Article Response: Indie Kids

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Tanya and Maura and I came up with this - any comments?

Tom, Tuesday, 2 January 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

A few of my good friends are indie kids. A very few, and amateurs at the game, not dedicated full timers. We avoid talking about music, mostly.

Also, I know some people who have managed to become adults, with jobs, and suchforth, and remain indie at heart. Those are the saddest of all.

Sterling Clover, Tuesday, 2 January 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

sounds very elitist. what would indie kids label tom, maura and tanya? is music all that defines these people? i think magnifying the most obvious stereotypes of the music is a bit easy. well that and to place yourself above them because you find merit in jessica simpson and hip-hop is funny. all of the regular contributors here are as insular as those you collectively deride. off to pine for the new death by chocolate record then.

keith, Tuesday, 2 January 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

I would pass this article out as propaganda for the betterment of the planet, if I were indie enough to do such things. As it is I'm fine sitting here laughing my ass off like an elitist.

Happily insular,

Otis Wheeler, Tuesday, 2 January 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

How did you guys know so much about my life? And in such detail? Maybe y'all are just closet indie kids, and this was all in good fun? Yeah, we may wear the glasses, go to the shows, and listen to the awful music, but some of us also have corporate jobs (me), sport neat clothes (me), don't have bedhead (me, sometimes), and listen to all the hip-hop and pop music, unironically even (me). So there.

No offense taken, Larm-O

Larmey, Wednesday, 3 January 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

Yes, it's elitist. FT is a site for neurotic pop elitists. And since even typing the words "Jessica Simpson and hip hop" makes me feel critically and morally superior, I suppose I can't duck that charge either. "Are these people defined only by their music?" Thank goodness, no: but you wouldn't know it looking at some of them. What would indie kids make of me, Maura and Tanya? Respectively a sad aging dilettante, an, uh, indie kid, and a lunatic. Cheers then!

Tom, Wednesday, 3 January 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

Some kind of funny stuff there. A bit obvious, perhaps. Question: Do these stereotypes hold true in the UK as well as in the US? Hard to believe y'all would have such astute observations if you hadn't witnessed this phenomona first hand.

It got me thinking, is indie rock way over-represented online or do I just move in the wrong circles? I mean, that stuff doesn't sell all that well. How come there seems to be so much more coverage of music/ dissection of scene for indie rock than for other genres? (All those "How to love an indie boy"-type joke pieces that have floated around through the years, very similar in content to this piece.) I'm sure Autechre sells as much as Modest Mouse. I want more sites like Skykicking and Josh Blog (FT obviously has radio pop covered.)

Mark Richardson, Wednesday, 3 January 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

I don't think there is any one kid who is all that. If so, he probablly would have self destructed by now! Some people are dedicated to music because they like it and that's good. SOme people are dedicated to music because its a "scene" and that's bad. A lot of "indie kids" don't actually really know that much about music and that's sad. They can tell you all about At the Drive-In and how much they rock but they don't even own Physical Graffiti or Highway to Hell.

Tim Baier, Wednesday, 3 January 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

About there not being any one kid who is all like that -- hm. Come to Orange County sometime. ;-)

Ned Raggett, Wednesday, 3 January 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

If owning Highway to Hell is a prerequisite to knowing about music, well then shit.

Josh (owns AC/DC Live mind you), Wednesday, 3 January 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

funny at parts, a lot of the standard digs. with all due respect, does this sort of thing really help ft's reputation for intelligent writing? maybe if there were some fresh angles of attack or something. i mean, i'm all for humour . . .

and there seems to be something a little desperate about this need to constantly slag indie rock culture in a generalized sort of fashion (in between reviews of clientele and piano magic, neither of whom i would have heard of without ft). it reminds me of j.d. considine's suspicion that people who constantly bitch about pop do so because they don't like the fact that pop moves them.

but of course there are kids who are all those things. come to ottawa sometime.

sundar subramanian, Wednesday, 3 January 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

In response to Sundar and Mark's accusations of unoriginality - well, yeah, but. I have seen these criticisms of indie in general a few times: not admittedly in many places other than FT, but nonetheless a few times. I have never to my knowledge seen anyone try to respond to them. Our article mixed up silly personal stuff with serious stuff and the response to this kind of article is always going to be "Oh, how unoriginal" rather than "Why are they wrong, or why doesn't it matter if they're right?"

