Genre Guides

Melodic House BPM

Melodic House is usually mixed around 118-126 BPM, with 122 BPM as a practical DJ target. Anjunadeep-adjacent, emotional, melody-led house. Innellea, Massano, Cassian, Anyma, Argy. Distinct from melodic-techno: groovier, slightly slower, more song-like.

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Viewing Melodic House within the House family.

House

115132BPM
125
90160

The foundation of electronic dance music, born in Chicago in the early 1980s. Characterized by a steady four-on-the-floor kick drum pattern, synthesized basslines, and soulful vocals.

Four-on-the-floor kickSynth basslinesSoulful vocalsOffbeat hi-hats

Sub-genre BPM landscape

scale: 90160 BPM
Tropical House100118
Slap House110125
Outsider House115128
Lo-Fi House115125
Chicago House118128
Deep House118125
Disco House118126
Italo House118128
Organic House115124
Melodic House118126
French House118128
Soulful House120128
Brazilian Bass120128
Microhouse120128
Afro House120128
Acid House120130
Funky House122128
Garage House122128
Latin House122128
Afro-Tech122128
Tech House124128
Future House124128
G-House124128
Jackin' House124128
Tribal House124130
Progressive House126132
Electro House126132
Bass House124130
Big Room House126132
Ghetto House130150
Hard House140150

House sub-genres

Chicago House

118128

The original house sound from clubs like The Warehouse and Music Box. Drum machine patterns (TR-707, TR-909), Roland bass, and disco DNA. Pioneered by Frankie Knuckles, Marshall Jefferson, and Larry Heard.

TR-909 drumsDisco DNARaw productionSoulful vocals

Deep House

118125

A smoother, more atmospheric take on house. Warm pads, jazzy chords, and subdued vocals create a hypnotic, late-night feel.

Warm padsJazz-influenced chordsSubdued vocalsMellow basslines

Tech House

124128

Blends house groove with techno's minimalism. Punchy percussion, rolling basslines, and stripped-back arrangements dominate the dancefloor.

Punchy percussionRolling basslinesMinimal arrangementGroove-focused

Progressive House

126132

Long, evolving builds and breakdowns with layered melodies. Tracks develop gradually over 7-10 minutes with emotional peaks.

Long buildsLayered melodiesEvolving arrangementsEmotional breakdowns

Acid House

120130

Defined by the squelchy, resonant sound of the Roland TB-303 bass synthesizer. A pivotal genre in rave culture.

TB-303 acid basslinesSquelchy synthsHypnotic patternsRave energy

Electro House

126132

Big, distorted basslines and aggressive synth leads. High-energy festival sound with dramatic drops. Distinct from classic 'electro' (electrofunk).

Distorted bassAggressive leadsBig dropsFestival energy

Funky House

122128

Infuses house with funk and disco elements. Groovy basslines, filtered samples, and uplifting energy.

Funk influencesFiltered disco samplesGroovy basslinesUplifting vibe

French House

118128

Filter-driven house pioneered by Daft Punk, Cassius, Stardust, and the Ed Banger crew. Heavily filtered disco and funk samples, sidechain pumping, and phaser sweeps.

Filtered disco loopsSidechain pumpPhaser sweepsCompressed mix

Disco House

118126

House built on disco loops and live instrumentation feel. Strings, horns, slap bass, and four-on-the-floor uplift. Overlaps with French and funky house.

Disco samplesSlap bassLive stringsFunky guitar

Soulful House

120128

House with gospel-rooted vocals, jazzy keys, and live-feel arrangements. Defined by labels like Defected, Soulfuric, and artists like Louie Vega and Kerri Chandler.

Gospel vocalsJazzy keysLive feelUplifting message

Garage House

122128

The New York/New Jersey vocal house sound from Paradise Garage and Tony Humphries era. Soulful, gospel-tinged vocals over swung drums. Direct ancestor of UK garage.

Vocal-ledSwung drumsGospel feelNY/NJ club roots

Future House

124128

Bouncy, metallic-bass house pioneered by Tchami, Oliver Heldens, and Don Diablo. Mid-2010s Spinnin'/Mixmash sound bridging UK garage swing and big-room drops.

Metallic bassG-house influenceGarage swingFestival drops

Bass House

124130

Aggressive, bass-forward house drawing from UK bassline and dubstep. AC Slater, Joyryde, Habstrakt territory. Heavy mid-range growls over four-on-the-floor.

Heavy growl bassBassline influenceDubstep DNAFestival energy

G-House

124128

Gangsta-house: tech house with West Coast hip-hop samples and gangsta rap acapellas. Pioneered by AC Slater, Amine Edge & DANCE, and the Night Bass label.

