Guys, EDM was just a term I used so that we didn't have to get way into genre semantics. If EDM as a term bothers people, then stop using it, I guess? I don't see what makes the term EDM so offensive in and of itself other than "mainstream" artists using the term, and if that's the single criteria for usage or not, that's kind of narrow minded. If you want it to go that way, that's fine, but I find the discussion really uninteresting unless you're tying it back to what today's music sounds like so just keep that in mind.
AndrewKilpatrick wrote:When did I say dance music DIDN'T do all those things? I just said it is more potentially limiting, and limited in reality, than other forms of music...I'm not say ALL dance music is limited, though if we are getting into a genre debate, when it gets to a point its not limiting itself it'd be difficult to class as dance. And I know music is subjective, I was being subjective as it was my opinion
See, this is where my weird thesis of authorship and participation comes into play. I guess the only formal (formal as in "form"-al) limitation when it comes to popular conceptions of dance music is the rhythmic aspect -- it would be hard to use an irregular time signature and continue to call yourself "dance." But other than that, I don't see what limitations exist that are inherent to the form.
The thing that raises dance music above most other music for me is the relationship between the artists and the audience. You talk about how the function of dance music is limiting, but I'd say that the function liberates the form, because all dance music, by virtue of inviting its audience to DANCE, is collaborative in nature. When you hear about DJs talk about song selection, you always hear stuff about having to pick the right song for how the audience is interacting with the mix -- if it's too mellow pick an intense song, and vice versa, I feel like this can extend to the composition of the music itself, where the songs are composed WITH the audience in mind, not despite them.
This may seem limiting on the outset, but when you consider the kind of feedback loops that can occur when both the audience and the artist are factors in the equation, it gets a lot more compelling. You can make an argument that lots of other music is made with the audience in mind, but that relationship is one-sided -- the audience doesn't really get a voice in this situation. It's this invitation to collaboration that makes me feel like dance music is a lot more than just an attention-grabbing form. At least in principle, anyway. Most EDM these days seems like it's being made by people who wanted to be rock stars but spent their time in Ableton/Logic/Reason instead.