320 Kbps House Eurodance Pop Dance New - Snap Discography 19902009
The Snap! Discography: A Retro Dance Music Journey (1990-2009) - 320 kbps House Eurodance Pop
Album:
Welcome to Tomorrow (1994).
| Year | Release Type | Title | Style | |------|---------------|---------------------------|-----------------------| | 1990 | Album | World Power | House / Hip-House | | 1992 | Album | The Madman’s Return | Eurodance | | 1995 | Album | Welcome to Tomorrow | Pop Dance | | 1996 | Compilation | Snap! Attack (Remixes) | House / Trance | | 2000 | Single | "Gimme a Thrill" | Nu-Disco | | 2003 | Single | "Rhythm Is a Dancer 03" | Euro-Trance | | 2009 | Compilation | The Power: Greatest Hits | Pop Dance / Electro | The Snap
References
- The House Era (1990–1991): The early albums (World Power) are raw. Tracks like "The Power" and "Ooops Up" are rooted in Hip-House. They sample heavily (lamentably, some earlier digital reissues use "re-played" samples rather than the originals due to licensing, so keep an ear out for that). The sound is aggressive, anthem-like, and purely club-focused.
- The Eurodance Peak (1992–1995): This is the core of the collection. With The Madman's Return and Welcome to Tomorrow, Snap! perfected the Eurodance formula: rap verses (Turbo B) paired with soaring diva vocals (Jackie Harris, Penny Ford, Niki Harris). "Rhythm is a Dancer" remains one of the best-engineered pop-dance tracks of the decade. The 320 rips do justice to the dynamic range between the stripped-back rap sections and the explosive choruses.
- The Pop/Commercial Shift (Late 90s–2009):** As the discography progresses into the 2000s, the sound shifts toward radio-friendly Pop-Dance. The grit of the early house beats is replaced by polished, radio-ready production. While these later tracks lack the raw energy of the early 90s, they are historically important for seeing how the act adapted to the rise of Trance and modern EDM.