Dance Classics by PartyFavorz cover art

Dance Classics by PartyFavorz

Dance Classics by PartyFavorz

By: Party Favorz
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About this listen

The “Dance Classics” channel offers a journey through time with non-stop mixes from four iconic decades of dance music. This channel brings together the most memorable dance songs from the 70s, 80s, 90s, and 00s. Enjoy a diverse collection of tracks that have made an enduring impact on dance floors worldwide. Whether you’re revisiting favorites or discovering classics for the first time, this channel is your gateway to the enduring beats and rhythms that have defined generations.© 2023 Party Favorz. All rights reserved. Music
Episodes
  • BackSpin: Electro House Classics & Other Millennial Dance Club Hits! [2009 — 2010] Volume 8
    May 17 2025
    Play Pause DonateDownloadShare var srp_player_params_682b34f4f0aa9 = {"title":"","store_title_text":"","albums":[],"hide_artwork":"true","sticky_player":"true","show_album_market":0,"show_track_market":"true","hide_timeline":0,"player_layout":"skin_boxed_tracklist","orderby":"date","order":"DESC","hide_album_title":"true","hide_album_subtitle":"true","hide_player_title":"true","hide_track_title":"true","show_publish_date":"false","show_skip_bt":"false","show_volume_bt":"false","show_speed_bt":"false","show_shuffle_bt":"false","use_play_label":"true","use_play_label_with_icon":"true","progressbar_inline":"true","spectro":"","hide_progressbar":"true","main_settings":"||"} var srp_player_params_args_682b34f4f0aa9 = {"before_widget":"","after_widget":"","before_title":"","after_title":"","widget_id":"arbitrary-instance-682b34f4f0aa9"} if(typeof setIronAudioplayers !== "undefined"){ setIronAudioplayers("arbitrary-instance-682b34f4f0aa9"); } Album : BackSpin [2009 — 2010] Volume 8Genre : Electro House, Funky HouseYear : 2025Total Time : 2:57:35 Kelly Clarkson - My Life Would Suck Without You (Chriss Ortega Club Mix) Jordin Sparks - Battlefield (Bimbo Jones Remix) Katy Perry feat. Snoop Dogg - California Gurls (Liam Keegan Electro Remix) Pussycat Dolls - Bottle Pop (Dave Audé Club Mix) Kelis - Acapella (Dave Audé Club Mix) The Temper Trap - Sweet Disposition (Mark Picchiotti's Dirty South Extended Club Edit) Janet - Make Me (Dave Audé Club Mix) Oceana - Body Rock (Dave Audé Vocal Mix) Jipsta - I Want Your Sex (Mike Rizzo M2 Original Club Mix) Kaci Battaglia with Ludiacris - Body Shots (Wawa Extended Mix) Katy Perry - Peacock (Reynaldo Klawa Club Remix) Rihanna - Rude Boy (Wideboys Stadium Club Mix) Madonna - Celebration (Oakenfold Remix) Black Eyed Peas - I Gotta Feelin' (David Guetta Remix) Kelly Rowland feat. David Guetta - Commander (Extended Mix) Tiesto & Sneaky Sound System - I Will Be Here (Wolfgang Gartner Remix) Train - Hey Soul Sister (Karmatronic Club Mix) Robyn - Dancing On My Own (Buzz Junkies Club Mix) Ke$ha - Your Love Is My Drug (Dave Audé Club Mix) Pussycat Dolls - Hush Hush (I Will Survive) (Dave Audé Extended Mix) Macy Gray - Beauty In The World (Cutmore Extended Remix) Jason Derülo - Whatcha Say (Johnny Vicious Club Mix) Wynter Gordon - Dirty Talk (Chew Fu Extended Mix) Rihanna - Russian Roulette (Chew Fu Black Russian Club Mix) Wildboyz feat. Ameerah - The Sound Of Missing You (Extended Mix) David Guetta feat. Kelly Rowland - When Love Takes Over (Original Mix) Katy Perry - Last Friday Night (T.G.I.F.) (Almighty Club Mix) Scissor Sisters - Fire With Fire (Digital Dog Club Mix) Miami Starfish feat. Jermaine Stewart - Clothes Off (Soul Seekerz Club Mix) The Ian Carey Project - Get Shaky (Ian Carey Original Mix) Richard Vission & Static Revenger feat. Luciana - I Like That (Dave Audé Club Remix) Avicii & Sebastien Drums - My Feelings For You (Original Mix)
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    2 hrs and 58 mins
