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Genre

dance pop

Top Dance pop Artists

Showing 25 of 58 artists
1

78.1 million

125.8 million listeners

2

12.3 million

65.7 million listeners

3

9.9 million

56.5 million listeners

4

9.4 million

49.0 million listeners

5

16.2 million

46.1 million listeners

6

9.0 million

43.7 million listeners

7

18.4 million

34.4 million listeners

8

7.2 million

34.3 million listeners

9

5.5 million

33.4 million listeners

10

6.9 million

28.0 million listeners

11

3.9 million

23.4 million listeners

12

3.2 million

22.3 million listeners

13

2.2 million

20.6 million listeners

14

1.9 million

19.7 million listeners

15

2.3 million

17.0 million listeners

16

8.3 million

16.6 million listeners

17

2.0 million

15.0 million listeners

18

849,613

14.7 million listeners

19

1.2 million

13.4 million listeners

20

1.2 million

12.2 million listeners

21

1.2 million

12.1 million listeners

22

2.3 million

11.7 million listeners

23

4.6 million

11.7 million listeners

24

3.5 million

11.6 million listeners

25

584,712

9.4 million listeners

About Dance pop

Dance pop is a shimmering crossroads where pop songwriting meets club-ready rhythm. It blends catchy melodies, bright hooks, and glossy, radio-friendly production with a four-on-the-floor pulse that begs to move the body. Its sound runs from sparkling synth arpeggios to disco-tinged basslines, always aimed at turning a single into a memorable moment on the dance floor and then letting that moment echo on headphones, radios, and stadiums alike. The genre didn’t spring from one year or one artist, but rather from a late-1970s to early-1980s shift in pop music that embraced kinetic beats without losing a strong, ear-catching chorus.

Historically, dance pop emerges from the same lineage as disco and synth-pop, but with a punchier, more club-oriented focus. In the United States and Britain, a wave of producers—most famously Stock Aitken Waterman—crafted lean, hook-driven productions that transformed songs into immediate dance-floor anthems. Madonna’s early 1980s records, and the glossy work of Kylie Minogue and Janet Jackson, helped establish a template: pop songs with a guaranteed moment of lift on the dance floor. The 1990s broadened the palette with larger-than-life choruses and international influence, as Swedish producers like Max Martin began shaping chart-ready hits that sounded equally at home on MTV and in intrepid clubs.

The 2000s and 2010s cemented dance pop as a global lingua franca. It absorbed electronic textures from electropop and disco-house, while trading in R&B grooves and, at times, hip-hop cadences. Britney Spears, Christina Aguilera, and later artists kept the genre’s core: a bright, insistent chorus paired with a propulsion that keeps listeners moving. Lady Gaga elevated dance pop to a theatrical, fashion-forward realm, demonstrating how pop could fuse performance art with club-ready production. In recent years, stars like Dua Lipa, Ariana Grande, and Katy Perry have carried the mantle forward, delivering punchy, anthemic tracks that thrive on festival stages and streaming playlists alike. Max Martin, the Swedish hitmaker, has become one of the most influential ambassadors, crafting songs that define the modern dance-pop sound—memorable melodies, precise hooks, and a sense of inevitability when the chorus hits.

Geographically, dance pop is a global phenomenon. It flourishes in the United States and United Kingdom, where radio and streaming ecosystems propel hits quickly, but it also resonates deeply in Sweden’s pop machine, across mainland Europe, and in Latin America and parts of Asia where artists splice dance-pop DNA with local sensibilities. It has proven versatile enough to sit beside EDM, house, and Latin rhythms, yet remains unmistakably pop—designed to be sung along to, danced to, and shared across cultures. For enthusiasts, dance pop is a continually evolving laboratory of hooks, energy, and mood—an engine for carnival-like energy and a testament to how a great melody can propel a beat into the night.