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Afrodite
Miami
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Afro House
Afro house is a subgenre of house music that took shape in South Africa in the 1990s. It blends classic house’s 4/4 pulse with African rhythmic sensibilities, emphasizing hand percussion such as congas, bongos, shakers and djembe alongside warm basslines and steadily dancing kick drums. Tracks often sit around 118–124 BPM and lean into hypnotic, polyrhythmic grooves, soulful harmonies, and an organic, spiritual atmosphere. Producers commonly use piano, saxophone, synthesizers, marimba/kalimba and rich pads, while vocals appear in a variety of African languages in call‑and‑response or chantlike phrases. The result is music that feels both deeply communal and club‑ready, equally at home on outdoor dance floors and late‑night sets.
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Latin House
Latin house is a dance music style that fuses the four-on-the-floor drive of house with Afro–Latin and Caribbean rhythms, percussion, and song forms. It typically sits around 120–128 BPM and features congas, bongos, timbales, cowbells, güiro, and claves layered over punchy house drums and a syncopated, tumbao-inspired bass. Harmonically, Latin house often borrows from salsa, boogaloo, and Latin jazz: montuno piano riffs, brass stabs, and ii–V–I motion appear alongside soulful or Spanish-language vocals and call-and-response choruses. Its sound coalesced in late-1980s New York, Chicago, and Miami—Latin diaspora hubs where DJs and producers blended garage and Chicago house with salsa and merengue club culture. The result is an uplifting, dancefloor-focused style that balances the sleek repetition of house with the celebratory swing, polyrhythms, and melodic vibrancy of Latin music.
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Afro Tech
Afro tech is a club-focused hybrid of Afro house and techno that blends four-on-the-floor drum programming with African polyrhythms, deep sub-bass, and hypnotic, minor-key synth work. It favors driving grooves, atmospheric pads, chant-like vocals, and long, DJ-friendly arrangements that build patiently toward cathartic drops. Compared with soulful Afro house, Afro tech tends to be darker, more streamlined, and more mechanical, while retaining the swing, percussion density, and call-and-response sensibilities of Southern African dance music.
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Artists
FL3X, Alessandro Cacciapuoti
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