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Various - Hit Mix - Stylus Music - Synth Pop

Various - Hit Mix - Stylus Music - Synth Pop
Price £5.00

Track Listing

A1 Jody Watley Looking For A New Love
A2 Hot Chocolate You Sexy Thing
A3 Hot Chocolate Every 1\'s A Winner
A4 Vesta Williams Once Bitten Twice Shy
A5 Samantha Fox I Surrender
Mirage (12) Serious Mix
A7 Whitney Houston I Wanna Dance With Somebody (Who Loves Me)
A8 Blue Mercedes I Want To Be Your Property
A9 The Jets Crush On You
A10 Freeez Southern Freeez
A11 Westworld (2) Sonic Boom Boy
A12 Samantha Fox Nothing\'s Gonna Stop Me Now
A13 Kim Wilde You Keep Me Hangin\' On
A14 Kim Wilde & Junior (2) Another Step Closer To You
A15 Man 2 Man & Man Parrish Male Stripper
B1 The Whispers And The Beat Goes On
B2 Aretha Franklin Jimmy Lee
B3 Raze Jack The Groove
B4 Steve \"Silk\" Hurley Jack Your Body
B5 Natalie Cole Jump Start
B6 Jaki Graham Step Right Up
Mirage (12) Jack Mix II
B8 Sybil Let Yourself Go
B9 The Housemaster Boyz & The Rude Boy Of House House Nation
B10 Adonis Do It Properly (No Way Back)
B11 The Jets Curiosity
B12 Kid \'N\' Play Last Night
B13 Jonathan Butler Lies
B14 Billy Ocean Love Is Forever
C1 Lillo Thomas Sexy Girl
C2 First Circle Workin\' Up A Sweat
C3 Lola Wax The Van
C4 The Whispers Special FX
C5 First Circle Miracle Worker
C6 Joyce Sims Lifetime Love
C7 Nitro Deluxe This Brutal House
C8 L.A. Mix Don\'t Stop (Jammin\')
C9 The Whispers Rock Steady
C10 Midnight Star Midas Touch
C11 Harold Faltermeyer Axel F
C12 Dynamix II & Too Tough Tee Just Give The DJ A Break
C13 Colonel Abrams How Soon We Forget
Mirage (12) Jack Mix IV
C15 Wally Jump Jr & The Criminal Element Turn Me Loose
C16 Criminal Element Orchestra Put The Needle To The Record
D1 The Blow Monkeys It Doesn\'t Have To Be This Way
D2 Deborah Harry French Kissin\' In The USA
D3 Boogie Box High Jive Talking
D4 Thompson Twins Get That Love
D5 The Blow Monkeys (Celebrate) The Day After You
D6 Radio Heart & Gary Numan Radio Heart
D7 The Firm Star Trekkin\'
D8 Westworld (2) Ba-Na-Na-Bam-Bo
D9 Ritchie Valens La Bamba
D10 The Damned Gigolo
D11 Timbuk 3 The Future\'s So Bright I Gotta Wear Shades
D12 Chris Rea Let\'s Dance
D13 The Damned Alone Again Or
D14 Carly Simon Coming Around Again
D15 The Blow Monkeys Out With Her


Media Condition » Very Good Plus (VG+)
Sleeve Condition » Very Good Plus (VG+)
Artist Various
Title Hit Mix
Label Stylus Music
Catalogue SMR 744
Format Vinyl Double Album
Released 1987
Genre Synth Pop

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Other Titles by Various

True Faith The First PhaseLazy DJsFierce Dance Cuts No. 1Regrooves Volume TwoSerious Beats 1Vox Populi: First Choice Sampler 1993 Volume 1Betta Breaks & Beats Volume 1Different Worlds EPMarch 88 PreviewsSoul DazeThe Guitar Dance EPThe House Sound Of Chicago - Megamix Vol. 2 - House Strikes AgainThere's A Movement Underground Points In Time 00720 Flash Back Greats Of The Sixties


Some Other Artists in the Synth Pop Genre

Culture ClubHoward JonesSpandau BalletFrankie Goes To HollywoodErasureThompson TwinsLevel 42MadonnaHazell DeanGo WestEurythmicsKingSheena EastonGary NumanAlison MoyetBrosNik Kershawa-haDuran DuranSoft CellWham!Heaven 17Five StarMike OldfieldPaul YoungSinittaClimie FisherThomas DolbySwing Out SisterLiving In A BoxBrother BeyondMel & KimThe Kane GangThe Human LeagueMatt BiancoUltravoxHue & CryOrchestral Manoeuvres In The DarkJean-Michel JarreBronski Beat

More from Synth Pop >>

Some Other Artists on the Stylus Music Label

Mirage Mr. MenImaginationLindisfarneElla FitzgeraldDoris DayAntigen & Andrea MartinGlen CampbellShalamarOdysseyBo DiddleyNat King Cole

More from Stylus Music >>

Information on the Synth Pop Genre

Synthpop is a genre of pop music in which the synthesizer is the dominant musical instrument. It originated as part of the New Wave movement of the late 1970s and to mid-1980s, and it has continued to exist and develop ever since. It has seen a rise in popularity in the 21st century.

