There are a lots of new stuff, which will be popular in a 1 year or 2. Currently, listeners preffer bangers like Jumper(Hardwell & W&W). You can't predict what's the next big thing.
btw. This music is here to stay, at least ten years. This is not the same thing that happened back in 90's. Currently, I don't see any genre that can surpass EDM. Every genre has its limits, except EDM.
Edm had a brief period this year with
artist like Skream and Daft Punk revisiting stuff from the early 2000's, 90's, and even the Disco Era in Daft Punks attempt to bring life to this music. Kaskade even released a few
tracks going back to his earlier sound. I don't think any genres were birth in the 90's, but when I said that I was actually referring to electronic music of the 90's and not other musics.
The way I see it as an Instrumentalist, Theorist, and Electronic
artist Edm is one of the most limited genres. Electronic has existed since disco died around the late 70s and early 80s, but in it's current state of EDM I feel its VERY limited.
1) Primarily Major 3rd Chords
2) Primarily 4x4 (not as in the rythmn , but mainly the kicks and stuff we know and love)
3) These days LOTS of PRESETS
4) Mainly Major keys
I think "Dance" music will always existed, but as far as EDM I don't see how you can experiment with it much before it becomes IDM or some variation of Downtempo or Ambient. This to me will hand on influence to music, but it will be sacrificed.
When it comes to Rock, Country, Jazz, and many other genres they all can be adapted and fused with more stuff than specifically EDM. Electronic music has a wide range of adaptability, but lets not forget EDM is not the only brand of Electronic music, and I think people forget that a lot.
True adaptable forms of Electronic to me include Trip Hop, Hip Hop, Ambient, IDM, and a bunch of other things on the more experimental side, but EDM I don't think is even made to adapt its made for the moment, and not for the future.
This is what EDM appears to be the moment, and not the future.