  • BackSpin: Electro House Classics & Other Millennial Dance Club Hits! [2009 — 2010] Volume 7
    May 14 2025
    Play Pause DonateDownloadShare var srp_player_params_682b434a72bef = {"title":"","store_title_text":"","albums":[],"hide_artwork":"true","sticky_player":"true","show_album_market":0,"show_track_market":"true","hide_timeline":0,"player_layout":"skin_boxed_tracklist","orderby":"date","order":"DESC","hide_album_title":"true","hide_album_subtitle":"true","hide_player_title":"true","hide_track_title":"true","show_publish_date":"false","show_skip_bt":"false","show_volume_bt":"false","show_speed_bt":"false","show_shuffle_bt":"false","use_play_label":"true","use_play_label_with_icon":"true","progressbar_inline":"true","spectro":"","hide_progressbar":"true","main_settings":"||"} var srp_player_params_args_682b434a72bef = {"before_widget":"","after_widget":"","before_title":"","after_title":"","widget_id":"arbitrary-instance-682b434a72bef"} if(typeof setIronAudioplayers !== "undefined"){ setIronAudioplayers("arbitrary-instance-682b434a72bef"); } Just when you thought we’d emptied the vault of bangers from this era, BackSpin Volume 7 comes stomping in with another round of club anthems that defined the dancefloors of 2009 and 2010. This was not a chill period in dance music—it was a full-throttle takeover. These weren’t just tracks you heard in the club; they were the soundtracks to pre-games, afterparties, breakups, hookups, and everything in between. By this point, Electro House had become the default language of clubland. It didn’t matter if the artist was an underground favorite or a Disney Channel graduate—everyone wanted in on the energy. And with remixers like Dave Audé, Mike Rizzo, Jody den Broeder, and Jump Smokers consistently delivering top-shelf work, the line between pop and club music completely vanished. Remix Culture Was King Let’s be real—some of these tracks hit harder in their remixed versions than the originals ever could. Usher’s “DJ Got Us Fallin’ In Love” was already slick, but Jump Smokers cranked it up with a glammed-up club version that dominated summer playlists. Christina Aguilera’s “Not Myself Tonight” might’ve been polarizing on radio, but Jody den Broeder turned it into a pulsing floor-filler with an edge. Black Eyed Peas continued their chart domination with “Imma Be” and “Meet Me Halfway,” both of which got remixed within an inch of their lives—one dirty, one dreamy, and both undeniable. And let’s talk about Lady Gaga, who basically lived on the dance charts during this period. You’ll find three of her biggest tracks here—“Bad Romance,” “Paparazzi,” and “Love Game”—all reworked by Dave Audé into high-energy triumphs that left no corner of the dancefloor untouched. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kszwg8u9--w The Rise of Selena Gomez One of the most fascinating shifts during this period was the arrival of Selena Gomez—best known at the time as a squeaky-clean Disney princess. But her early releases with The Scene were smart, polished pop that lent themselves surprisingly well to club remixes. “Round & Round” and “A Year Without Rain” became club favorites thanks to 7th Heaven and Dave Audé, respectively, who transformed them into soaring dance tracks without stripping away her youthful charm. Selena’s transition from Disney darling to legitimate pop artist began here, and the clubs were ready to embrace her. Ke$ha’s Party Nation Also bursting into the scene like a glitter bomb was Ke$ha, whose breakout hit “TiK ToK” became a global party anthem. Fred Falke’s remix gave it just enough disco-drenched sophistication while keeping its messy, rebellious spirit intact. Ke$ha’s arrival signaled a new wave of club pop—raucous, unfiltered,
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    3 hrs and 13 mins
