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Description

Strut is a modern, data-era microgenre label that groups songs with a confident, swaggering feel built on danceable funk and disco foundations, but delivered with rock-pop immediacy.

In practice, strut tracks lean on syncopated, pocketed grooves, punchy bass lines, chanky rhythm guitars, handclaps, and crisp hi-hats, with vocals that project attitude and showmanship. The style often revives 1970s club sonics (boogie, disco, blue-eyed soul) while incorporating 2000s–2010s indie dance and pop-rock sheen.

History

Origins

Strut’s musical DNA reaches back to the 1970s, when disco, funk, boogie, and blue‑eyed soul defined the archetypal “walking with confidence” groove: four-on-the-floor or tightly syncopated drums, elastic bass, percussive guitars, and bold horn or synth hooks. Glam rock’s theatricality and pop‑rock’s hookcraft further shaped the swaggering, stage-forward attitude the label “strut” evokes.

Coinage in the Streaming Era

The term “strut” is a contemporary, data-driven microgenre tag popularized on streaming-era taxonomies to cluster tracks with that unmistakable confident, mid‑tempo, dance‑ready pulse. In the 2000s and 2010s, indie dance and pop‑rock acts revived disco-funk textures with modern production—tight sidechaining, bright top‑end, and punchy transient design—making the “strut” feel newly prominent in playlists and algorithmic clusters.

Aesthetic and Scene

Rather than a formal scene with fixed boundaries, strut is an aesthetic thread: songs that feel like a catwalk or a late‑night city stroll. It cuts across pop‑rock, neo‑soul, nu‑disco, and electro‑funk, tying together artists from the UK, US, and beyond who foreground groove, attitude, and sleek, radio-friendly arrangements.

How to make a track in this genre

Groove and Tempo
•   Aim for 100–120 BPM to maximize the confident, head‑nodding feel. •   Use tight, pocketed drums: crisp hi‑hats (often on 16ths), dry snares/claps, and either four‑on‑the‑floor kicks or syncopated funk patterns.
Bass and Rhythm Guitar
•   Write melodic, syncopated bass lines that push and pull against the kick; think octave jumps, chromatic approaches, and ghosted notes. •   Add percussive, chanky rhythm guitars (muted 16ths, Nile Rodgers‑style voicings), occasionally doubled with clean chorus for sheen.
Harmony and Hooks
•   Favor dominant‑7th and minor‑key mixolydian colors; keep progressions concise (two to four chords) to spotlight groove. •   Build memorable call‑and‑response hooks (vocals vs. horns/synths) and use short pre‑chorus lifts and drop‑outs to accentuate the chorus impact.
Sound Design and Arrangement
•   Layer handclaps, tambourine, and light congas/shakers for forward momentum. •   Use brass stabs or bright polysynths to punctuate phrases; sidechain pads subtly to the kick for modern polish. •   Structure around groove moments: intro riff → verse pocket → tension pre‑chorus → explosive chorus → instrumental break/solo → final chorus with added ad‑libs.
Vocals and Lyrics
•   Deliver with swagger and clarity; stack harmonies on choruses and add tasteful ad‑libs. •   Lyrical themes often center on confidence, nightlife, style, flirtation, and movement—keep lines punchy and quotable.

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