Balearic beat records vary between house or
Italo house and
deep house influenced sounds and a slower
R&B-influenced (under 119bpm) beat consisting of bass drum, snare and hi-hats (often produced with a
Roland TR-909 drum machine) programmed in certain laid-back, swing-beat patterns; plus
soul, Latin, African,
funk and
dub affectations; and production techniques borrowed from other styles of dance music that were popular at the time. Vocals were sometimes present, but much of the music was instrumental. The sounds of acoustic instruments such as guitar and piano were sometimes incorporated into Balearic beat. Having been primarily associated with a particular percussion pattern that eventually fell out of vogue, the style eventually faded from prominence and its repertoire was subsumed by the more general "
chill out" and "
downtempo" genres. The style of Balearic beat is described by the original followers, as opposed to its UK followers, as the ability for the DJ to play across a broad range of styles, from early minimal
New Beat to the first extended remixes of pop-songs, making Balearic DJ sets those that tend to have the sharpest turns of musical direction. While the public outside
Ibiza generally describes Balearic beat as a music style, the island based community regard Balearic beat as a non-style or a healthy disrespect to style conformity and a challenge to the norm. It's a freestyle expression that seamlessly binds sporadic vinyl inspiration through technical flair on the turntables. Today, due to stylistic segregation in
electronic dance music, few promoters and DJs dare to stretch the spectrum of styles that far in fear of losing identity and clients. DJ Alfredo still heralds the most diversity among Ibiza DJs, but generally the approach to mixing as well as the terminology, have been swallowed up by the
Chillout scene. Ibiza is still considered by some to have its own "sound", however, including the music of
Jens Gad, co-creator of
Enigma, and his new chillout-world-influenced hybrid project,
Achillea, recorded in his studio in the hills overlooking Ibiza. Compilations such as
Global Lounge Sessions: The Balearic Sound of Ibiza, released in 2002, and Sequoia Groove's
Buddha-Lounge series, continue to be released. These generally feature
house music and certain downtempo selections, not the old style of Balearic beat,
per se. Some prefer to use the term
Balearic more generally, however, to apply to all of these styles. ==See also==