  • BackSpin: Electro House Classics & Other Millennial Dance Club Hits! [2009 — 2010] Volume 6
    May 10 2025
    Play Pause DonateDownloadShare var srp_player_params_682ae092e3fee = {"title":"","store_title_text":"","albums":[],"hide_artwork":"true","sticky_player":"true","show_album_market":0,"show_track_market":"true","hide_timeline":0,"player_layout":"skin_boxed_tracklist","orderby":"date","order":"DESC","hide_album_title":"true","hide_album_subtitle":"true","hide_player_title":"true","hide_track_title":"true","show_publish_date":"false","show_skip_bt":"false","show_volume_bt":"false","show_speed_bt":"false","show_shuffle_bt":"false","use_play_label":"true","use_play_label_with_icon":"true","progressbar_inline":"true","spectro":"","hide_progressbar":"true","main_settings":"||"} var srp_player_params_args_682ae092e3fee = {"before_widget":"","after_widget":"","before_title":"","after_title":"","widget_id":"arbitrary-instance-682ae092e3fee"} if(typeof setIronAudioplayers !== "undefined"){ setIronAudioplayers("arbitrary-instance-682ae092e3fee"); } It’s time once again to rewind the clock and fire up your favorite dance memories with Volume 6 of our BackSpin series, spotlighting the electric surge of Electro House and other club-defining hits from the early millennium. This installment zeroes in on 2009–2010—two powerhouse years that marked a massive turning point for electronic dance music and the global club scene. By this point, the shimmering dominance of the big room anthems helmed by remix legends like Thunderpuss, Hex Hector, and Victor Calderone had begun to fade. Their reign throughout the late '90s and early 2000s had set the standard for peak-hour energy, but by 2009, a new breed of producers began rewriting the rulebook. The Electro House Revolution This was the moment when Electro House officially took center stage. David Guetta broke into the U.S. mainstream and never looked back, while the Swedish House Mafia began building their empire brick by brick. Artists like Bimbo Jones, Jody den Broeder, Wideboys, Jump Smokers, Mike Rizzo, and Wawa steadily made names for themselves by turning pop into gold—remixing everything from the obvious club fodder to unexpected chart-toppers. Their influence was unmistakable. If their names were attached to a remix, you knew you were in for something massive. What made this shift so monumental is that the remixers became just as famous—if not more so—than the original artists. Guetta and Swedish House Mafia didn’t just fill clubs; they packed stadiums and headlined the very festivals that were just beginning to explode in North America. Electronic music wasn’t just for the underground anymore—it was pop. Commercial Kings of the Club Charts Yet, while Guetta and SHM were scaling the highest heights, others carved out their own niche—less flashy but no less effective. Remix powerhouses like Cahill, Moto Blanco, and Dave Audé were hitting hard and consistently. Their mixes dominated Billboard's Dance Club charts and brought just the right balance of commercial accessibility and dancefloor credibility. Moto Blanco leaned heavily into Disco House—reinventing the genre with crisp, soulful vocals over chugging basslines and glittery synths. Meanwhile, Cahill and Dave Audé turned pop tracks into pure club fuel, often elevating songs far beyond their original versions. These guys weren’t interested in the spotlight—they were all about the sound. And club DJs and promoters knew: if you needed a floor-filler, you grabbed a remix from one of them. Pop Royalty Ascends This stretch also marked a major shift in pop culture, with a new generation of women dominating both the charts and the dancefloor. Rihanna was rising like a phoenix,
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    3 hrs and 8 mins

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