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'' 'Future Pop''' is in the second half of the 1990s, arising style of [[Electronic Dance Music | Electronic Dance Music]], which, with its clean, danceable song structures in 4/4-time on [[Synthpop | Electro Pop-recourse]] - and [[Techno Trance (Music) | Trance]] components. Moreover, one sees the roots of this in the [[Electronic Body Music | EBM]] anchored, although sound <ref Name="Matzke/Seeliger"> Peter Matzke & Tobias Seeliger ' 'The Gothic and Dark Wave Lexicon'', p. 166, Schwarzkopf and Schwarzkopf, Berlin 2003, ISBN 3-89602-277-6</ref> main representative of the style are or were [[Apoptygma Berzerk]], [[VNV Nation]] and [[Covenant]].
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'''Futurepop''' is in the second half of the 1990s, arising style of [[Electronic Dance Music | Electronic Dance Music]], which, with its clean, danceable song structures in 4/4-time on [[Synthpop | Electro Pop-recourse]] - and [[Techno Trance (Music) | Trance]] components. Moreover, one sees the roots of this in the [[Electronic Body Music | EBM]] anchored, although sound <ref Name="Matzke/Seeliger"> Peter Matzke & Tobias Seeliger ' 'The Gothic and Dark Wave Lexicon'', p. 166, Schwarzkopf and Schwarzkopf, Berlin 2003, ISBN 3-89602-277-6</ref> main representative of the style are or were [[Apoptygma Berzerk]], [[VNV Nation]] and [[Covenant]].
    
==Origin of name ==
 
==Origin of name ==