Progressive House
House
music had reached the mainstream by the late '80s (more so in Britain than
anywhere else), and while several early house hits were by genuine pioneers,
they were later overwhelmed by the novelty acts and one-hit wonders dominating
the charts around the turn of the decade. As well, ambient, techno, and trance
made gains early in the '90s as electronic styles with both street cred and a
group of young artists making intelligent music. A generation of house producers
soon emerged, weaned on the first wave of house and anxious to reapply the more
soulful elements of the music. With a balance of sublime techno and a house
sound more focused on New York garage than Chicago acid house, groups like
Leftfield, the Drum Club, Spooky, and Faithless hit the dance charts (and
occasionally Britain's singles charts). Though critically acclaimed full-lengths
were never quite as important as devastating club tracks, several Progressive
House LPs were stellar works, including Leftfield's Leftism, Spooky's
Gargantuan, and the Drum Club's Everything Is Now. By the mid-'90s, the
innovations of progressive house had become the mainstream of house music around
the world.
Related
Styles: House, Techno, Euro-Dance,
Club/Dance, Trance, Tribal-House,
Detroit Techno, Electronica,
Funky Breaks, Speed Garage, Goa Trance,
Tech-House, Progressive Trance,
Jazz-House .