

Whitney Houston - I'm Every Woman (Album Version)ħ5. Quindon Tarver - Everybody's Free (To Wear Sunscreen)ħ2. Daft Punk - Around the World (Radio Edit)ħ1. Everything but the Girl - Missing (Todd Terry Remix / Radio Edit)Ħ0. Lisa Stansfield - All Around the World (Remastered)ĥ8. Eiffel 65 - Blue (Da Ba Dee) (Video Edit)ĥ6. Quad City DJ's - C'mon N' Ride It (The Train)ĥ4. Ghost Town DJs - My Boo (Hitman's Club Mix)ĥ3. Backstreet Boys - Everybody (Backstreet's Back) (Extended Version)Ĥ5. George Michael - Freedom! '90 (Remastered)Ĥ0. Adventures Of Stevie V - Dirty Cash (Money Talks) (Sold Out 7 Inch Mix)ģ7. 2 Unlimited - Get Ready (Rap Version Edit)ģ4. Whitney Houston - My Love Is Your Loveģ3. I'm Gonna Get You (Original Flavour Mix)ģ0. Beats International - Dub Be Good to MeĢ8. Londonbeat - I've Been Thinking About You (Album Version)Ģ4. Chumbawamba - Tubthumping (Album Version)ġ3. C+C Music Factory - Gonna Make You Sweat (Everybody Dance Now)Ġ9.


Vengaboys - We like to Party! (The Vengabus)Ġ7. The anything-goes aesthetic that fueled the rise of alt-rock and hip-hop led to dance floors in the ‘90s becoming unpredictable arenas where brawny rockers, house-pop cuts, runway-ready strutters, and retro-minded novelty hits could flow into one another easily, even when all they had in common was the ability to get people moving.Ġ1.

Acts like Black Box and C+C Music Factory brought club-dominating beats to the world’s streets, crafting smashes out of the wee hours’ most beloved grooves MTV-era royalty like Madonna and Janet Jackson kept pushing boundaries, minting highly danceable hits that borrowed elements from pop’s leading edge. The chaotic musical landscape of the ‘90s turned the decade’s dance parties into places where underground sensations, alt-rock standards, hip-hop anthems, and pop chart-toppers crashed into each other with glee.
