Peter Robinson 

Can we dance through a recession like it’s 1992?

Snap!, 2 Unlimited and EMF - names you might have thought had been consigned to the bargain bins of history. But no.
  
  

 MC Hammer in concert at the NEC Birmingham, 1991
MC Hammer in concert at the NEC Birmingham, 1991. Photograph: Rex Features Photograph: Rex

Snap!, 2 Unlimited and EMF - names you might have thought had been consigned to the bargain bins of history. But no. Sit through a Coronation Street ad break right now, and you'll be forgiven for thinking you've flipped over to a televised version of Dave Pearce's Dance Anthems, circa 1992.

Things began innocuously enough over the summer when Britvic Drench blanket-bombed commercial breaks with a Thunderbirds puppet dancing to Snap!'s 1992 hit Rhythm Is a Dancer, and resulted in the song spending several weeks back in the charts. In the past month, however, the early-90s revival has gathered pace: Argos has wheeled out MC Hammer's U Can't Touch This (1990), monks are bouncing to House of Pain's Jump Around (1992) for Mars, and, in a double whammy from Müller yoghurts, 2 Unlimited's No Limit (1993) and EMF's Unbelievable (1990) have both been slapped over old footage of couples dancing.

These songs each fire a message at the emotional memory of a generation who first enjoyed the tracks 16 to 17 years ago - and now have a disposable income. But as Argos and MC Hammer attempt to convince viewers that their no-frills packaging policy is a boon in this lean festive period, you wonder whether this music is designed to connect on a subconscious level. If we danced our way through the last recession and it turned out all right in the end, things might not seem so gloomy in 2008 and a few Argos gift sets, yoghurts or chocolate bars are hardly going to break the bank, are they?

 

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