The reason I talk about indie in general and indie culture is multifold. I find the 'culture' in general frustratingly uncritical - endless bands, endless reviews, precious little to say about most things. I also find the culture irritating even when the music is lovely - I don't see that this is a contradictory response. So I write about bands that I find interesting or I find matter to me, and a lot of them happen to be indie. (I also find guilt fascinating as a response to music, obviously).

Why do I find the culture irritating? Well, my main serious bits of the article were the ones focussing on insularity and the oddly patrician approach to taste and music discourse I find in the indie 'scene'. Speaking personally, as a pop fan, I've spent countless postings, articles and e-mails having to defend my tastes from their very root. And I think that's been really good for my development as a listener, a writer, etc.

So FT takes a stand against indie because it amuses me, and because I think it's good for people to be confronted with dismissive opinions: most indie rock criticism not only takes indie to be the centre of the musical universe, it also leaves the attitudes and assumptions behind the music unexamined. Our counterweight may be crass, but at least it's there. Usually I drop a line into a review somewhere or a side-point in an NYLPM piece and try to keep things reasonable and polite; sometimes the frustration at stuff gets to me so the hammer is tried rather than the chisel.

As for intelligent writing, it's all very well but I so rarely get any feedback. By shoving some of Tanya's stuff front and central at least responses are guaranteed. Thanks, as ever, for yours!

Tom, Wednesday, 3 January 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

Indie Kids, do you mean saps who love conformist and generic rubbish grey lightweight inoffensive duffers e.g Coldplay, Travis and Bluetones albums?

When you refer to indie kids, what do you precisely mean, for instance what albums would a stereotypical indie kid your are refering to would have bought in 2000? and what would their favourite albums of the 90s be? Does Indie kid mean boring britpop and dull dadrock that would encompass shed 7, stereophonics, cast, oasis, kula shaker, montrose avenue, bluetones and all that rubbish that MM/NME celebrated for most of the mid 90s onwards.

or are indie kids that wear identical tshirts, baggy jeans, and sometimes hooded tops they seem to only like 3 bands blink 182/offspring/ green day - you know those hidedous 13-18 old i see wondering around in groups - sheeplike, unoriginal and dumb.

DJ Martian, Wednesday, 3 January 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

Aww, indie "boys" just want to fuck indie "girls" and vice-versa, modify as necessary for non-heteros. Looking and acting the part makes it much easier. To quote the Pop Group, "We are ALL prostitutes!" Or, quoting Samantha Fox, "Indie kids need love too too too too too." I enjoyed the part of the article about them growing up and listening to Aimee Mann, though; that was funny.

Kris, Wednesday, 3 January 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

no, martian, i think he means hideous saps who like stuff like sunny day real estate, trail of dead, the dirty three, and godspeed.

my comment re unoriginality was mostly directed at the easy jokes about masturbation, ugliness, and social maladjustment. i really don't think it's necessary to answer "why are they wrong?" or "why doesn't it matter?" here. i realize it was meant as humour but i thought it was weak, partly because it was unoriginal.

maybe you have a different perspective over there but here indie rockers are a) 80% male and b) an extreme minority. most people don't even know what indie rock is. it's not a scene any straight guy would get into for a shag. most indie rockers have had their tastes criticized (and had to defend them) a million times ("punk was a fad," "you can't hear the words," "they can't sing," "it's just noise," "can't they even tune their instruments?" . . .). much more, in fact, than the typical pop fan (which you obviously are not), whose tastes *are* the social norm.

of course indie rock criticism is indie-centric. it wouldn't be indie rock criticism otherwise. i've long ago stopped reading pitchfork regularly for that reason but that's just my taste. reviews are more important for fans of non-mainstream music who aren't exposed to the music they like through radio or TV. i have also been frustrated by the "experimental but not too experimental" aspect of indie rock taste but, hell, at least they generally tend to be more open to experimental music than most people. ultimately not everyone's going to be obsessive enough about music to cultivate a thousand aesthetic sensibilities and invest heavily in each one. i don't see the need to pick on people who have a specific taste.

some of the music i like and some i don't but i'm not sure it makes me a more critical listener than anyone else just because i prefer the magnetic fields to pedro the lion or camera obscura to don caballero (or ligeti or nagamani srinath or coltrane or bauhaus or boston to pavement or yo la tengo or aix em klemm or whoever). there are after all enough people who love rachel's and despise my bloody valentine.

