HAPPY HARDCORE


'Happy hardcore' is a form of dance music typified by a very fast tempo (usually around 165-180 BPM), often coupled with male or female vocals, and saccharine lyrics. Its characteristically 4/4 beat "happy" sound distinguishes it from most other forms of breakbeat hardcore, which tend to be "darker". In its original incarnation, it was often characterized by piano riffs, synth stabs and spacey effects. This genre of music is closely related to the typically Dutch genre of Gabber. Happy hardcore evolved from rave music around 19911993, as the original house music-based rave became faster and began to include breakbeats, evolving into breakbeat hardcore.
In the UK, happy hardcore was at its peak between 1994 and 1997. In the more recent past happy hardcore has made a large re-emergence into the mainstream, more specifically it has received coverage in ''Mixmag''. It has spawned various new record labels in the United States, Canada, the UK, and Japan and continues to grow in popularity. In 2002, the compilation series Bonkers was relaunched after a 3 year hiatus and have proved to be successful, releasing eight compilations between 2002 and 2005. The 21st century sound of the genre is notable by the lack of the bouncy synths and piano lines that were trademarks of the genre in the 90s. The genre now has a more euphoric trance feel to it not too dissimilar to the sound of the late 90s trance that was popular in Ibiza at the time, albeit at a higher tempo.

Contents
Development of happy hardcore
The Change
Artists, DJs and producers
See also
External links
Artists, DJs and producers
Record labels
Record stores

Development of happy hardcore


By mid-to-late 1992, hardcore breakbeat was shifting to its darker elements. The "cheesier" elements of the hardcore scene (sped up vocals (sometimes pitched up), choruses, rolling piano lines, synth stabs, 'bouncy' kicks with slight distortion etc.), which were being blamed by the purists for the commercialization of the music, had started to be eliminated by the new breed of ravers, who wanted to take the music back to the underground with darker, more minimal tracks.
Some producers (Luna-C (who was one of the men behind the Smart E's), Slipmatt (of SL2), Red Alert & Mike Slammer, Brisk, DJ Vibes, Wishdokta, etc.), however, utilized these elements for their own sound. This pushed forward the genre so that there were now polyrhythmic breakbeats, half-speed dub-bass and no 4/4 kick drum (which attracted many black ravers, who promptly introduced MCs into the scene). But, apart from this, the E-rush of hardcore continued for quite some time, just as the music was still getting faster and faster. Dark side and the happier tunes were being played together at the same raves, the same pirate stations, etc.
Slipmatt's "SMD #1" was quite a culture shock to most of the ravers. It was not and it was most definitely not dark. It increased the intensity of the happiest, cheesiest treble elements of rave and was loved by some and hated by many. It also reintroduced the 4/4 kick drum, had fewer snare breaks and a more techno-influenced bassline. It had a profound influence on the whole of the hardcore scene. After several months, the darker tunes were dying and being replaced by the bittersweet nature of ambient jungle/drum'n'bass. Some of the once happier tunes had darkened up a bit and turned the bass right up and ragga jungle and jump-up jungle itself had arrived. The other happy ravers (still using the jungle-style rhythms for a while) gradually took Slipmatt's lead and happy hardcore was born.
By late 1994, happy hardcore had broken away from Jungle (which was now accepted by the mainstream) and had its own network of DJs (Slipmatt, DJ Force & Styles, Vibes & Wishdokta, DJ CJ, Hixxy, Brisk, Clarkee, etc.) labels (Kniteforce, Slammin Vinyl) and clubs/raves (Die Hard, United Dance, Dreamscape, etc.) It was rejected by the dance mainstream and had its own media and pirate radio. Other US DJs would follow in the next few years, Venom, Phil Free Art, Matt Positive, Muppetfucker aka. Noahphex, Spree, Cloudskipper, Michael Knight, DJ Entropy, and many more.
In this course of time 19951997 the music was still evolving. There were now almost no breakbeats and the music had become faster and stompy, with a progressive rhythm. The scene was now set for the genre's merge with bouncy techno and 4-beat. Around 1999 various UK rave culture publications started announcing the largely mistaken "death" of Hardcore; many would argue that it had instead just gone back to its underground roots.
Also around this time the UK Happy Hardcore had started taking influences from the mainstream trance tunes heard virtually everywhere. While this move attracted new listeners it also began to alienate some of its long time producers, many of which switched to producing Hard house or simply retired. It was this merging of trance influences with hardcore that caused the birth of a new genre Freeform Hardcore. This style of music blended the earlier dark influences, the breakbeats, as well as various trance influences. Freeform also created its own network of DJs and producers most noticeably CLSM, Sharkey, AMS, Kevin Energy, and lesser knowns such as Tilzs, AC Slater, Sunrize, Daywalker, Oli G, White Russian, Brak, Bounce, and Dodgee.
Freeform hardcore, and other trance influenced happy hardcore attracted a new audience to the music and caused a major upsurge in interest among the European and American ravers, causing remixes of classic happy hardcore anthems to reach the pop charts. Examples include tracks such as "You're Shining" or "Heartbeatz" both by Styles & Breeze.
Hardcore also received its own special in 2004 on BBC Radio 1 entitled ''John Peel Is Not Enough'' named after a CLSM track of the same name. Also, if you like the earlier happy hardcore, a lot of Makina tunes are worth listening to. Makina, having started off underground in Europe, grew largely popular in the northeast of England and is still listened to in clubs such as the New Monkey in Sunderland, and abroad at Pont Eiri.

