Who is Danger? Danger Songs, Music, Discography & Artists Like Danger

Who is Danger? Danger Songs, Music, Discography & Artists Like Danger

There are electronic producers who make music for clubs, and then there are producers who make music that feels like a memory you cannot quite place. Adam first came across Danger through a playlist that had no business being that good, and the track “11h30” hit like a short film with no dialogue. That is the kind of thing that sticks. 4D4M covers a lot of ground in electronic music subgenres, but artists who build a genuine world around their sound are rare. Danger is one of them.

Who Is Danger?

Danger is the stage name of Franck Rivoire, a French electronic musician from Lyon, France. Active since 2007, Rivoire launched the Danger project after uploading electro-influenced tracks to MySpace, which drew quick attention from the French electronic scene. That same year, Danger signed with Ekler’o’shock, a French label known for cultivating artists like DatA.

Danger wears a black mask at every public appearance. Rivoire has pointed to two specific inspirations: Daft Punk and the Black Mage character from Final Fantasy. He has described himself as shy off-stage, and the mask draws a hard line between the private person and the performer. The persona is fully realized, not a gimmick tacked on for mystery.

Track titles are another signature element. Most are named after times of day: 11h30, 88:88, 4h30, 3h16, referencing when each piece was completed. The title 88:88 references an unplugged LCD clock. The early EPs are named after specific September 2007 dates, released out of chronological order as a deliberate nod to the Star Wars film series. Before music became a full focus, Rivoire trained and worked as a graphic designer, and that attention to structure and concept shows throughout the project.

Danger’s Sound Explained

Danger makes electronic music rooted in electro house, French house, and synthwave, with trip hop and witch house elements appearing across different releases. Rivoire grew up playing piano and saxophone, moved through jazz and punk bands, and eventually moved into electronic production through chiptunes on Amiga and Atari computers. That path explains the harmonic depth underneath the harder-edged production.

The synth work is the engine. Heavy, warm basslines anchor tracks built for both headphones and large-format sound systems. There is a retrofuturist quality to everything: 80s-influenced textures with modern production weight. Danger has described making music for people who grew up among blockbusters and video games rather than stadiums. The production feels emotional rather than mechanical, which separates it from a lot of electronic music chasing similar reference points.

The game soundtrack work expanded the range significantly. The Furi OST in 2016 brought harder, more aggressive elements. Haven in 2020 moved toward ambient and melodic territory. Each project tests the catalog’s edges without losing the core identity.

Top 15 Danger Tracks

  1. Come & Find Out: The synth hook is relentless and the energy builds in a way that feels earned. One of the most gripping entries in the catalog.
  2. The Future: A tightly wound electro house cut. Danger generates propulsion here without needing a conventional drop structure.
  3. Battle (feat. K Motionz): Harder edges while keeping Danger’s atmospheric quality intact. Both artists bring something specific.
  4. Unknown Object (feat. Ironlung): Dark, heavy, and built for maximum impact. The featured artist adds raw energy without overtaking the track.
  5. Make You Move: Punchy production with warmth underneath. Does exactly what the title says.
  6. Drop To The Beat: Pure forward momentum, built to function in a set without sacrificing personality.
  7. Headshot (feat. MC Kush): Vocal energy over bass-forward production. The contrast holds throughout.
  8. Flavours: A more restrained cut that shows range. This one knows when to breathe.
  9. One One Four (feat. Magenta): Late-night feel with a melodic edge. The collab gives it a different texture from solo material.
  10. Cycle Of Life: One of the longer entries in the current catalog, giving the production room to develop properly.
  11. 11h30: The track that put Danger on the map in 2007. Still holds up completely. Named after the time of day it was completed, which became the approach for most of the catalog.
  12. 88:88: Named after an unplugged LCD clock. Dense electro production with a conceptual layer behind it.
  13. 4h30: A standout from the third Danger EP. The bass weight is serious and the atmosphere builds from the first seconds.
  14. 1:30: From the July 2013 EP. Precise, controlled production that communicates a lot without excess.
  15. 6:24: Created for the video game Furi. The game is brutal and fast-paced, and Danger’s contribution fits that without sounding like a typical game track.

Why 4D4M Vibes With Danger

4D4M gravitates toward artists who treat electronic music as something more than a function. Danger builds full environments. The masked persona, the time-coded track names, the deliberate EP chronology, none of it is accidental. This is an artist with complete control over how the music lands, and that level of intentionality stands out in a field where most producers just chase what is already working.

