A stand out memory I have from April 1996 is being on holiday in a snack bar one afternoon and they had German techno playing. At least I assumed it to be German techno, I didn't know any of the tunes being played but it was definitely techno and sounded of the German variety. Then a few tunes later they had a complete change in music with 70s record "Jeans On" by David Dundas coming on, the first time I'd ever heard it and I didn't know what it was until years later.
Speaking of German techno it was the month "Forever Young" by Interactive chart. Not a German techno record as such but the members were key figures in the German techno scene. It was already 2 years old by this point.
You wouldn't be hearing it at the raves though, not only because of it's age (2 years was considered old in rave terms at the time) but because British DJs Jimmy J & Cru-L-T did their own version called "I Wanna Be Forever" that you'd hear instead.
It was the month that gave us the first Dance Nation compilation from the Ministry Of Sound. The DJs on the compilation were Pete Tong and Boy George, the former now very much a big name from his Radio 1 show and the latter a former pop star who was very much a DJ by this point. Not that either DJ actually mixed their CD but importantly with the tracklist like a lot of these big compilations its a mixture of classics and not so classics.
One In The Jungle returned to Radio 1 in Apr 96. It had previously aired for a few weeks in the summer of 1995 but was now back for a regular slot on a Friday night at 10pm after the Pete Tong show. It would be hosted by an MC, usually MC Navigator in the early days and include a jungle chart rundown and a guest mix from a different DJ each week.
March had seen the theme to The X-Files enter the Top 40 and in April we saw a dance version of the theme by DJ Dado.
2Pac was a big name rapper in America and was on his 5th album but he didn't make his UK Top 40 debut until Apr 96, just 5 months before his death. The record was "California Love" in collaboration with Dr Dre who had left Death Row records the month before.
Another significant Top 40 debutant from the rap world was The Fugees. Their debut was "Fu-Gee-La" which only made number 21 even though it was pretty well known. They wouldn't chart any lower than number 3 for their remaining singles.