Hip-hop vocalsTech house drumsDark grooveG-funk samples

Big Room House

126132

Stripped-down festival house built around massive kick-driven drops. Hardwell, Martin Garrix, W&W era of Mainstage EDM at Tomorrowland and Ultra.

Massive kicksSimple dropsFestival anthemEDM mainstage

Tropical House

100118

Slow, sun-soaked house with marimba/steel-drum leads, panflutes, and tropical instrumentation. Popularized by Kygo, Thomas Jack, and Matoma in 2014–2016.

Marimba leadsSteel drumsSlow tempoSun-soaked vibe

Slap House

110125

Plucked, slap-bass-driven house with downtempo trap-influenced energy. Brazilian Bass evolution: Imanbek, VIZE, Alok. Massive in 2019–2021.

Plucked slap bassDowntempo feelPop crossoverVocal hooks

Brazilian Bass

120128

São Paulo–born deep house variant with prominent slappy bass and minimal arrangement. Alok, Bhaskar, and Vintage Culture defined the sound that birthed slap house globally.

Slappy bassDeep house rootsBrazilian grooveMinimal arrangement

Microhouse

120128

Glitchy, micro-sampled minimal house pioneered by Akufen, Ricardo Villalobos, and the Perlon/Kompakt circle. Granular textures and click-house grooves.

Granular samplesClick texturesMinimal paletteSubtle groove

Hard House

140150

UK rave-era hard house with pumping kicks, hoover synths, and crowd-rallying energy. Tidy Trax, Trade nightclub heritage. Tony De Vit, BK, Lisa Lashes.

Pumping kicksHoover synthsRave energyUK club origin

Italo House

118128

Late-80s Italian house with piano stabs, female diva vocals, and synth strings. Black Box's 'Ride on Time' and 49ers epitomize the sound.

Piano stabsDiva vocalsSynth stringsItalian disco DNA

Latin House

122128

House laced with congas, timbales, and Latin/salsa percussion. DJ Disciple, Erick Morillo, Roger Sanchez crossover sound.

Congas/timbalesLatin percussionSpanish vocalsSalsa influence

Ghetto House

130150

Raw, sexually explicit Chicago house with stripped 808/909 patterns. Dance Mania label sound: DJ Funk, DJ Deeon. Direct precursor to juke and footwork.

Raw 808/909Explicit vocalsDance Mania soundStripped arrangement

Jackin' House

124128

Cut-up disco-loop house with chopped vocal stabs and bouncy swung drums. Strictly Rhythm/Defected territory. The 'jacking' references original Chicago house dance.

Chopped vocal stabsCut-up disco loopsBouncy swingFilter sweeps

Outsider House

115128

Raw, lo-fi, outsider-art house from labels like L.I.E.S., Mood Hut, and 1080p. DJ Sotofett, Huerco S., Anthony Naples. Tape hiss and DIY production aesthetics.

Tape hissDIY productionLo-fi texturesOutsider attitude

Lo-Fi House

115125

Raw, tape-saturated house with intentionally degraded sound quality. Vintage samples, dusty drums, and DIY aesthetic. Ross From Friends, DJ Boring, Mall Grab.

Tape saturationVintage samplesDusty drumsDIY aesthetic

Afro House

120128

Fuses house music with African rhythms, percussion, and melodic elements. Rich in polyrhythmic patterns and organic instrumentation. Black Coffee, Keinemusik.

African percussionPolyrhythmic patternsOrganic instrumentsTribal vocals

Afro-Tech

122128

Tech house variant with African percussion layers, log drums, and organic textures. Sits between Afro House and tech house: Themba, Black Motion sound.

African percussionTech house drumsLog drumsTribal energy

Organic House

115124

Layered, percussive, melody-soft house championed by labels like All Day I Dream and Crosstown Rebels. Bedouin, Sébastien Léger, Tinlicker, Bona Fide. Subtle, warm, organic textures over deep grooves.

Layered percussionSoft floating melodiesSub-126 BPM ceilingWarm organic textures

Melodic House

118126

Anjunadeep-adjacent, emotional, melody-led house. Innellea, Massano, Cassian, Anyma, Argy. Distinct from melodic-techno: groovier, slightly slower, more song-like.

Emotional lead synthsAnjunadeep aestheticSong-like structureGroovy progression

Tribal House

124130

Percussion-heavy house with congas, djembes, bongos, and chant vocals. Pier Bucci, DJ Chus, Stephan Hinz territory. Different from Afro House: tribal is more global drum focused.

Heavy percussionTribal chantsCongas/djembesDrum-led arrangement
Core DJ range
118126 BPM
Practical target
122 BPM
Evidence
10 curated reference tracks

Use the BPM that makes loops, cue points, and phrase markers behave cleanly in your DJ software.

