The jewel in A-ha’s crown, of course, is the dazzling debut single “Take on Me.” This synth-pop gem is chiseled like a diamond, with a perfect keyboard riff and a melody that moves in and out of major keys just as singer Morten Harket’s voice turns from desperate to hopeful and back again. Still, he could hardly fail with this song’s thumping beat and “hey, sexy lady” refrain. (We’ll ignore the ruling from Hurby “Luv Bug” Azor, who guests on the song, that pushing it is “only [for] the sexy people.”),The disco-inflected vibes on house goon Todd Terje's most infamous single make it a versatile party tool. The fact that it’s dedicated to simply being happy—it’s not about finding bliss because of a specific reason—though, hey, if you just got the job, kissed the girl, canoed the Hudson,Howard and Guy Lawrence, the two young brothers that make up U.K. dance phenom Disclosure, originally surmised that their 2012 single "Latch" was too odd to find mainstream success. When you pop this one on at a bash, take a cue from the bros in the video’s gym audience: Bang your head.After a decade that saw the beehive-topped party band enshrined in the college-rock pantheon—and dealt the group a crippling blow with the death of beloved guitarist Ricky Wilson—the B-52s roared back to their career peak with this ode to a “little place where we can get together.” Tin roof, rusted—what does it mean? Few dance-pop classics feel more urgent or fierce than “Tell It to My Heart”; you can see that Dayne’s been waiting her whole life to belt out lines like “Body to body / Soul to soul / Always feel you near.” The lyrics might read like bad sophomore-year poetry, but blend them with unabashedly hammy ’80s synths and a so-passionate-it’s-a-little-scary delivery, and the result is a sonic Roman candle, blasting fireballs of fun onto the dance floor.Pop-idol pinups they may have been, but the members of Norwegian trio A-ha also made great, genuinely inventive music in their mid-’80s heyday.
“Like a Prayer” is a crazy, outlandish, imaginative, absurd song, which makes its success as a dance-floor filler all the more ridiculous and wonderful. "—,The music industry took a minute to catch wind of Fetty's earworm-machine potential, but once net virality took hold a year after the original release of "Trap Queen," the rise was nothing short of meteoric. Like Orwell’s,MJ’s hits grew increasingly shrill and even aggro as he entered the.A truly great party has to have drama, and who better to provide this than the Queen of Pop, Madonna.
Put this on at a party now and watch as everyone around you immediately begins to pogo.The song that defined an era makes most statements about it seem trite. You can reach as at:© BOTY Movies & Media, 2015 - 2018. And it still does.Get a huge dose of ’80s nostalgia by blasting this spiteful, synthy song, a poppy take on Gloria Jones’s upbeat, girl-groupy cut from ’65. The threesome (with a little help from ringers Q-Tip, Maceo Parker and Bootsy Collins) come up with “Groove Is in the Heart,” a sweetly innocent percolator of a tune that, against all odds, becomes the worldwide club smash of 1990. Here is a list of the Top 100 Dance & Party Songs (In No Particular Order):All of our music is the clean radio friendly versions,Playlists tailored to your specifications,Any song will be available to you no matter how rare,Music going as far back to the 40's to today's newest and hottest hits,We have the special 8bar and intro/outro versions of songs for mixing,Party Rock Anthem – LMFAO Feat. On the one hand: multipazillionaire hip-hop star/ladies’ man/Lil Wayne-BFF who curses a lot. But the very best parties have a feeling of unbridled joy to them, and this 1984 hit from Wham! Yep, pure dance-floor venom.You’re not just encouraged to dance during this jam, one of the all-lady rap crew’s first and biggest hits; you’re actually ordered to hit the dance floor and work up a sweat.