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Post by Deleted on Jan 1, 2019 18:41:04 GMT 10
I Don't Feel Like Dancing was a successful single for Scissor Sisters in 2006, reaching #1 in many countries. However, it sounds like it was a cheesy disco track from the 1980s or 1990s.
SharksFan99 and Cassie like this
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Post by Deleted on Jan 14, 2019 12:45:55 GMT 10
This song came into the Top 20 for absolutely no reason in mid-2016 despite being a album track. I heard it on the radio today and thought it sounded like something out of the 2000s...
But the song did get a proper single release in February 2017...
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Post by aja675 on Jan 15, 2019 0:53:26 GMT 10
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Post by Deleted on Feb 3, 2019 6:57:13 GMT 10
This came out in 1997 and is a remix of a 1983 "debut" single. Doesn't scream "eurodance" to be so it would probably work in the late 80s or the 2000s?
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Post by Deleted on Feb 4, 2019 17:50:52 GMT 10
Year: 1983
Sounds Like: Late 2000s/2010 (as I first heard it in a car ad)
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Post by Telso on Feb 4, 2019 21:13:54 GMT 10
Year: 1983 Sounds Like: Late 2000s/2010 (as I first heard it in a car ad) Uhm what? It's a New Wave song that's a novelty in the way of its minimalism, but otherwise it still belongs very well into 1983. There's nothing about it that makes it sound from the late 2000s/early 2010s to me. Can you explain?
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Post by SharksFan99 on Feb 5, 2019 9:25:07 GMT 10
Uhm what? It's a New Wave song that's a novelty in the way of its minimalism, but otherwise it still belongs very well into 1983. There's nothing about it that makes it sound from the late 2000s/early 2010s to me. Can you explain? Yeah, I don't think it sounds like it's from the Late 2000s/Early 2010s either. It's very much a product of it's time.
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Post by Qwerty on Feb 5, 2019 19:55:47 GMT 10
Uhm what? It's a New Wave song that's a novelty in the way of its minimalism, but otherwise it still belongs very well into 1983. There's nothing about it that makes it sound from the late 2000s/early 2010s to me. Can you explain? Yeah, I don't think it sounds like it's from the Late 2000s/Early 2010s either. It's very much a product of it's time. 100% agree. The synth note just screams mid 80s to me.
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Post by TheUser98 on Feb 14, 2019 6:12:17 GMT 10
This is from 1969, however the distortion-heavy guitar intro, pounding, single-note piano riff, and steady, driving beat, has lead some people to label it as one of the first punk rock songs ever to be released. Punk rock of course would be a defining music genre of the 70's.
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Post by Telso on Feb 24, 2019 22:29:34 GMT 10
Definitely an odd-one-out for 1990 when Pop music sounded so cold and industrial. Even other House songs of that year like "Pump Up the Jam" have badly aged compared to this. Definitely would blend in more seamlessly in the mid or even late 90s.
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Post by aja675 on Mar 23, 2019 21:13:15 GMT 10
This is brand-new, but sounds early '10s.
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Post by Telso on Mar 24, 2019 5:21:55 GMT 10
^Don't agree with that. It's so midtempo and so airy and just so... current
But since lumping anything vaguely electro-upbeat for the early 2010s is a common thing on here. Here is my take: the last big hit to me utilisizing the distorded synths, trance pads and heavy BPM, complete with the uplifting lyrics, all very popular in early '10s Pop music:
Cassie likes this
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Post by #Infinity on Mar 29, 2019 2:10:35 GMT 10
Speaking of Ariana, I think “thank u, next”, despite dominating the charts in late 2018, sounds like it belongs snugly in 2007. Lots of Timbaland and Timbaland-wannabe productions from that time have that specific type of beat, free of the utterly ubiquitous trap influences in pop music today.
I know the music video is coincidentally based on a 2000s movie, but a lot changed about pop/R&B from 2004 to 2007.
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Post by #Infinity on May 1, 2019 11:34:00 GMT 10
This is from 1986. Having known it since I was little, I really never would have guessed; it doesn’t sound like anything else from that year. To me personally, it sounds very 2015. Pop spongs from around that year were frequently driven by speedy guitar textures, big thumping beats, and funky synthesized basslines. The audio mixing may sound comparatively primitive, but the general feel definitely seems vaguely 2015.
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Post by longaotian on May 1, 2019 11:44:03 GMT 10
This is from 1986. Having known it since I was little, I really never would have guessed; it doesn’t sound like anything else from that year. To me personally, it sounds very 2015. Pop spongs from around that year were frequently driven by speedy guitar textures, big thumping beats, and funky synthesized basslines. The audio mixing may sound comparatively primitive, but the general feel definitely seems vaguely 2015. I already know that song and i could easily identify it was from the '80s myself. But yeah, I do know what you mean about the 2015 thing.
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