Breaks, or breakbeat, is a genre that blew up the dancefloor. Discover its roots, the best tracks, key artists and its modern revival — from The Prodigy to Florida Breaks.
Breaks, or breakbeat, is a style where every hit feels like it’s literally “breaking” the rhythm. It’s music born at the crossroads of hip hop, rave and funk, and it still remains the backbone of many dance genres — from big beat and dubstep to drum & bass and Florida breaks.
The history of Breaks: from funk to rave
The roots of breakbeat go back to the 1970s, when Bronx DJs like DJ Kool Herc started “breaking” tracks — isolating short instrumental sections (breaks) that hit the dancers the hardest. These very “breaks” became the foundation of hip hop and dance battles.
In the ’90s, UK producers breathed new life into breaks by speeding up the tempo and adding rave energy. This gave rise to subgenres such as:
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Nu Skool Breaks (Plump DJs, Stanton Warriors)
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Florida Breaks (DJ Icey, Sharaz)
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Acid Breaks, Electro Breaks, Breakcore
What makes Breaks different from “regular” electronic music?
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Non-linear rhythm: instead of a straight four-on-the-floor, you get choppy, irregular drum patterns
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Frequent use of samples from funk, hip hop and rock
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A sound that is dynamic, powerful and rhythmically complex — perfect for breakdance
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A strong groove and “swing” — your body just starts moving on its own
Subgenres and modern forms of Breaks
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Big Beat — the commercially successful side of breaks (The Prodigy, Fatboy Slim, The Chemical Brothers)
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Nu Skool Breaks — a modern, “fat” sound with electro-style filters
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Bassline Breaks, Tech Funk, Jungle Breaks — hybrids with techno, dubstep and drum & bass
Artists you should check out
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The Prodigy – Voodoo People (Pendulum Remix)
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Stanton Warriors – Da Antidote
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Plump DJs – Scram
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Krafty Kuts – Freakshow
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Aquasky vs Masterblaster – Shadow Breaks
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DJ Icey – Dreams
Fun facts
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Breaks are the backbone of breakdance: b-boys and b-girls dance specifically to those “break sections”.
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Many 2000s video games (Need for Speed, Tony Hawk’s Pro Skater) used breaks tracks in their soundtracks.
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Breakbeat remixes often hit harder than the original versions.
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Florida Breaks is still alive and kicking at underground raves across the US.
Why Breaks are back in fashion
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The trend for ’90s retro sounds
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A new wave of breakbeat-infused house and techno
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Strong club appeal wherever people want something uneven, heavy and seriously groovy
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Breaks-style sections are appearing even in modern pop and EDM hits.
Conclusion
Breaks are more than just a music style. It’s a movement, a history, the pulse of the street and the freedom to improvise. It has never truly been pure mainstream, yet it has always influenced everything around it — from hip hop and rave to today’s electronic music. If you don’t just want a simple four-on-the-floor thump but want to bend the rhythm and blow up the dancefloor, turn on some breaks.