Some will say you can't really talk about July 1996 without talking about girl power so I'll get this out of the way. It was of course the month Shampoo had their final Top 40 hit with "Girl Power".
A month after Crowded House announced to the world they were breaking up there was a new music act from New Zealand ready to take their place. OMC made their Top 40 debut with "How Bizarre". A big hit no doubt and I like it too, but they didn't exactly fill the gap left by Crowded House because they had no further Top 40 hits.
It was the month "Born Slippy" by Underworld from the Trainspotting soundtrack entered the Top 40. It was the record that brought Underworld to the general public's attention, but they'd been around for some time and already had a significant following.
Elsewhere in the dance music world we saw future Radio 1 DJ Judge Jules in the Top 40 for the first time. The record was "Outrageous" which was a collaboration with fellow DJ John Kelly under the name Stix 'N' Stoned.
Patrick Prins is a name you may not be familiar with. He's a Dutch producer who has quite a lengthy number of aliases and in Jul 96 he released "Le Voie Le Soleil" under the name Subliminal Cuts. He'd previously had a Top 40 hit the previous year with "To The Beat Of The Drum (La Luna)" under the name Ethics.
Dreamscape returned in Jul 96 with the rescheduled Dreamscape 22 which was their first event since the tragic death of promoter Murray Beetson. It was now in the hands of Red Alert & Mike Slammer who were the same people who ran Slammin Vinyl.
There was also a Slammin Vinyl event at Bagleys in London in conjunction with Dream FM. It included a Jimmy J & Vinyltrixta back to back set with MC Ruff which is quite possibly my favourite happy hardcore set ever. At the time I thought they were the ones who ran Slammin Vinyl but they infact ran the record shop of the same name in Kingston.
July saw the launch of arguably the biggest happy hardcore album series, Bonkers. It was mixed by Hixxy & Sharkey who had given us "Toytown" the previous year. However they were going in different directions musically, Hixxy was a cheesefest including "Toytown" whereas Sharkey was going in a more mature direction which would evolve into Freeform.