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Genre

new rave

Top New rave Artists

Showing 25 of 94 artists
1

1.5 million

9.1 million listeners

2

1.4 million

6.0 million listeners

3

1.1 million

2.9 million listeners

4

442,499

1.3 million listeners

5

593,362

1.2 million listeners

6

545,584

959,003 listeners

7

311,549

830,836 listeners

8

709,216

789,652 listeners

9

769,764

741,907 listeners

10

319,496

674,719 listeners

11

356,535

580,160 listeners

12

106,884

541,950 listeners

13

344,114

424,837 listeners

14

206,455

423,504 listeners

15

274,538

383,267 listeners

16

3,071

364,199 listeners

17

305,197

343,701 listeners

18

178,174

259,266 listeners

19

141,323

230,699 listeners

20

139,567

214,634 listeners

21

182,558

213,663 listeners

22

167,587

199,217 listeners

23

232,005

198,646 listeners

24

106,533

184,622 listeners

25
!!!

!!!

167,749

176,429 listeners

About New rave

New rave is a mid- to late-2000s UK-born phenomenon that fused indie rock DNA with bright, club-ready electronic flourishes, creating a neon-saturated, dancefloor-friendly variant of the post-punk revival. Born from a moment when guitars and synths stopped arguing and started dancing together, it crystallized around 2005–2007 as journalists and tastemakers began labeling a specific mood: muscular basslines, gleaming synth arpeggios, shouted choruses, and an aesthetic that borrowed from rave culture, sci‑fi imagery, and streetwear. The term itself was popularized in music press as a descriptor for a wave of acts that made guitar-driven music feel urgent on the dancefloor again.

Sonic hallmarks of new rave include razor-sharp guitars tempered by sweeping synths, propulsive 4/4 kick drums, and a penchant for hooky, anthem-like refrains. It sits at a crossroads: the urgency of indie rock, the cholesterol-free bass of electro, and the communal, communal-leaning energy of late-90s rave. The result is music that feels both swaggering and fidgety—kinetic but often clever, loud yet melodic, with a taste for neon imagery and futuristic aesthetics.

The movement’s most emblematic ambassadors are Klaxons, whose 2007 debut album, Myths of the Near Future, became a touchstone for the scene and helped propel the term into mainstream indie consciousness. The album’s chunky bass, shimmering synth lines, and mythic, sci‑fi lyric sensibilities set a template that many others would imitate or riff on. Another central act is New Young Pony Club, a London quartet whose punchy, electro-indebted post-punk songs—driven by tight bass, bright keys, and exuberant vocals—embodied the fashion and energy of new rave’s second wave. From there, acts like Does It Offend You, Yeah? and Hadouken! contributed high-energy, party-ready tracks that bridged indie audiences and club crowds, reinforcing the movement’s crossover appeal. The scene also found a home in clubs and festivals across the UK and Europe, with fans drawn to its nocturnal, fluorescent charm as much as its songwriting.

Geographically, new rave was most popular in the United Kingdom, especially London and other major UK cities, where club culture and the indie press collided most intensively. It also gained traction in continental Europe—France and Germany among the more receptive markets—where there was a receptive cross-pollination between electro-pop and guitar-based bands. In the United States, the wave remained more of a stylish curiosity and a club-night specialty, with pockets of interest in major cities and in indie-rock and electro scenes that welcomed the hybrid energy.

By the end of the decade, the moment cooled as styles shifted and new subgenres emerged, but the legacy of new rave endures as a provocative, flirtatious bridge between indie ethos and dance-floor spectacle. It is remembered for its electric aesthetics, its Mercury Prize–shortlisted icons, and its insistence that a night out could feel as cinematic as a record collection—glow sticks in hand, guitars blazing, and synths streaking across the room. For enthusiasts, new rave remains a vivid snapshot of a restless, playful moment when DJs and guitar heroes learned to share the spotlight.