The synthwave and French house influence connects directly to what 4D4M plays and follows. The game soundtrack work is a bonus that shows actual range rather than just claiming it. Most producers only talk about versatility. Danger has demonstrated it across multiple projects spanning nearly two decades.

Discography

Year Album Label
2007 09/14 2007 (EP) Ekler’o’shock
2009 09/16 2007 (EP) Ekler’o’shock
2010 09/17 2007 (EP) Ekler’o’shock
2014 July 2013 (EP) Ekler’o’shock
2016 Furi (Original Soundtrack) Furi Music
2017 太鼓 (Taiko) 1789 Records
2019 Origins 1789 Records
2020 Haven (Original Soundtrack) 1789 Records
2024 Windblown Original Soundtrack Motion Twin

Live and Touring

Danger performs live in the signature black mask, keeping the visual identity consistent across every appearance. In November 2016, Danger opened for Porter Robinson and Madeon on their Shelter Live Tour, an international run that brought the project to significantly larger audiences. In June 2014, Danger launched a side project called Sunset with a live performance at Nouveau Casino in Paris. Live shows have covered Europe and North America, and the masked format makes each performance distinct from just knowing the recorded catalog.

FAQ: Frequently Asked Questions About Danger

What genre is Danger?

Danger makes electronic music rooted in electro house, French house, and synthwave. Tracks range from club-ready electro cuts to cinematic game soundtrack material. Electro house is the clearest starting point for new listeners, but the catalog covers more ground than one label suggests. The French house influence shows up consistently, though the overall sound has developed its own distinct identity through nearly two decades of active releases and multiple game soundtracks.

Where is Danger from?

Danger is Franck Rivoire, a French electronic musician from Lyon, France. The connection to the broader French electronic tradition is clear, placing Danger in a lineage that includes Daft Punk, Justice, and Cassius. The black mask is a direct reference to that culture of persona-driven performance that France has produced more consistently than almost anywhere else in modern electronic music.

Why does Danger wear a mask?

Danger’s black mask is a deliberate artistic choice inspired by Daft Punk and the Black Mage character from Final Fantasy. Rivoire has described himself as shy off-stage, and the mask creates a hard line between the private person and the performer. This is not a mystery maintained for marketing purposes. The mask functions as a character, and the music is what that character produces.

What are Danger’s most famous tracks?

“11h30” established the Danger sound early and remains a reference point. “Come & Find Out” is currently among the most-streamed tracks. “88:88” and “4h30” are catalog landmarks that long-term fans return to regularly. Tracks from the Furi and Haven soundtracks have pulled in audiences who came through gaming rather than the club circuit. The catalog has strong entry points whether someone wants harder electro or more ambient material.

Has Danger done any video game soundtracks?

Danger has contributed to three video game soundtracks. Furi in 2016, developed by The Game Bakers, featured five Danger tracks suited to the game’s brutal combat pace. Haven in 2020, also by The Game Bakers, was a role-playing game that drew out a more melodic, ambient side of the production approach. Windblown in 2024, developed by Motion Twin, added a third full soundtrack to the catalog. Each project explores a different dimension of what Danger can do while keeping the core electronic identity intact.

What label is Danger on?

Danger signed with Ekler’o’shock in 2007 for the early EP releases. The label had strong ties to the French electronic scene and was where the initial catalog was built. Later work, including Taiko in 2017 and Origins in 2019, appeared under 1789 Records. The Windblown game soundtrack was released in connection with Motion Twin. Danger has been deliberate about how and where the music appears, consistent with the overall approach to controlling every aspect of the project’s identity.

Is Danger the same as other artists named Danger?

No. The Danger covered here is French electronic musician Franck Rivoire. Other artists use similar names across different genres and countries. The Spotify profile linked in this article is specific to the French electro house and synthwave producer. The correct SoundCloud and social accounts use the handle 2emedanger. The MusicBrainz disambiguation entry notes this specifically as the French electrohouse artist, which is the clearest way to confirm the correct profile in any database or streaming search.

Danger Online

Platform Link
Spotify Listen on Spotify
SoundCloud soundcloud.com/2emedanger
Twitter / X @2emedanger
Facebook 2emeDanger on Facebook
YouTube The2emedanger on YouTube
Bandcamp 2emedanger.bandcamp.com
Official Site 2emedanger.com