First wave: 1977-1990
Depeche Mode, one of the most successful synthpop bands of all time.

Giorgio Moroder paired up with Donna Summer in 1977 to release the electronic disco song I Feel Love. While a disco song first and foremost, the programmed, arpeggiated beats had a profound impact on the bands which would soon be known as synthpop. That same year, Ultravox member Warren Cann purchased a Roland TR-77 drum machine, which was first featured in their October 1977 single release Hiroshima Mon Amour.

In 1978, the first incarnation of the Human League of Sheffield, England released their debut single "Being Boiled". In the United States, Devo, who had been using synthesizers since their beginnings in 1975, moved towards a more electronic sound.

In the UK, the original synthesizer bands had a sound that was generally dark, moody and robotic and were more founded in an avant-garde, art rock aesthetic. In 1979, Tubeway Army, a little known outfit from West London, who dropped their initial punk rock image and topped the UK charts in the summer of 1979 with the single "Are Friends Electric?" and their album Replicas. This prompted the singer/songwriter, Gary Numan to go solo and in the same year he released the Kraftwerk inspired album, The Pleasure Principle which was another number one album, and he topped the singles charts for the second time with "Cars".

This Zeitgeist of revolution in electronic music performance and recording/production was encapsulated by then would be record producer, Trevor Horn of The Buggles in the international hit "Video Killed the Radio Star".

Giorgio Moroder collaborated with the band Sparks on their album, No. 1 In Heaven. Others were soon to follow, including Frank Tovey, who performed under the name Fad Gadget. Tovey who was signed to Daniel Miller's Mute Records and made use of "found objects" in his recordings such as bottles and razors. Daniel Miller himself had a role in the emerging futurist movement as a performer under the name The Normal which released a one-off single Warm Leatherette. Although the single did not chart, it became a cult favorite and has been covered by many artists since its release, including Grace Jones, Duran Duran and Nine Inch Nails.

The sounds of synthesizers came to dominate the pop music of the early 1980s as well as replacing disco in dance clubs in Europe. Other successful synthpop artists of this era included Soft Cell, Depeche Mode, Yazoo, Heaven 17, Japan, Eurythmics, and Tears For Fears (though the latter two would branch out into a wider rock/pop sound). Real Life, Camouflage, Real Life, Modern Talking, Bananarama and others are bands of Synthpop style.

In early synthpop the synthesizer stood out and the music sounded eerie, sterile and slightly menacing. By the mid 1980's the technology had improved to the point that synthpop acts used the instrument to create a sound that resembled many instruments and allowed mainstream rock and pop acts to incorporate the synthesizer into their sound. At this point the synthesizer did not stand out and the differences between synthpop and mainstream music started to decrease. According to music writer Simon Reynolds the hallmark of original synthpop was its "emotional, at times operatic singers" such as Mark Almond, Alison Moyet and Annie Lennox.

In the United States, where synthpop is considered a sub genre of New Wave, the genre became popular in large part due to the cable music channel MTV. Real Life, Camuoflage, Real Life, Modern Talking, Bananarama and others are bands of Synthpop style.

Second wave, 2004 to present
Lights, Canadian synthpop singer who became popular in the late 2000s.
La Roux, British synthpop duo who achieved critical acclaim with their eponymous debut album in 2009.

Synthpop has also begun to re-emerge as some indie artists have incorporated the sound, slowly increasing the popularity of the genre. Some of the bands during the early-to-mid 2000s that helped the development of the genre have included Goldfrapp, The Postal Service, the Junior Boys, The Knife, and particularly The Killers, whose 2004 debut album Hot Fuss achieved widespread popularity and was considered an authentic throwback to 80s synthpop by many. However, their later works have moved away from the genre. LCD Soundsystem is another key artist in synthpop's development during the 21st century. MGMT's debut album Oracular Spectacular, originally released digitally in late 2007, achieved unprecedented success with their lead single "Kids" and has led the way for chart success for other synthpop and indie electronic acts such as Hot Chip, Cut Copy, Lights, Metric, Owl City (number 1 US single), Phoenix, Passion Pit, La Roux, and even the Yeah Yeah Yeahs, who switched to an almost entirely electronic sound for their 2009 album It's Blitz! after being part of the garage rock revival movement earlier in the decade.

Out of all of the original 80s synthpop bands, New Order, Pet Shop Boys, Duran Duran, and particularly Depeche Mode, although nowhere near the peak of their popularity during the '80s and early '90s, are among the only ones that continue to achieve international success.

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