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MAX TROUPE
France
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Dancehall
Dancehall is a Jamaican popular music style built around bass‑heavy, groove‑centric riddims and the vocal art of chatting or singjaying in Jamaican Patois. It emphasizes direct, energetic delivery, call‑and‑response hooks, and a party‑forward attitude, while also leaving space for sharp social commentary and witty wordplay. The genre is fundamentally riddim‑based: producers release instrumental tracks (riddims) that many different vocalists "voice" with their own songs. This culture encourages competitive creativity, rapid evolution of styles, and a constant stream of new versions. Tempos typically sit in the midtempo range, with syncopated kicks and snares and prominent sub‑bass. Since the mid‑1980s, digital drum machines and synths have defined much of dancehall’s sound, though live instrumentation and hybrid production are common too.
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Dennery Segment
Dennery segment is a drum-forward, chant-driven offshoot of soca that originated in the district of Dennery in Saint Lucia. Often nicknamed "Lucian Kuduro," it fuses the stripped, polyrhythmic punch of African club styles with the road‑march energy of Caribbean carnival. The style is characterized by minimal melodic content, heavy hand‑percussion grooves (congas, cowbells/iron, shakers), whistle and siren riffs, and short call‑and‑response hooks delivered in Saint Lucian Kwéyòl and English. Tempos typically sit in the groovy soca range (roughly 115–130 BPM), emphasizing a hypnotic, repeating riddim that invites specific dance instructions and crowd participation. Production tends to be lean and percussive with tight kick–sub alignment, clipped vocal chops, and rhythmic breakdowns rather than harmonic builds—designed as much for street parades as for club play.
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Soca
Soca is a high‑energy dance music from Trinidad and Tobago that emerged in the early 1970s as a modernized offshoot of calypso. It blends calypso’s witty lyricism and call‑and‑response with Afro‑Caribbean percussion, East Indian rhythmic accents, and contemporary funk/disco/pop production. Typical features include a four‑on‑the‑floor kick, strong backbeat claps, driving "engine room" percussion (iron/cowbell), syncopated bass lines, bright synths or brass stabs, up‑stroke rhythm guitar, and catchy chant‑like hooks designed for crowd participation. Tempos range from around 110–125 BPM for "groovy soca" to 150–165 BPM for "power soca," reflecting music made for Carnival fetes, road marches, and mass performance.
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Melodding was created as a tribute to
Every Noise at Once
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