Deep house emerged in the mid-1980s in Chicago as a more introspective, musically sophisticated offshoot of the house music revolution. While the main house scene was defined by the raw energy of Frankie Knuckles at The Warehouse and Ron Hardy at the Music Box, a parallel current was developing — one that drew more heavily from jazz, soul, and ambient music. Larry Heard, performing and producing as Mr. Fingers, is widely credited with creating the template for deep house. His 1986 track "Can You Feel It" — built on lush synthesizer pads, warm basslines, and ethereal chord progressions — is regarded as one of the first true deep house records, a landmark moment that defined an entire aesthetic philosophy.
Through the late 1980s and 1990s, deep house evolved and spread. In New York, the legacy of Larry Levan at the Paradise Garage inspired a generation of producers who embraced the deeper, more soulful side of dance music. Kerri Chandler, one of the most revered figures in house music, brought a spiritual, gospel-inflected dimension to deep house, crafting tracks that were as much about emotional communion as they were about the groove. Ron Trent, Chez Damier, and the Prescription Records collective further refined the Chicago deep house sound, emphasising live instrumentation, jazz-informed harmony, and a sense of timeless elegance.
The 2000s and 2010s saw deep house reach unprecedented global popularity. In Berlin, Dixon and Âme's Innervisions label became a beacon for impeccably curated deep, melodic electronic music that blurred the lines between deep house, minimal, and techno. Solomun, through his Diynamic label and legendary Solomun+1 residency at Pacha Ibiza, brought deep house to massive audiences while retaining its sophisticated character. Labels like Defected Records, Anjunadeep, and Freerange continued to champion the genre's soulful roots while pushing it in new directions.
Today, deep house occupies a unique position in electronic music. It is simultaneously one of the genre's most commercially accessible forms — its warm, approachable sound making it a favourite for bars, restaurants, and lifestyle brands — and one of its most artistically respected. Whether heard in the intimate basements of Berlin, the sunset terraces of Ibiza, or the festival stages of Dekmantel, deep house continues to prove that electronic music can be deeply moving, profoundly musical, and endlessly rewarding.