I wrote a guideline for putting on techno contras a while back (see link below) 
and included some additional terms which are sometimes heard when talking about 
non-traditional contra dance music.
Crossover
Livetronica
Electro-acoustic
Electroflow (for fully pre-recorded music events)
There are two main components that I think distinguish “techno” and other 
non-traditional music contra dances from the more traditional:
music that includes one or more of the following: looping, beat mixes, 
sampling, remixing, unusual instrumentation, non-32-bar music, the use of 
non-traditional music or musical references, particularly in terms of samples
lowered lights and "club" or “theatrical" style lighting.
In my experience, what is considered "techno" or "crossover" music runs the 
gamut from music that is entirely live with extensive use of electronics to 
modify and loop the music, to fully pre-recorded music tracks, sometimes 
traditional fiddle music, other times Top 40 remixes. Some DJs do some remixing 
on the spot). In between those two extremes are groups like Buddy System (Julie 
Vallimont of Nor'easter and Noah VanNorstrand), Firecloud (another Julie 
Vallimont group), Contra Force, and Phase X (Christopher Jacoby's group) which 
use pre-mixed samples, beats loops but then play live instruments such as 
keyboard, fiddle and guitar on top of that.

https://www.facebook.com/notes/will-loving/how-to-put-on-techno-contra-dances-my-experience-over-multiple-years-and-events-/10151541411764182/
 
<https://www.facebook.com/notes/will-loving/how-to-put-on-techno-contra-dances-my-experience-over-multiple-years-and-events-/10151541411764182/>

With regard to the terms you’ve listed. I can’t say I’ve ever heard “iPod 
dance” and it’s probably on it’s way out due to iPods and other standalone 
music players also being replaced by phones, iPads and other tablets. The best 
example of an "Alternative Music Dance” would, I think, be Lisa Greenleaf’s 
“Alternative Music Contra” dances. She has premixed music from a number of 
sources including jazz, pop, rock, etc. and then recorded her calls over the 
music. She teaches the dances, starts the music, and often jumps in to dance 
once things are going well.

Will


> On Jan 20, 2020, at 9:42 AM, Bob Peterson via Contra Callers 
> <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> I’m always on the lookout for terms that describe the style of using 
> non-traditional and often non-live music. So far I’ve seen or used:
> iPod dance
> Alternative music dance
> Fusion contra
> Techno contra
> DJ’d contra
> 
> Q: What other terms have people seen? 
> 
> Q: What do the terms mean to you? For instance here is what I understand:
> iPod dance - pre-mixed music, genre unspecified
> Alternative music dance - ditto iPod dance, but livelier
> Fusion contra - ?
> Techno contra - live performance electronic, beat-heavy music
> DJ’d contra - caller and DJ are not the same person?
> 
> I’d like to focus this thread on terminology, not what’s bad (or good) about 
> the non-traditional styles. It would be great to have other threads discuss 
> values and preferences, if someone wants to tackle framing that conversation.
> 
> I like to mix and call contras to recorded music, so this is really a 
> marketing-related topic for me. Currently I’m using “alternative music contra 
> dance”.
> 
> \Bob Peterson
> home dance: https://lcfd.org/jp <https://lcfd.org/jp>
> 
> _______________________________________________
> Contra Callers mailing list -- [email protected]
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--

Will Loving
2419 S York St Apt 5
Denver CO 80210-5319
+1 413 253-7223  (GMT –7, Mountain Time)  
+1 413-221-8626  (iPhone)
[he/him]

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