The Change


Happy Hardcore had a slow period of growth and popularity from 1998-2001 which can be seen in the number of happy hardcore artists and producers leaving happy hardcore for other genres of music and some record labels stop releasing records.
Several possible contributing factors lead to the decline of the genre during 1998-2001. Several major UK distributors for the genre going bankrupt and with it label profits instantly destroying some labels such as Hectech Records. Another less public contribution was the closure of Q-Records. Q-Records was based in Tokyo, Japan and was a major distributor and retail store for all of Japan. In their prime Q-Records exclusively distributed Happy Hardcore and Drum n Bass and was at the time of operation was solely responsible for selling 40-60% of all hardcore records worldwide. Q-records operated between 1996-1999. Other people point to that happy hardcore's time was up with people arguing that the sound itself didn't evolve to support itself.
Happy Hardcore ultimately merged into what is referred to UK Hardcore in and around 2002-2003 with flyers and internet forums referring to the new style of hardcore as UK Hardcore (ref1, ref2)
Some of the key songs that mark the change over from Happy Hardcore to UK Hardcore are Hixxy - Welcome (RaverBaby), UFO & Breeze - Deep Inside (New Infinity), Hixxy - Castles in the Sky (RaverBaby), Hixxy - I want to be a hippy (Unreleased). Most people point to the hardcore producer Hixxy and his record labels RaverBaby & JellyBaby as major contributing factors to the change. To kick start the sound so to speak, initially the record label RaverBaby pressed promo copies of the first 12 releases on RaverBaby and sent them to nearly every influential DJ around the world free of charge. Most of these promo's would make it to full releases on the label while the ones that didn't now considered rare vinyl collectors items.
UK Hardcore is sometimes referred to as a hybrid of Trance music based of the instruments and sounds used in current songs. It's arguable to if this is correct or not, and for the most part depends on the path of music genres the listener traveled to arrive at UK Hardcore as their favorite style of music. UK Hardcore focuses largely on fast 4/4 beats with uplifting leads, looped vocals and extended builds leading to frantic crescendos, before 'dropping the beat'. Breakbeats are used less throughout the songs. BPM range is 165 to 170 or more. Well known DJs and producers include Scott Brown, Hixxy, and Breeze & Styles. Although the style follows rigid musical structures and is beat lead there is sufficient diversity for niche genre's, hence the confusing number of names which refer to a musical sound many outside the scene might think to be the same genre.

Artists, DJs and producers



Anabolic Frolic

Bang

Brisk

Spinback

CLSM

DJ Ham

DJ Paul Elstak

Dougal

Hixxy

Gammer

Sharkey

Scott Brown

Sy

Unknown

enVias

DNA

Fade

Justin Time

DJ Storm

Eruption

Mickey Skeedale

Breeze

Slipmatt

Luna C

Billy Daniel Bunter

Darren Styles

DJ Seduction

Jon Doe

See also



List of electronic music genres

UK_hardcore

External links



HappyHardcore.com

Nu Energy

USH.Net

HTID

Hardcore Producer.com

Hardcore Adrenaline Album

SupportHardcore.com

DanceNetRadio.co.uk

Kraftyradio.com
Artists, DJs and producers


DJ Spinback

AMS

Cloudskipper

CLSM

DJ Seduction

Milo

Oli G

DJ Slipmatt

DJ Breeze
Record labels


Essential Soundz

Evolution Records

Deinitive Dance Recordings

Infinity Recordings

Warped Science

Underground Recordings

Kniteforce

MasterWax

Next Generation Records / Blatant Beats

Nu Energy Collective

Nukleuz

Quosh Records

Resist Music Ltd

Slammin Vinyl

Thin n Crispy Recordings
Record stores


IMOrecords.com

IMOdownload.com

IMOtickets.com

Shop.HappyHardcore.com

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psst.. try this: add to faves