*sigh* i'm coming off as really defensive of indie here, which a number of indie rockers who know me would find very funny. there are flaws with the scene/s that can turn you or me off but mostly these are all just come down to basic human tendencies (social insecurity, naivete, sexual desire, need for companionship, . . .) it's not a scene for everyone, especially if you're not a raging fan of indie rock, and it's not a scene i would wholeheartedly commit myself to, but again, that's just me and my taste. i don't know.

sundar subramanian, Thursday, 4 January 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

I love you tanya



and i'm not pissed, oh no

carsmilesteve, Thursday, 4 January 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

i immediately sent the link to the article to a few of my friends and forced them to read it. they agree that it is pure genius.

so yes, i thought it was fucking brilliant, though some of the 18 points were much funnier/true than others. some were kind of lame. but then again, who am i to judge indie rockers? my favorite band is still the velvet underground, so what do i know.

geeta dayal, Thursday, 4 January 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

Some of the 'girls' on Make Out Club are cute.

J.M., Saturday, 6 January 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

after actually attending an indie rock show (which i hadn't in a while), i'm feeling somewhat more sympathetic towards tanya's position.

sundar subramanian, Monday, 8 January 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

I think the real problem with the indie scene is not how much we are alike and pathetic (which is why we all hang out together and have 'a scene'), but the hierarchy/elitism.

There are always people like yourselves who denounce the popular, well-known bands and say 'Indie kids have shit taste/are narrow- minded sheep because they don't like *insert obscure band who no one has ever heard of, that you would be able to find in any record store and you should feel like an idiot for not knowing them*'. I'm always open to listening to exciting new bands. But if I hear a great band I'm not going to throw casual references about them around so everyone will be impressed with my cool taste and lord it over others and say 'Ohmigod, do you like Shed 7, they're so passe'. I still love Shed 7. Don't deny something worthwhile and enjoyable just because *now* you're cool, in your sole, lonely definition of the word.

Audrey, Wednesday, 17 January 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

Audrey, you couldn't be more wrong. It's more like 'Indie kids have shit taste/are narrow- minded sheep because they don't like *insert obscenely popular band that lacks indie-allowable camp factor that Spice Girls, for ex. have*'

i.e. not Mrs. Spears, but Jessica Simpson

Sterling Clover, Thursday, 18 January 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

I can't speak for my fellow authors but I have never been and will never be cool. For me it's more like 'indie kids have shit taste because they generally only listen to indie' (my bits in the article were mostly #s15-17 or so). And you can define indie as widely as you like, from the most mersh altbands going to 200-copy ltd.edition sparkly vinyl sideprojects. Like I said in 1000 somewhere, most of this stuff works for me only because I listen to all the other stuff too, i.e. it can fulfil its function as an alternative because I'm into all the music it's meant to be an alternative *to*.

Anyway, Shed 7 are a poor example because they were shit before they were hip, they were shit while they were hip, and they're shit now. It'd be like me using J Lo to defend pop, or something.

Tom, Thursday, 18 January 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

I like Destiny's Child and TLC. I couldn't even guess how they would fit into your view of good mainstream music. The point is, how do you even know these indie kids don't listen to other music? You've judged the scene but have you gone and talked to any of them and checked out their record collection?

I chose Shed 7 because it's such a popular band to put down (and I still do like them). I could have put any well-known indie band - the Bluetones maybe. It doesn't matter which one I put because, as I expected you said the equivalent of 'Ohmigod, do you like Shed 7.'

Audrey, Thursday, 18 January 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

TLC and DC are both good, obviously.

And yes, I have talked to indie kids. A lot of them are lovely - this is why there is a nice big caveat on the side of the article saying we don't really hate them. Most of them dabble in musics other than indie, which is great: some genuinely do have as narrow taste as is being painted, and those ones often end up becoming prominent in the 'scene' and hence being judged unfairly by relative outsiders like myself.

Meanwhile yes I gave the obvious answer to Shed Seven, but I don't see that it proves much of a point other than that a lot of people ENTIRELY CORRECTLY hate Shed Seven. It'd be like saying, you're a film snob, you don't like Battlefield Earth, and me saying no because it's rubbish, and you saying a-ha! Told you so!

