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Leila K - Ça Plane Pour Moi - Polydor - Euro House

Leila K - Ça Plane Pour Moi - Polydor - Euro House
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Track Listing

A1 Ça Plane Pour Moi (Long)
A2 Ça Plane Pour Moi (Felix Edit Part 1)
AA1 Ça Plane Pour Moi (Felix Part 1)
AA2 Ça Plane Pour Moi (Felix Part 2)


Media Condition » Near Mint (NM or M-)
Sleeve Condition » Very Good Plus (VG+)
Artist Leila K
Title Ça Plane Pour Moi
Label Polydor
Catalogue PQX3
Format Vinyl 12 Inch
Released 1993
Genre Euro House

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Other Titles by Leila K

Ça Plane Pour MoiOpen SesameOpen Sesame


Some Other Artists in the Euro House Genre

CappellaCulture BeatEurogrooveSnap!Technotronic & Ya Kid KAlex Party2 UnlimitedClockJeff Wayne & Ben LiebrandUrban Cookie CollectiveBlack BoxMilli VanilliTwenty 4 Seven & Captain HollywoodClub House & Carl FaniniHuff 'n' PuffRageDJ H. Feat. StefyAbbacadabraObsessionTechnotronic & ReggieClubzoneDivaDario GPrimaTechnotronicPopcornNatural Born Grooves49ersWho's That Girl!UndercoverNosotrosLivin' JoyWestbamLivin' JoyJam TronikPartizanBorsettaWarebandYann FontaineNomad

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Some Other Artists on the Polydor Label

Level 42ShakatakRoxy MusicOlympic RunnersJean-Michel JarreAndrew Lloyd WebberJames LastVisageVangelisGloria GaynorVanessa WilliamsPeaches & HerbGodley & CremeSecond ImageThe Dave Clark FiveSunsonicRaissaDirty White BoyPrincessNu ColoursThe ShadowsLloyd Cole & The CommotionsMonyakaJon & VangelisPepsi & ShirlieLadies FirstRainbowGenelabCoast To CoastYazzBarclay James HarvestAlicia BridgesTony! Toni! Toné!David GrantDaniel BedingfieldMelodi BrownCommodoresElla FitzgeraldThe Style CouncilThe Jam

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Information on the Euro House Genre

House music, also an underground genre in the United States, had come to the UK and continental Europe with the rise of acid house and "rave" techno in the late 1980s. By the early 1990s, with the rise of the Belgian New Beat, house then became associated with Belgium and the Netherlands.

Some of the first songs with elements of what would later be called Eurodance are house music. For example, Strike It Up by Black Box (1990) and Rhythm is a Dancer by Snap! (1992) both have the duet characteristic of Eurodance, and Everybody's Free (To Feel Good) by Rozalla (1991) has the characteristic synthesizer riff.

Of course, not all European house music was absorbed into the Eurodance genre. By the early 2000s, it remained a style distinct from Eurodance with harder synth and a slower tempo, for example Satisfaction by Benny Benassi (2003).

Data from the Discogs music database. Submit a Release.