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4 Reasons Why Deep House Music Is Here To Stay
Deep house and related genres (tropical, future, etc)
are here to stay. There are 6 reasons for this which can be read below:
1. It’s listenable
Deep
house is not only great music, it is great lounge music. You can listen to it
in your room for its head-bobbing effects as well as just lying in bed. You can
listen to tracks like this, “LarryKoek – Île De Luna” for
the chilled effects of the summer, or tracks like “Helsloot – Rain (ft. Freya)” for the
aforementioned head-bobbing effects.
If
you have ever been to a North American shopping center, you will have likely
heard the sounds of deep house. It is pleasant to the ear even for someone who
does not like dance music. Everyone can listen to constant beats because it’s
relatable to popular music that everyone’s heard, as opposed to listening to
Dubstep which is much more diverse.
2.
It’s playable at parties
Unlike
big room house, deep house is danceable. Big room house is just jumping, but
there is no real dancing. Luckily that isn’t the case for deep house. The
“everybody f**king jump” phase is almost over, so partygoers will go back to
being normal. Deep house's YouTube presence is huge, with so many deep house music blogs.
3.
Wide range of subgenres
Some
would consider tropical house and future house subgenres of deep house. Huge
acts like Oliver Heldens and Tchami are pumping out new hits on a monthly basis
nowadays, and their shows are attracting more and more listeners on a daily
basis. The new
Tchami track is just fire, and he has yet to release one of his biggest
bangers (Missing You). Oliver Heldens just released Bunnydance, which is also
killing dancefloors. It’s hard to imagine these two big players going away
anytime soon.
Whilst
future house is super energetic and bouncy, tropical house is made more for
casual listening. Kygo is the leading player in tropical house music, with
multiple songs of 20 million or more views on YouTube. He played at
TomorrowWorld 2014, and his future success is guaranteed. You can expect Kygo
to become huge among the mainstream media.
With
all this in mind, it is important to be able to categorize genres correctly.
Tropical house has exotic sounds and is typically slower at about 115 to 120
beats per minute, as opposed to deep house’s 120 to 125. Future house is
usually 126 beats per minute, albeit every producer has variations.
4.
Relatable to pop
Deep
house isn’t pop. But it definitely has some similarities to the huge genre.
Soulful vocals are a common feat of deep house songs, as well as pop songs.
Repetitive beats are another similarity.
In
conclusion, deep house is only going to further expand to the mainstream due to
its relativity and versatility, as well as casual listening experience.
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