Tom, Thursday, 18 January 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

okay, good point (and it made me laugh)

the thing about the article is that it hit a few tender points about the amount of conformity in the scene. But I'm happy with the music I listen to and the way I look and I felt I ought to defend it.

I still like Shed 7...

Audrey, Thursday, 18 January 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

one month passes...
indie kids really suck. tom, youre a big fat wuss for backtracking and saying "oh im sorry! i really do like them!" if youre gonna insult someone,stick to it ya pussy! because INDIE KIDS ARE A BUNCH OF WHINY, ANNOYING, WHITE, UGLY UGLY UGLY kids who have nothing better to do than mooch off their parents, collect shit records, dress in the colors of piss yellow and crap brown, and never ever wash themselves. you know you fucking hate them. you know it baby. admit and be proud. FUCK FANZINES FUCK UGLY GREASY KIDS AND FUCK INDIE FUCKING ROCK!

VIVA THE REAL REVOLUTION OF ROCK AND ROLL THAT WILL ONE DAY TAKE YOUR SOUL AND SPIT OUT THE SHIT THAT IS WHINY LITTLE BOY MUSIC! VIVA THE TIME OF TRUE REDEMPTION, THE TIME OF TRUE MUSIC! ONE DAY YOULL SEE AS I SIT IN MY THRONE AND JUDGE YE THAT WORE BLACK FRAMED GLASSES AND CLAIMED TO LIKE BOTH AT THE DRIVE IN AND THE SPICE GIRLS!

Freddy Krueger, Monday, 19 February 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

three weeks pass...
what ever happened to the days when "indie" meant you did your own thing? now it seems like indie is just another set of rules you have to follow.

jeremy harker, Wednesday, 14 March 2001 01:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

one month passes...
well ..... Personally i thought that article was kinda funny cos not all indiekids are like that. Basically you complain about us being total stereotypes but its you who is actually stereotyping all indiekids into one thing! Duh ! we arent all the same , we dont dress in piss colours either ! You are judgining us on the indiekids you know .But i must admitt i think its strange how you back down on what you said by then saying you think indiekids are ok , make up your mind why dontcha? I must say you did a good job though and every1 is allowed an opinion so im being a friendly indiekid and sayin well done. errrr yeh plz dont shout @ me!

why would i want to tel you losers that?, Friday, 20 April 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

I have to say that the article was pretty sharp in descibing practically ALL the indie kids I have ever met, and I doubt I know the same people Tom and co know, so perhaps there is an element of truth?

DG, Friday, 20 April 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

Yes, what bothers me the most about indie kids is their political hypocrisy. I knew an indie guy in college who claimed to be a vegan, yet he wore leather combat boots and used soap made from animal fat. And I've had to defend myself against several indie acquaintances for buying the occasional shirt at the Gap because the clothes are most likely made in sweatshops and, uh, yeah, the Gap stands for corporate capitalist evil! I should be buying my threads at the Salvation Army! There are a few things wrong with that. First, just because a shirt comes from the S.A. doesn't mean it wasn't made in a sweatshop. If anything, it was made in a sweatshop circa 1975, before the issue of sweatshop labor became such a widely recognized problem, and so the conditions may have been even worse. Second, few indie kids understand that the Salvation Army sends much of its unusable clothing overseas, to be reprocessed in, you guessed it, sweatshops! Not to mention that they exploit their mentally disabled employees, paying them something like four dollars an hour. Third, I can't stand it when indie kids call themselves "ghetto". As in, "yeah, well, I'm really ghetto. I only shop at the Salvation Army." These kids are overwhelmingly financially comfortable and privileged, with warm, loving homes and plenty to eat. They don't NEED to shop at the Salvation Army, while so many others have no choice. When did poverty become hip? It's an insult to actual struggling, suffering people. Finally, why do so many of them call themselves anarchists? I have the feeling that they would be scared sh!tless in an instance of actual, widespread anarchy. They would not enjoy living in constant fear and violence. Millions of residents of less fortunate, wealthy and peaceful nations can only dream of being in the "hip" thrift- store shoes of the average privileged American indie kid who is so bored, in his luxury, that he romanticizes poverty and political unrest.

