Take That– | Rhythm Is A Dancer (12" Mix): It Only Takes A Minute (Wright Vocal Mix) | 5:12: 5:04 | row: Rhythm Is A Dancer
For more details on specific versions or to see the full credits, you can check out the Maxi Dance Sensation 7 entry on Discogs . Maxi Dance Sensation vol. 7 -2 CDS Compilation-...
This article explores the significance of this specific volume, the tracklist that defined a generation, and why the "2 CDS Compilation" format remains a holy grail for audiophiles and party lovers alike. Take That– | Rhythm Is A Dancer (12"
Format: Maxi Dance Sensation 7 2×CD, Compilation, Stereo. Format: Maxi Dance Sensation 7 2×Cassette, Compilation | Label – Catalog Maxi Dance Sensation 7 - Discogs Format: Maxi Dance Sensation 7 2×Cassette, Compilation |
To understand the value of , one must understand the music market of the 1990s. In the era before Spotify, YouTube, or even reliable high-speed internet, compilation albums were the primary way fans discovered new music. They were the curators, the tastemakers, and the soundtrack to every house party and discotheque.
Maxi Dance Sensation vol. 7 may never have existed, but its hypothetical structure reveals truths about the era’s dance music economy: the primacy of the 7-minute mix, the commodification of the DJ’s tool kit, and the listener as active participant (mixing, skipping, replaying the “good part”). Future research should examine why such compilations have been excluded from streaming-era reissues—likely due to complex licensing of multiple remixers per track. Until then, we must treat the “Maxi Dance Sensation” series as a ghost format, haunting the bargain bins of memory.
The double-CD format of vol. 7 serves a clear functional division, typically: