The Scene '80s and '90s Electric Boogie - Bronx, Los Angeles, Miami

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The Scene  '80s and '90s Electric Boogie - Bronx, Los Angeles, Miami Powered by Lab Doctors
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07/11/2022

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ELectric Boogie

Boogie, following the example of post-disco, lacks the four-on-the-floor beat (however there are examples of exceptions where some tracks will include the four-on-the-floor beat), which is a "traditional" rhythm of disco music, has a strong accent on the second and fourth beats and generally is located in the 110 to 116 beats-per-minute range. Aside from applying certain technological and promotional aspects of new wave music and having been fairly exposed to its subgenre synthpop, boogie is, however, R&B-rooted and predominantly draws from funk music. Other influences from a completely different music landscape include jazz. Typical boogie track can be characterized by mid-tempo rhythm, prominent use of slap bass (electric—in the early 1980s—and/or synthetic—mid-1980s onwards), loud clapping sound, melodic chords and, obviously, synthesizers.

Among electro-boogie (later shortened to electro) pioneers include Zapp, D. Train,Sinnamon and other post-disco/boogie musicians; especially those influenced by new wave and synthpop acts like Human League or Gary Numan, combined with the R&B sound of Herbie Hancock and George Clinton. As the electronic progression continued, acoustic instruments such as bass guitar were replaced by Japanese-made synthesizers and most notably by iconic drum machines like Roland TR-808. Early uses of this drum machine include several Yellow Magic Orchestra tracks in 1980–1981, the 1982 track "Planet Rock" by Afrikaa Bambaataa, and the 1982 song "Sexual Healing" by Marvin Gaye.

It's Electric!

You can't see it [It's electric!] You gotta feel it [It's electric!] Ooh, it's shakin' [It's electric!] [Jiggle-a-mesa-cara She's a pumpin' like a matic She's a movin' like electric She sure got the boogie]