Funkymix Collection 📥
Listening through the collection is like walking through a hall of fame for popular music, but with a distinct "club polish."
While there are hundreds of titles under the FUNKYMIX COLLECTION umbrella, certain volumes have achieved "holy grail" status. FUNKYMIX COLLECTION
Volume 4: The Ghetto Funk Edition Arguably the dirtiest of the bunch. This volume features heavy use of the "Think Break" (from Lyn Collins' "Think (About It)"). It is raw, distorted, and intended for warehouse parties. Key Track: "Funky President (Bootleg Mix)". Listening through the collection is like walking through
Volume 12: Electro-Boogie This marks the shift toward 808 drum machines. Here, the funk guitar is replaced by synth stabs and robotic vocoders. It bridges Afrika Bambaataa with Daft Punk. Key Track: "Planet Rock Breaks". It is raw, distorted, and intended for warehouse parties
Volume 24: The Nu-Funk Revival A modern masterpiece. This volume features live bass guitar recordings (not samples) layered over programmed drums. It is cleaner, fatter, and designed for festival main stages. Key Track: "Uptown Funk (Funkymix Re-Drum)".
Search for "high intensity workout music" on any platform, and you will find user-created playlists borrowing heavily from the FUNKYMIX COLLECTION. The relentless rhythm (steady 120-128 BPM) with syncopated funk guitar stabs is scientifically perfect for cardio. The "drop" in a Funkymix track often coincides perfectly with a sprint interval.
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