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Ghettotech

Ghettotech (also known as Detroit club) is a genre of electronic music originating from Detroit. It combines elements of Chicago's ghetto house with electro, Detroit techno, Miami bass.[1]

Ghettotech

Early–mid-1990s, Detroit and Chicago, United States

Overview[edit]

Former Detroit music journalist for the Detroit Metro Times, Hobey Echlin describes ghettotech as a genre that combines "techno's fast beats with rap's call-and-response."[2] It features four-on-the-floor rhythms and is usually faster than most other dance music genres, at roughly 145 to 160 BPM. Vocals are often repetitive, crude, and pornographic. As DJ Godfather puts it, "the beats are really gritty, really raw, nothing polished."[3]


Ghettotech was born as a DJing style in the late 1980s, inspired by the eclecticism of The Electrifying Mojo and the fast-paced mixing and turntablism of Jeff "The Wizard" Mills. DJs would mix multiple genres including jungle, ghetto house, hip hop, R&B, electro and Detroit techno.[4][3] The music of 2 Live Crew is also cited as influential to the genre.[4]


A Detroit ghettotech style of dancing is called the jit. This dance style relies heavily on fast footwork combinations, drops, spins and improvisations. The roots of jit date back to Detroit jitterbugs in the 1970s.[5] Chicago's equivalent dance style is Juke, where the focus is on footwork dating back to the late 1980s.[3][6]


Ghettotech was an integral part of the Detroit Electronic Music Festival, an annual event.

Twilight 76

Databass

Electrofunk

Jefferson Ave

Motor City Electro Company

Intuit-Solar

666aline

Archived 2009-06-09 at the Wayback Machine article at Stylus Magazine.

"Ghettotech, The Bluffer's Guide"

article at Global Darkness.

"Ghettotech"

by Ethan Brown article.

"Ghetto tech"

Inc, CMJ Network (December 2000). . CMJ Network, Inc. {{cite book}}: |last= has generic name (help)

CMJ New Music Monthly

at Curlie

Ghettotech