As Acid House peaked during the latter half of the 80s, its frantic, sweat-inducing collision of rhythm, bleeps and squelches was sometimes contrasted by the considerably slower and rather stern-sounding New Beat genre emerging from Belgium. This was a scene forged by homegrown DJs, including Fat Ronnie and Marc Grouls, at the Antwerp nightclub Ancienne Belgique, and via independent record labels such as Antler, Kaos Dance and R&S, among others. By the mid-90s, however, Belgian New Beat had been pretty much eclipsed by fresher club sounds from the US and UK, including Techno, Jungle and Drum & Bass.
In the past few years, certain dance music strands from decades-gone-by have been enthusiastically reappraised, knowingly-referenced or simply regurgitated by younger generations of DJs, musicians and producers. Until fairly recently, however, Belgian New Beat had somewhat vanished into the mists of time - largely overlooked by cultural archaeologists, despite its retrospective capacity to surprise, spook, amuse and bewilder. Gradually, a new generation of muso’s and club kids are rediscovering the genre…
Who better, then, to give us an overview of its original appeal than Mark Moore? A teenage punk during the late-70s, who pioneered an eclectic approach to DJ-ing within London’s most cutting-edge club scene of the following decade, this lifelong music-obsessive was one of the very first DJ’s to spin underground US house tracks in the UK around the mid-80s.