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Radio Funk : Webradio Disco, Funk, Soul and Boogie 80
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The DJ Ice Age (And AI Is the Glacier) Radio Funk
Every week, Radio Funk shines a spotlight on the best disco, funk and soul tracks.
This ranking is built on two pillars: your votes and the personal picks from our editorial team.
Stay tuned and vote for your favourite tracks, because it is your voice that shapes the chart!
At its core, the Radio Funk Top is a unique weekly barometer merging audience votes and editorial expertise to capture the pulse of the current funk scene.
This selection gives you instant access to the best groove trends, without wasting time — and this week, ‘Analog Love’ by Dabeull leads a Top 10 packed with fresh discoveries.
What exactly is the Radio Funk Top?
The weekly funk ranking: our Top 10
Beyond the Top 10: explore the funk universe
Forget cold algorithms — behind this ranking is a living, breathing method.
This is not a random list, but the real heartbeat of today’s funk scene.
More than a simple chart
The Radio Funk Top is not an impersonal, algorithm‑driven playlist generated by a machine.
It is a real weekly barometer, an essential rendez‑vous for groove lovers who want to know what is really happening right now.
This is a human‑curated selection, thought specifically for demanding fans, highlighting tracks that truly deserve attention, far from the surrounding noise.
The whole thing rests on a precise two‑step mechanism: listener votes give the broad trend, then Radio Funk’s editorial team refines the selection.
This combination guarantees a nearly unmatched balance — you get both mainstream‑pleasing hits and rare gems unearthed by passionate diggers.
Our chart is the fusion of the audience’s heart and the specialists’ ears: a mix that ensures you never miss the most essential funk.
Because the ranking is updated weekly, the game changes every time.
Each week, the cards are reshuffled, giving a fresh snapshot of a constantly evolving funk scene.
The 10 best funk tracks of the week.
A fresh update every seven days.
A mix of public votes and expert‑driven selection.
Enough talk — here are the 10 tracks that define the sound of the week.
This table brings together your votes for this essential funk Top.
| Place | Artiste | Titre | The editorial verdict for each track |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Dabeull | Analog Love | An analog slap. Back to the roots. |
| 2 | DJ Tarek | 254 West 54 St | Heavy bass, sticky groove. Deadly. |
| 3 | DJ Tarek | Watson | Melodic, instantly gets stuck in your head. |
| 4 | DJ Tarek | Welcome to Oran | A blend of influences, a refreshing new take. |
| 5 | DJ Tarek | Call Me Baby | Carrying voice, future classic. |
| 6 | Jackson 5 | The Life of the Party | A strong comeback, timeless groove. |
| 7 | Jackson 5 | Honey Love | A soft, yet always seductive groove. |
| 8 | Michael Jackson | I Can’t Help It | Quincy’s production is untouchable. A true standard. |
| 9 | Jackson 5 | Especially for Me | Unsung but striking. A must‑rediscover. |
| 10 | Jackson 5 | Dancing Machine | The machine is running at full speed. |
Dabeull imposes his analog‑driven style against DJ Tarek.
It’s a clash between the warm, vintage texture of the No. 1 and the brute efficiency of “254 West 54 St.”
“Analog Love” is declaring war on the digital: its warm grain fully deserves the top spot.
Positions 4 to 7 are not a “soft midsection.
This is where the real battle rages. Take “Call Me Baby” (No. 5): its catchy vocal line perfectly illustrates the current energy of the scene.
It is right in the middle of the chart that you feel the next waves of funk.
These tracks are the classics of tomorrow.
The bottom of the chart is not a punishment.
Seeing “I Can’t Help It” hold its ground here proves that listeners are still demanding solid, groove‑based foundations.
This Top 10 is just an entry point. Behind it, a whole world of groove is waiting for you.
To catch the vibe, look back.
The current sound rests on the funk legacy built by the giants.
Ignoring these roots means missing the essence of modern funk — that’s a fact.
Connect the dots: take a deep dive into the discography of Michael Jackson, the undisputed king, then discover how The O’Jays remain the architects of the shadow whose samples have shaped hip‑hop, R&B and pop.
Beyond the chart, there are artists who are unshakable pillars.
These are the trusted names that keep the funk scene alive and define the standard.
The definitive selection lives here: The Essentials of Funk Today.
Now let’s talk about the present.
Dabeull’s album Analog Love proves that the genre is still breathing strong.
A 100% analog‑driven production that shows how to run a mixing desk in 2025.
Dig through our archives to uncover forgotten gems and trace the evolution of the ranking.
This is where the story of funky funk is written.
To know the best current funk tracks, there’s no secret: you just have to check the Radio Funk Top.
This weekly ranking is the ultimate barometer, the result of a unique blend between passionate listener votes and sharp picks from our editorial team.
Each week, this list refreshes to highlight both today’s gems — like Dabeull’s analog‑driven productions — and the timeless classics that keep dancefloors alive.
It’s the surest way to not miss a beat of the current groove.
Right now, the trend is leaning toward authentic, vintage‑sounding grooves.
The track that often sits at the top of our recent charts comes from Dabeull’s album Analog Love, praised for its 100% analog production and flawless groove.
Yet the chart is dynamic: behind the leaders, new entries shake the hierarchy every week.
To catch tomorrow’s hits, keep a close eye on the “midsection” of the chart (positions 4–7), where future favourites often hide.
Historically, the title of “Godfather” — or undisputed king of funk — belongs to James Brown.
It is he who laid the foundations of the genre, transforming R&B into a relentless rhythmic machine with tracks like Get Up (I Feel Like Being a) Sex Machine.
That said, within the world of Radio Funk Top, the “king” is whoever wins the hearts of the listeners and claims the No. 1 spot.
It is an ephemeral throne, contested by the legends of the past and the rising stars of today.
If funk is the result of an evolution from soul and jazz, it is James Brown and his band who crystallised the genre in the late 1960s.
By shifting the rhythmic focus onto the first beat of the bar (the famous “The One”), they created a completely new way to think about music.
This innovation opened the door to groups like The Meters or Parliament‑Funkadelic, whose influence still echoes in the tracks we play and rank every week on Radio Funk.
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