New beat originated in Belgium in 1987,[6] and was popular in several music clubs across Western Europe.[7][8] Sometimes described as "new wave disco beat"[9] the genre has been characterized as a blend of new wave, hi-NRG,[2]EBM (which also developed in Belgium[10]), and acid house.[3][4] New beat is the immediate precursor of hardcore electronic dance music, which developed in Belgium, the Netherlands, and Germany around 1990. Belgium's native form of hardcore that emerged from new beat is also known as Belgian techno or rave techno.[citation needed]
In contrast to EBM, new beat records did not appear within a certain subcultural context[4] and were mostly produced to enter the international music charts.[9][2] In Belgium, compilations such as New Beat Take 1 sold 40.000 units.[9] The Belgian sound was re-introduced to the United States market in 1989 through a compilation album known as This Is the New Beat, released through Polygram Records.[3]
From 1988 to 1990, new beat spawned two short-lived subgenres with hard beat, a style that incorporated more elements of EBM (e.g. the Concrete Beat – "I Want You"; Major Problem – "I Still Have a Dream"; Tribe 22 – "Acid-New Beat"),[5] and skizzo, a techno-influenced style, considerably faster than the original slow new beat style.
Modern new beat is known as midtempo bass.[16] Modern artists described as "new beat" include 1788-L,[17] and Rezz.[17]Notaker described the subgenre as a "fresh sound that’s been generally unexplored in the mainstream electronic realm," further commenting on the versatility of the subgenre, stating "the range of which you can produce in this tempo range can be extremely gritty and heavy to really melodic and beautiful to calm, relaxing and atmospheric."[18] Rezz's studio album Certain Kind of Magic peaked at number 12 on the US BillboardDance/Electronic Albums and her previous album Mass Manipulation received the Electronic Album of the Year awarded at the Juno Awards.[19][20][17]
Record labels
The rise of the new genre did not only launch new artists; a few new record labels also were set up, especially to release new beat records. They lived a golden era with, despite not being mainstream, massive sales, and not only in their home country Belgium but also in the rest of Europe and specifically Ireland and the United Kingdom. Roland Beelen (Bellucci of the above-mentioned Morton Sherman Bellucci) and Maurice Engelen (of Praga Khan) set up Antler-Subway Records.[21] There was also R&S Records, launched by Renaat Vandepapeliere and his wife.[22] Other labels include ARS, PIAS, ZYX Records and Music Man.
New Beat Flashback – Interviews and Information: V.J. Marcel Vanthilt from MTV Europe talks about New Beat and take interviews in English. The rest of the clip is in Flemish/Dutch
^ abcdTimor Kaul: Electronic Body Music. In: Thomas Hecken, Marcus S. Kleiner: Handbook Popculture. J.B. Metzler Verlag 2017, ISBN3-476-02677-9, pp. 102–103.
^ abNikki van Lierop: Hard Beat 1st Compilation., 1989. "Hard Beat is the perfect link between Electronic Body Music and New Beat."
^Marc Grouls: In-D – Virgin In-D Sky's., 1988. "In 1987 Belgian New-Beat groups proved that New-Beat is a fact and the salesfigures in and out of Belgium are the best proof."
^ abcdefPhilipp Anz, Arnold Meyer: New Beat. In: Philipp Anz, Patrick Walder: Techno, Rowohlt Taschenbuch Verlag, Reinbek, June 1999, ISBN3-499-60817-0, pp. 25–26.
^Reed, S. Alexander (2013). Assimilate: A Critical History of Industrial Music. Oxford University Press. pp. 247–250. ISBN9780199832583.
^Reynolds, Simon (2012). Energy Flash: A Journey Through Rave Music and Dance Culture. Picador. ISBN978-1-59376-407-4. As the nineties progressed, the b.p.m. returned to normal, then accelerated, as DJs started playing techno with their turntables set to +8. A native hardcore was born, with labels like Hithouse, Big Time International, Who's That Beat, Beat Box and Music Man, and groups like Set Up System, Cubic 22, T99, 80 Aum, Incubus, Holy Noise and Meng Syndicate.