-heidi

Heidi Ambler, Sunday, 22 April 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

good lord this is a riot! you honestly think you can sum 'indie kids' into one lump. yes there is a bit of the 'more indie than tho' going on in the ranks but as a whole i really dont see the indie rock/pop music genre as being filled with dirty kids to 'wear piss yellow and brown', who breed like rabbits or are fake. personaly i think its more amusing when white suburban males says how they can identify with life in the ghetto. i listen to 'indie' bands....most of which were not mentioned in any of your comments, i shower, i do have glasses but not the ones as described, my hair is well maintained, i hate the color yellow, i dont call girls 'grrls' or boys 'bois', i shop at some vintage stores because i really like 50ish dresses, not because i plead poverty...i've even worked *gasp* at lerners!.....so i dont know whats up with this whole anti-indie rant. you're just lumping us into a steriotype. one could easily be placed on any genre of music.....so can it. **azalea path

azalea path, Sunday, 22 April 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

Indie kids can be summed up into one big lump because they are in fact all the same. Additionally, you are just like every other indie kid. Just admit it and move on.

Sterling Clover, Monday, 23 April 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

You're right, it is amusing when white suburban males say they can identify with the ghetto. Are indie kids not mostly white and suburban? I think they are. But if you mean guys like Eminem, yes. You're right. Eminem types are ridiculous too.

Heidi, Monday, 23 April 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

considering you dont even know me...just the one post i wrote...clover, you sounds pretty silly saying im just like 'all the indie kids'....every group has its steriotypes...whatever you listen to im pretty sure isnt exempt from that. because a person listens to a type of music dosent necessary govern the rest of their lives. and heidi as for the ethnic makeup of the indie scene i dont know if its mostly white...from what ive seen yes. i dont see how you're linking that to my comparison with the white rich/middle class boys who listen to rap because they 'identify' with it. with indie *at least the bands i listen to'...they're most likely white middle class but then so am i so there is no contradiction there. so in summary i think the anti-indie argument can be held with any group....you dont think the stuff you're listening to is processed crap then so be it...personaly im not a backstreet or brittey spears fan...so i look elsewhere for music. **azalea

azalea path, Thursday, 26 April 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

'at least i listen to music made by my race and class!'

ethan, Thursday, 26 April 2001 00:00 (twenty-three years ago) link

Oh yes, this article is right on. My college is infested with thick- framed jerk-off who ought to know better. I also didn't know that anyone other than myself had noticed the way that these people call everyone "boys" and "girls" (though it's mostly the men that get this treatment).

I myself decided to dress in a generic indie rock fashion, with the "ironic" t-shirts, the tight courdoroy pants, the repulsive late- 70s tennis shoes, et cetera. I couldn't bring myself to wear the buddy holly glasses, but that's immaterial. The point is, I've never gotten more action in my life. I didn't realize that "hey man, I love your shoes" is what passes for a pick-up line among the bed-head indie tarts.

I don't even listen to indie rock, I hate it, I listen to rap. Not even that college "hip-hop" turntablist snooze crap, but real shoot- em-up die-nigga RAP rap. But so long as I wear my little tight shirts and maintain the perfect slouch, it's all indie. Rap can be indie, reggae can be indie, and god knows disco can be indie. It's about looks, it's about sex, and that's all it's about.

Girls don't like music anyway. They're buying those $200 7-inches because they're cute, and they think of them as a lifestyle accessory more than a vehicle for music. It's girls that fuel emo and any other type of music made by crying pussies in red Saucony shoes.

And with God as my witness, I swear that when I'm able to perfect my indie rock style, I'll be able to do anything I like. I will masturbate and poop in the middle of the road with complete impunity. Hey, it's all indie.

Chris H., Saturday, 5 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

This man is my idol.

Otis Wheeler, Saturday, 5 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

100% correct, Otie. I'm gonna hire him as my official doyenne of style. Chris Herbert, I salute you.

Tim, Sunday, 6 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Well fellows, I appreciate your appreciation of me.

Chris H., Sunday, 6 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

i don't appreciate you, i think you're full of shit. 'real shoot- em-up die-nigga RAP rap'? fuck that.

ethan, Sunday, 6 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

This is getting off the topic of the question, but I'm serious when I say real shoot 'em up rap, etc. College hip-hop, abstract hip-hop, progressive hip-hop, or really any kind of rap that bristles at being called rap, is almost always effete and awful. They're groups who "Respect" De La Soul, Public Enemy, and the other late-80's & early-90's rap groups that were pidgeonholed into the "consciousness" catagory, without really understanding them. Enough with "third-eye" nonsense, and endless blather about "not being pop." They are humorless, boring, and absolutely no fun.