What BPM Is Melodic House?

Melodic House sits at 118126 BPM as a core DJ range, with 122 BPM as a practical target for crate filtering and set planning. As a sub-genre of House, it sits within the broader 115132 BPM family.

How to Read Melodic House BPM in DJ Software

Melodic House is usually mixed around 118-126 BPM, with 122 BPM as a practical DJ target. Use the range as a DJ planning reference, then verify each track's beatgrid before a set.

118-126 BPM
Core Melodic House DJ range
Beatmatch normally, then check phrasing around intros, breaks, and drops.
59-63 BPM
Halftime interpretation of the core range
Double the grid if 8-bar loops or cue points feel too slow.
122 BPM
Practical target for crate filtering
Use as a starting point, then sort by energy, key, and arrangement.

Reference Tracks for Melodic House

The current reference snapshot does not include resolved BPM/key cards for Melodic House. These curated references anchor the page's genre coverage:

reference 01InnelleaThe Wandering
reference 02MassanoThe Feeling
reference 03CassianPluto
reference 04AnymaEternity
reference 05ArgyTataki
reference 06AdriatiqueX
reference 07ColynAdagio for Squares
reference 08Lane 8Atlas

DJ Overview for Melodic House

Use this as a mixing and library-prep description, not an encyclopedia entry.

Sound palette
Emotional lead synths, Anjunadeep aesthetic, Song-like structure, Groovy progression
Drum feel
118-126 BPM core range; check whether slower readings work better doubled or as halftime.
Arrangement and phrasing
Confirm intro, build, drop, breakdown, and outro cue points before trusting the analyzer value.
Energy use in a set
warmup, groove section, or crossover bridge
Often compared with
House, Chicago House, Deep House

Compare Nearby Styles

115 BPM132 BPM
118126 · typical 122

Primary reference for this page.

115132 · typical 125

Broader family range for planning transitions.

Chicago House
118128 · typical 122

Same typical tempo; compare by arrangement and energy.

118125 · typical 122

Same typical tempo; compare by arrangement and energy.

Disco House
118126 · typical 122

Same typical tempo; compare by arrangement and energy.

Mix Into Melodic House

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.

115-132 BPM · typical 125
High
High
Long blend, harmonic blend, or drop swap
Chicago House
118-128 BPM · typical 122
High
High
Long blend, harmonic blend, or drop swap
118-125 BPM · typical 122
High
High
Long blend, harmonic blend, or drop swap
124-128 BPM · typical 126
High
High
Long blend, harmonic blend, or drop swap
126-132 BPM · typical 128
High
High
Long blend, harmonic blend, or drop swap
Acid House
120-130 BPM · typical 125
High
High
Long blend, harmonic blend, or drop swap
Electro House
126-132 BPM · typical 128
High
High
Long blend, harmonic blend, or drop swap
Funky House
122-128 BPM · typical 125
High
High
Long blend, harmonic blend, or drop swap

Key Planning for Melodic House

Melodic House 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.

Mixing Tips

01

Tempo Window

Stay in the 118126 BPM band for clean mixes; verify unknown tracks with the BPM tapper.

02

Harmonic Fit

Use the Camelot wheel to find compatible keys before transitioning, especially when Melodic House tracks have prominent melodic content.

03

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.

04

Next Reference

Browse the EDM genre BPM chart or the music genre tree to see how Melodic House relates to neighboring styles.

05

Typical Tempo

See tracks at the typical 122 BPM on the 122 BPM tracks page.

Ben Modigell

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.

DJingMusic ProductionTech HouseMinimal HouseDigital MarketingWeb DevelopmentUX Design

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: 10 curated reference tracks

Report a correction

Evidence: 10 curated Melodic House 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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Frequently Asked Questions

122 BPM is the practical DJ target for Melodic House. Treat it as a crate-filtering reference, then check the exact beatgrid and phrasing for each track.
Melodic House ranges from 118 to 126 BPM. The spread reflects production variations and sub-genre splintering within the style.
Melodic House is a sub-genre of House. While House as a whole spans 115-132 BPM, Melodic House sits at 118-126 BPM with a typical tempo of 122. The main distinction is in production: emotional lead synths, anjunadeep aesthetic.
Melodic House is best compared with House (115-132 BPM), Chicago House (118-128 BPM), Deep House (118-125 BPM), Tech House (124-128 BPM). These are more useful DJ references than same-tempo genres from unrelated scenes because the production style and phrasing are closer.
Melodic House is characterized by: Emotional lead synths, Anjunadeep aesthetic, Song-like structure, Groovy progression.