Sugar Shack - I Wanna Take You Higher - Wired Recordings - Euro House
|
Out of Stock |
Track ListingA1 I Wanna Take You Higher (Orlando Mix) (8:59)A2 I Wanna Take You Higher (Mothers Nervous Breakdown Mix) (4:25) B1 I Wanna Take You Higher (Stonekikka Mix) (6:01) B2 I Wanna Take You Higher (P.G. Funk Mix) (5:39) Media Condition » Mint (M) Sleeve Condition » Mint (M) |
|
| Artist | Sugar Shack | ||
| Title | I Wanna Take You Higher | ||
| Label | Wired Recordings | ||
| Catalogue | WIRED 1219 | ||
| Format | Vinyl 12 Inch | ||
| Released | 1995 | ||
| Genre | Euro House |
Other Titles by Sugar Shack
• I Wanna Take You Higher • I Wanna Take You Higher • I Wanna Take You Higher • I Wanna Take You Higher • I Wanna Take You Higher •
Some Other Artists in the Euro House Genre• Cappella • Eurogroove • Snap! • Culture Beat • Technotronic & Ya Kid K • Club House & Carl Fanini • Jeff Wayne & Ben Liebrand • Clock • Alex Party • Clubzone • Milli Vanilli • Rage • Technotronic & Reggie • Prima • Twenty 4 Seven & Captain Hollywood • Anticappella • 2 Unlimited • Huff 'n' Puff • Dario G • Urban Cookie Collective • Popcorn • Snap! & Turbo B. • Abbacadabra • Technotronic • Obsession • Lippy Lou • Zeitia Massiah • Spacedust • Partizan • Who's That Girl! • Jam Tronik • Livin' Joy • Livin' Joy • Wareband • Yann Fontaine • Undercover • Gino Latino • Rozalla • Splash • Nosotros • |
Some Other Artists on the Wired Recordings Label• Raw Stylus • Space 2000 • Jhana • Elevatorman • Shola • Source Of Light • Decibel • M. Doc • Jai • Little Axe • Bug City • Ruby Turner • Virtue • Space Brothers • |
Information on the Euro House Genre
House music, also an underground genre in the United States, had come to the UK and continental Europe with the rise of acid house and "rave" techno in the late 1980s. By the early 1990s, with the rise of the Belgian New Beat, house then became associated with Belgium and the Netherlands.Some of the first songs with elements of what would later be called Eurodance are house music. For example, Strike It Up by Black Box (1990) and Rhythm is a Dancer by Snap! (1992) both have the duet characteristic of Eurodance, and Everybody's Free (To Feel Good) by Rozalla (1991) has the characteristic synthesizer riff.
Of course, not all European house music was absorbed into the Eurodance genre. By the early 2000s, it remained a style distinct from Eurodance with harder synth and a slower tempo, for example Satisfaction by Benny Benassi (2003).
Data from the Discogs music database. Submit a Release.

