Dariacore BPM
Dariacore is usually mixed around 150-180 BPM, with 170 BPM as a practical DJ target. Hyperflip / dariacore: frenetic cut-ups of recognizable pop hooks, anime snippets and internet ephemera over breakbeats and club triplets. Pioneered by Jane Remover (as 'leroy') in the early 2020s.
Viewing Dariacore within the Breakbeat family.
Breakbeat BPM Reference
Breakbeat: 120-140 BPM, typical 130 BPM.
| Genre | BPM Range | Typical BPM | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Breakbeat | 120-140 | 130 | Syncopated, non-four-on-the-floor drum patterns. Funky, energetic, and sample-heavy. |
| Big Beat | 110-140 | 130 | Late-90s breakbeat with rock-band attitude. Chemical Brothers, Fatboy Slim, Prodigy, Crystal Method. Heavy drums, big riffs, festival appeal. |
| Nu-Skool Breaks | 125-135 | 130 | Late-90s/early-00s UK funky breaks. Adam Freeland, Plump DJs, Stanton Warriors. Cleaner production, electro-influenced. |
| Progressive Breaks | 128-138 | 132 | Progressive trance/house structures over breakbeat drums. Hybrid, BT, Way Out West. Builds and breakdowns with broken kicks. |
| Florida Breaks | 130-140 | 135 | Bass-heavy Miami breakbeat with Miami Bass DNA. DJ Icey, Baby Anne, Rabbit in the Moon. Massive on Florida rave circuit in the late 90s. |
| Dariacore | 150-180 | 170 | Hyperflip / dariacore: frenetic cut-ups of recognizable pop hooks, anime snippets and internet ephemera over breakbeats and club triplets. Pioneered by Jane Remover (as 'leroy') in the early 2020s. |
vibesdj.io/dj-tools - BPM ranges are practical DJ references, not strict genre boundaries.
Breakbeat
Syncopated, non-four-on-the-floor drum patterns. Funky, energetic, and sample-heavy.
Sub-genre BPM landscape
Breakbeat sub-genres
Big Beat
110–140Late-90s breakbeat with rock-band attitude. Chemical Brothers, Fatboy Slim, Prodigy, Crystal Method. Heavy drums, big riffs, festival appeal.
Florida Breaks
130–140Bass-heavy Miami breakbeat with Miami Bass DNA. DJ Icey, Baby Anne, Rabbit in the Moon. Massive on Florida rave circuit in the late 90s.
Nu-Skool Breaks
125–135Late-90s/early-00s UK funky breaks. Adam Freeland, Plump DJs, Stanton Warriors. Cleaner production, electro-influenced.
Dariacore
150–180Hyperflip / dariacore: frenetic cut-ups of recognizable pop hooks, anime snippets and internet ephemera over breakbeats and club triplets. Pioneered by Jane Remover (as 'leroy') in the early 2020s.
Progressive Breaks
128–138Progressive trance/house structures over breakbeat drums. Hybrid, BT, Way Out West. Builds and breakdowns with broken kicks.
- Core DJ range
- 150–180 BPM
- Practical target
- 170 BPM
- Evidence
- 4 curated reference tracks
- Track evidence
- 4 curated reference tracks
Use the BPM that makes loops, cue points, and phrase markers behave cleanly in your DJ software.
What BPM Is Dariacore?
Dariacore sits at 150–180 BPM as a core DJ range, with 170 BPM as a practical target for crate filtering and set planning. As a sub-genre of Breakbeat, it sits within the broader 120–140 BPM family.
How to Read Dariacore BPM in DJ Software
Dariacore is usually mixed around 150-180 BPM, with 170 BPM as a practical DJ target. Use the range as a DJ planning reference, then verify each track's beatgrid before a set.
Reference Tracks for Dariacore
The current reference snapshot does not include resolved BPM/key cards for Dariacore. These curated references anchor the page's genre coverage:
DJ Overview for Dariacore
Use this as a mixing and library-prep description, not an encyclopedia entry.
Compare Nearby Styles
Primary reference for this page.
Broader family range for planning transitions.
35 BPM slower typical tempo; useful for warmups or pull-backs.
38 BPM slower typical tempo; useful for warmups or pull-backs.
40 BPM slower typical tempo; useful for warmups or pull-backs.
Mix Into Dariacore
Tempo overlap is only one part of the decision. These suggestions separate BPM fit from style fit so same-tempo but unrelated genres do not look like natural transitions.
Key Planning for Dariacore
Dariacore can be produced in any musical key, so use the BPM range as the first filter and then check each track's detected key before mixing. For melodic or vocal-heavy tracks, translate your library's key labels with the Camelot wheel and test compatible moves with the key compatibility checker.
Explore Related References
Mixing Tips
Tempo Window
Stay in the 150–180 BPM band for clean mixes; verify unknown tracks with the BPM tapper.
Harmonic Fit
Use the Camelot wheel to find compatible keys before transitioning, especially when Dariacore tracks have prominent melodic content.
Tempo Bridges
When bridging into a different tempo, use the key transposer to plan how pitch change affects key, or transition during a breakdown where the beat drops.
Next Reference
Browse the EDM genre BPM chart or the music genre tree to see how Dariacore relates to neighboring styles.
Typical Tempo
See tracks at the typical 170 BPM on the 170 BPM tracks page.
Hey, it's Ben Modigell 👋
I've been DJing and producing music as "so I so," focusing on downtempo, minimal, dub house, tech house, and techno. My background in digital marketing, web development, and UX design over the past 6 years helps me create DJ tutorials that are clear, practical, and easy to follow.
Author and Methodology
Maintained by Ben Modigell
Ben is the founder of Vibes and builds DJ library, preparation, BPM, and harmonic-mixing tools for working DJs.
Last updated:
Data used: 4 curated reference tracks
Evidence: 4 curated Dariacore reference tracks; resolved BPM/key cards are shown only when exact genre evidence is available.
Source: Audio features sourced from ReccoBeats (https://reccobeats.com); track metadata via Spotify Search API. Spotify deprecated audio-features for new apps in Nov 2024. Manual label reference tracks use Beatport BPM/key metadata where available.
How this page is made: This page is generated from the Vibes genre taxonomy, curated reference tracks, computed evidence statistics, and reference track metadata where available. AI-assisted research helped draft the taxonomy notes; the visible page is rendered from structured data and reusable page logic.
Genre BPM ranges are practical DJ references, not statistical claims about every track. Different edits, live versions, and analysis engines may report slightly different tempos.
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