List of dance-rock artists
The following list includes notable dance-rock artists.
Artists
- !!![1][2][3]
- ABC[4]
- And Then There Were None[5]
- The B-52's[4][6][7]
- Belouis Some[4]
- Big Audio Dynamite[8][9][10]
- The Big Pink[11]
- BodyRockers[12]
- A Certain Ratio[4]
- The Charlatans[13][14]
- Depeche Mode[4][15][16]
- Devo[17][18]
- Duran Duran[4][19][20]
- Electronic[21][22]
- EMF[23][24][25]
- Eurythmics[4]
- The Farm[26]
- Fine Young Cannibals[27]
- Frankie Goes to Hollywood[28]
- Franz Ferdinand[29][30]
- Friendly Fires[31][32][33]
- Gang of Four[4]
- Garbage[4][34][35]
- Hall & Oates[4]
- Happy Mondays[25][36][37]
- Hot Chelle Rae[38][39]
- Hot Chip[40][41][42]
- Billy Idol[43][44]
- INXS[4][45][46]
- Mick Jagger[47]
- Jesus Jones[25][48][49]
- The Killers[50][51][52]
- LCD Soundsystem[53][54][55]
- Liquid Liquid[56]
- The New Cities[57]
- New Order[4][58][59]
- No Doubt[4]
- Oingo Boingo[60]
- Robert Palmer[4]
- Pet Shop Boys[4]
- Primal Scream[61][62]
- The Prodigy[63][64][65]
- Pseudo Echo[66]
- Public Image Ltd[67][68][69]
- Rogue Traders[70][71]
- Scissor Sisters[4][72][73]
- The Shamen[74]
- Simple Minds[75][76]
- The Stone Roses[37][77]
- Talking Heads[78][79][80]
- Tom Tom Club[81][82]
- U2[4][83]
- Walk the Moon[84]
- Was (Not Was)[85][86][87]
- The White Tie Affair[88]
- Robbie Williams[4]
References
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Devo's brand of high tech dance rock has already staked its musical horizons on its earliest albums
- Walters, Barry (15 June 2010). "Devo – Something for Everybody". Rolling Stone. Retrieved 28 February 2014.
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Disappointingly, a third album, TWISTED TENDERNESS (1999) offered little progression from the duo's dance-rock template.
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the Shamen reoriented themselves to play simplified dance rock on the pointedly political but boringly de-Shamenized in Gorbachev We Trust.
- Stevenson, Jane (23 October 2013). "Simple Minds make triumphant return to Toronto". Toronto Sun. Retrieved 28 February 2014.
- "Simple Minds". Cambridge News. 22 June 2013. Archived from the original on 24 May 2014.
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It's a throwback to the Heads' pre-funk dance-rock sound
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- Shewey, Don (23 September 1986). "David Byrne keeps on making sense". The Boston Phoenix. p. 4.
It's a far cry not just from Talking Heads' nervous dance rock but also from the experiments with "found" sound on My Life in the Bush of Ghosts
- Boehm, Mike (2 August 1990). "3 Talking Heads Plus 5 Equals Concert". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved 28 February 2014.
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Bassist Tina Weymouth and drummer Chris Frantz also play in the dance rock band Tom Tom Club.
- Sawdey, Evan (1 March 2009). "U2: No Line on the Horizon". PopMatters. Retrieved 1 March 2014.
After the breakthrough 1991 album Achtung Baby, this group of working-class Irish lads slowly began losing themselves in the pre-millennial dance-rock craze
- Monger, James Christopher. "Walk the Moon – Artist Biography". AllMusic. All Media Network. Retrieved 19 December 2016.
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- Rodman, Sarah (7 May 2008). "Was (Not Was) is again with new CD". Milwaukee Journal Sentinel. Archived from the original on 4 March 2014.
- Young, Alex (22 August 2008). "Listen: The White Tie Affair". Consequence of Sound. Retrieved 9 March 2016.
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