We’re living in the golden age of disco. No really.
In the late 90s a Parisian DJ named Dimitri from Paris started updating long-lost 70s disco and funk (rare grooves) tracks using drum machines and sequencers. The new tracks were usually called “re-edits” by the labels and as the sound caught on over the next few years, the disco revival turned into a new sound entirely.
Over the past few years, the nu-disco movement has gotten darker, more stripped down and more influenced by funk and electro than 70s string arrangements.