Tech house

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Tech house
Stylistic origins House, techno, minimal techno, tech trance, deep house
Cultural origins post-1986 United States (mainly Detroit and Chicago)
Typical instruments Synthesizer, keyboard, drum machine, sequencer, sampler
Subgenres
Electrotech  Deeptech  Pumping house
(complete list)
Fusion genres
Hardcore techno  Vocal trance  Electro house

Tech house is a subgenre of house music that mixes elements of techno with house music. The term tech house developed as a shorthand record store name for a category of electronic dance music that combined musical aspects of techno, such as "rugged basslines" and "steely beats," with the harmonies and grooves of progressive house.[1][2] The music originally had a clean and minimal production style that was associated with techno from Detroit and the UK.[2] In the mid to late 1990s a scene developed in England around club nights such as The Drop run by Mr.C & Plink Plonk, Heart & Soul, and Wiggle run by Terry Francis and Nathan Coles.[1] Other DJs and artists associated with the sound at that time included Charles Webster, Bushwacka!, Dave Angel, Herbert, Funk D'Void, Ian O'Brien, Derrick Carter, and Stacey Pullen.[1][2] By the late 90's London nightclub The End, owned by the former Shamen rapper Richard West (Mr C) and Layo Paskin, was considered the home of tech house in the UK.[1]

Characteristics

Technotronic feat. Monday Midnite – Like This (1999)
An excerpt from Technotronic's "Like This" (1999), which features a distinctive touch of Detroit techno within house structure that flourished during the late 1990s. This sound also gave prominence to electrotech.

Erick Morillo – Dancin' (Fuzzy Hair Remix) (2003)
Erick Morillo's "Dancin' (Fuzzy Hair Remix)" (2003), an example of the "deeptech" movement, characterized as a fusion between deep house and minimal techno, which shares a beat often considered to have derived into electro house.[citation needed]

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As a mixing style, tech-house often brings together deep or minimal techno music, the soulful and jazzy end of house, some minimal techno and microhouse (especially with a soulful feel, such as Luomo’s music), and very often some dub elements. There is some overlap with progressive house, which too can contain deep, soulful, dub, and techno elements; this is especially true since the turn of the millennium, as progressive-house mixes have themselves often become deeper and sometimes more minimal. However, the typical progressive-house mix—which might integrate some funky house, trance, and even some hard techno at times—has more energy than tech-house, which tends to have a more “laid-back” feel. Tech-house fans tend to appreciate subtlety, as well as the “middle ground” that adds a “splash of color to steel techno beats” and eschews the “banging” of house music for intricate rhythms.[3]

In contrast to most progressive house, which tends to have a progression over the course of the mix ending in an ecstatic release of energy at the end, tech-house often aims at achieving an even “groove.”[citation needed]

Musical structure

As a musical (as opposed to a mixing) style, tech-house uses the same basic structure as house. However, elements of the house 'sound' such as realistic jazz sounds (in deep house) and booming kick drums are replaced with elements from techno such as shorter, deeper, darker and often distorted kicks, smaller, quicker hi-hats, noisier snares and more synthetic or acid sounding synth melodies from the TB-303, including raw electronic noises from distorted sawtooth and square wave oscillators.

Some producers also add soulful vocals and elements, and equally as much raw electronic sounds in their music. However, a rich techno-like kick and bassline seems to be a consistency amongst tech house music.

Subgenres

Electrotech

An electronic music recording studio

Electrotech arose in Western Europe in late 2000 as the result of mixing high-attack basses found in electroclash with general tech house structure. As such, compositions still featured simple, discernible lyrics and single-note basslines, however, the final sound had a somewhat rough, "fuzzy" attitude very commonly found in electroclash. Examples of electrotech include "All You Need" by Miss Kittin,[4] "Keep Control" by Sono, "This World" by Slam and "I Want You" by Paris Avenue.

Deeptech

Deeptech or Deep Techhouse, is a tech house sub genre that fuses techno and the sub-genre deep house, using slower tempo, Latin percussion, soulful vocals, or vocal samples and longer note durations, which are very common in deep house, combined with drum distortion, side chaining compression, and heavy effects on vocals/samples, which are the norm in techno production. The songs or tracks in this sub-genre are known for a more relaxed groove, as opposed to tech house's upbeat feel. Artists such as Chris Coco, Fluorescent Noise and Miguel Migs have produced, and released Deeptech.

Pumptech (a.k.a. pumping house)

Pumping (tech) house is another, much more successful subgenre of tech that originated in Southern Europe when a trio called "The Biz", consisting of the Italian DJ Benny Benassi and two Swiss/French singers created a hit "Satisfaction" in late 2002. The signature sound was characterized by a modulated ("granulized") bassline, notable sidechain techniques, minimalist hitting and a heavy amount of reverberation used on either riffs or robotic voices. Pumping house became a huge success in 2003–05, as many other European producers (notably Vanguard, Royal Gigolos and Global Deejays) also took on the style and created their own distinctive variations of it.

Pumping's popularity fell as quickly as it rose after progressive house lost prominence, while electrotech started separating into a distinct genre around 2006. Some bands kept their sound intact and were kicked out of the mainstream later, others tried to implement new changes and even sacrificed their original sound.

Proponents

Notable contributors to the genre include:

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 1.3 Aaron, Charles (2000), "Whose House? Tech-house and the quest for dance music's post-rave soul, Spin, October 2000.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Bogdanov, Vladimir (2001), All Music Guide to Electronica: The Definitive Guide to Electronic Music, Backbeat Books, UK; 4th Revised edition, (page xiv).
  3. Richard Diaz, Customer Review for Terry Francis's Architecture
  4. "Miss Kittin – All You Need – Mobilee – music-head.de". Music-head.de. Retrieved 2011-02-10. 
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