Chris H., Monday, 7 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

yes, i understood exactly what you meant. because music is only exciting if shots go off and a nigga dies. fuck that.

ethan, Monday, 7 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

No, music is only exciting if it has some life. Aceyalone, Talib Kweli, even the god damned Roots make music that is so impotent and dead that it is appropriate only as the soundtrack for a vegan cookout.

Hip-hop snob complain that hip-hop became hip-pop (as if that's a bad thing) sometime between Young MC and Mase. It was always pop. All the sacred cows, Run DMC, Grandmaster Flash, A Tribe Called Quest, made music that was undeniably and unapologetically pop music. Sometimes it was even materialistic, bling bling, shoot em up, coke snorting, hard-rocking pop music. Nothing has changed.

Chris H., Monday, 7 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Think you guys could start yourselves a separate thread if you'd like to continue with this discussion?

Josh (ILM Moderator), Monday, 7 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

yes josh, i plan on starting a big catch-all thread for this soon, but right now i'm addressing the issue here, which is that i find fault with mr.herbert's separation of rap into 1) 'shoot-em-up die-nigga' and 2) boring 'consciousness' crap. but then he sort of switched his point halfway through to say that pop music is good, which is of course true and painfully overstated here by short-attention-span elitists paining themselves to explain why music that is slow and does not have Great Big Hooks and tries to promote any social conscience is all boring and pretentious and just plain bad.

sure, talib's album isn't good, same for jt money, same for trick daddy, who cares? being a top 40 gangsta doesn't automatically make an album listenable same way that being intelligent and speaking honestly doesn't. equating big balla clichés with an 'exciting' artist that 'has life' is just sophmoric. admittedly, the indie-hiphop template is rapidly getting tired, but so is your revered mainstream hiphop 'shoot- em-up die-nigga' template (and the former is far more enjoyable to begin with). when artists work to make original works that rise above stagnation or cliché, that is when you have music that is exciting. i see the roots doing this, i see jay-z doing this. they're not mutually exclusive. i have no problem with rap being pop, that's exactly what it has always been and what it will always be, just as rock is pop and country is pop. it's music and it's art.

(as i side note, i'm also very disturbed by the misogyny in your lengthy indie post as well but it's too late to address that meaningfully, and so let me just point it out for now. mr.herbert's 'mission statement's instant embracement by the other members of the forum is a close-up example of how howard stern/rush limbaugh/that guy from fox news 'tell-it-like-it-is' assholes create huge cults around their deplorable statements and awful generalisations. it's super-funny to say that girls don't really like music and are just buying records as fashion accessories if you have the mentality of an antisocial ten year-old boy, but otherwise it's just sexist)

ethan, Monday, 7 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Oooh! "short-attention-span elitists" is such the good tagline. In, fact, I'm stealing it for In Review right now!

Sterling Clover, Monday, 7 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

It's this whole "elitist" thing that confuses me... how is it at all elitist to like pop? Contrary, I'll grant you. Silly if applied to *every* pop song, yes. Inverted snobbery, possibly. But elitist? You'd have to show that enjoying pop distinguished, say, me from the "unwashed masses", which I don't think you can do. Now, maybe it distinguishes me from Pinefox, but I don't think the difference between myself and Pinefox is exactly what Bourdieu had in mind when he wrote Distinction. And to clarify, I would never really hire Chris Herbert.

Tim, Monday, 7 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

i'm going to kill this discussion now, but to clarify: he's elitist because he feels superior about choosing 'shoot-em-up di- nigga RAP rap' over 'boring college hiphop'. it's not 'i like top 40 pop', it's 'i am defined because i like this thing which is better than that thing'. it's all ego.

ethan, Monday, 7 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I never knew this board was the place to submit material for Maxim's letters page til Chris set us right.

Nicole, Monday, 7 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

thank you, i was tired last night and couldn't articulate a good way to sum up the entire vibe of it. the whole thing could have been a skit on 'the man show' or something. complete with 'dumb violent things are good, smart things are boring' and 'girls don't really GET what us men do' subtext. a bunch of disgusting 'anti-PC and proud of it!' bullshit. um, no offense.

ethan, Monday, 7 May 2001 00:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Something I ought to say Ronan is that the piece was about American indie kids - I talked about the attitudes (the indie online community being US-dominated I was encountering them more than British IKs), Maura gave me some background detail on look and lifestyle. Whether it applies to Ireland I've no idea - it doesn't to the UK so much at all.

