80-s New Wave - Dance Night At The Temple Vol. ...

| # | Artist | Track (Mix) | Year | |---|--------|-------------|------| | 1 | The Chameleons | Swamp Thing (12" version) | 1986 | | 2 | Clan of Xymox | A Day (Remix) | 1985 | | 3 | Anne Clark | Sleeper in Metropolis (Extended) | 1984 | | 4 | New Order | Confusion (1987 original mix) | 1987 | | 5 | Soft Cell | Memorabilia (Extended) | 1981 | | 6 | Fad Gadget | Collapsing New People (Dance mix) | 1984 | | 7 | The Neon Judgement | Tomorrow in the Papers | 1985 | | 8 | Visage | The Damned Don’t Cry (12") | 1982 | | 9 | The Cure | Primary (Remix) | 1981 | | 10 | Depeche Mode | Leave in Silence (Longer) | 1982 | | 11 | Ministry | Revenge (12" version) | 1983 | | 12 | Section 25 | Looking from a Hilltop (Megamix) | 1984 | | 13 | Severed Heads | Dead Eyes Opened (Extended) | 1985 | | 14 | The Danse Society | Heaven Is Waiting (12") | 1983 | | 15 | Cocteau Twins | Pearly-Dewdrops’ Drops (12" version) | 1984 |

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The legacy of the 1980s New Wave club nights extends far beyond a retro aesthetic. The "Dance Night At The Temple" phenomenon represented a vital safe haven for misfits, artists, and LGBTQ+ youth during a politically conservative decade.

The "Dance Night at The Temple" series represents more than just nostalgia for vinyl records and neon lights. It represents a time when the dance floor was a sacred space for misfits, visionaries, and anyone who found beauty in the dark. 80-s New Wave - Dance Night At The Temple Vol. ...

Any definitive compilation capturing "Dance Night at The Temple Vol. 1" would need to mirror the trajectory of a real club night. The music moved seamlessly through three distinct phases: 1. The Twilight Warm-Up (Post-Punk & Darkwave)

The emotional heart of post-punk.

High energy with that signature soaring synth riff. 2. The Mid-Night Moody Shift: Post-Punk & Darkwave | # | Artist | Track (Mix) |

No volume is complete without the Goth-tinged slowdown. Usually – "A Forest" (Robert Searle Mix) or Siouxsie and the Banshees – "Spellbound". At the Temple, this isn't a slow dance; it’s a pogo. Mohawks scrape the low-hanging ceiling tiles.

Thick fog machines obscuring the crowd, punctuated by sharp, colored neon lighting.

: Instantly recognizable, driving, and packed with space-age urgency. 2. The Darkwave Deep Cuts (The Midnight Haze) The "Dance Night at The Temple" series represents

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: Instruments like the Roland Juno-6 and Yamaha DX7 became accessible to young musicians.

This event promises to be a night to remember, with great music, dancing, and company. Share your memories of the 1980s on social media using the hashtag #80sNewWaveTemple, and you could be featured on our social media channels.

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