Tom, Tuesday, 1 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

that would make sense. it must be totally different though, really radically different, I mean what Jess said about liking indie music getting you laid was just an insane notion to me. It's the complete opposite over here. the "indie kids" here are just sort of odd quiet people who are obsessed with a few big name bands, manics, maybe radiohead, and the odd traditionalist pink floyd, beatles, doors sort of fan.

I don't know if Britain is different from Ireland in this respect, but the people buying the sort of middling crap that seems to go under the "indie" label here are not really part of any scene at all. the markers have been changed so much with the huge growth in the pop industry, that popular (ish) rock is very very accessible to the average 18, 19, 20 year old. So we're talking alot of the Coldplay clones, aswell as Coldplay, U2 perhaps, Charlatans, that type of thing, Travis. the fans are just your average lad types. I get the impression Britain might be like this too from magazines and the like.

Ronan, Tuesday, 1 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

ronan...well, yr not gonna get laid by anyone other than indie gurls or boys...and a sad state of affairs it is. (not that, um, i know anything about this mind you...) the article is pretty dead on re. indie kids in america, the stereotype that is. and no. it's not dead. not by a long shot. i have no idea what "indie kid" means in other countries...but i have to assume it's pretty damn odd.

jess, Tuesday, 1 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

RIP to Eazy E, the E, one of the best hip-hopsters of all time

Rob A, Tuesday, 1 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

The Australian variant of the UK indie kids seem to be mainly Belle & Sebastian fans intermingled with a bit of Mod/Glam/ Northern Soul/Strokes action. And they most certainly exist, are as cliched as any other subculture and deserve as much healthy mocking - I know that the common practice for indie kidz on a Thursday night after the indie klubz close is to go to the local metal/industrial/grunge hang-out and (discreetly) jeer, so why not? We're talking about cheap gags here, so being determined not to lower yourself to everyone else's level will only get you so far.

Tim, Wednesday, 2 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

"healthy mocking"

I disagree the mocking is healthy - quite the opposite - it's lazy and now very monotonous.

I like glam, mod and northern soul. Liking all sorts of things is a good thing.

Alexander Blair, Wednesday, 2 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

"Liking all sorts of things is a good thing."

I'm glad we agree on something.

Tom, Wednesday, 2 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

why is freakytrigger.com redirecting me to sunfinder.com?

g, Wednesday, 2 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

nevermind.

g, Wednesday, 2 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Does anyone here like the Eazy E or the NWA?

Rob A, Wednesday, 2 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

is that your bra size in your aol id?

i'm just asking.

also, makeoutclub.com, one year later, still offers proof that not every point made in the piece was off. cheap? sure, some of them were. but none were based in anything 'obsolete' at all.

maura, Wednesday, 2 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Right here.

Mark, Wednesday, 2 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

well, i'm not sure what the point of makeoutclub.com is, or what exactly indie is, but i have to admit a lot of the "girls" on there are pretty "cute." I bet they don;t put out much tho

g, Wednesday, 2 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I'm finally trying to read the article, and am redirected to some unrelated piece of nonsense. And I tried several times.

Sean, Wednesday, 2 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Yes - that link was directed to freakytrigger.com, the old domain name which got bought by redirect sharks when my host went bust and I couldnt renew it. The article currently lives at www.freakytrigger.co.uk/indiekids.html

Tom, Wednesday, 2 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Scrolled down, found new link... nevermind.

Sean, Wednesday, 2 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

my ex is on makeoutclub. i feel vaguely ill.

jess, Wednesday, 2 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Sean check NYLPM - remember Tom lost his .com freakytrigger domain in the spring of 2001 - now FT is co.uk !

gee whizz - I have not seen that makeoutclub for about a year - there are some laughable sad American girls on there, cliched beyond belief - horn rimmed glasses, pasty faces because they don't eat meat, i am so sensitive, alternative and unique statements, surprising a lot of bible followers - i suppose the christian right particularly in the south has a stronghold on culture/life in the US, straight cut fringes, naff emo/contemporary punk bands listed by the dozen - some of them have so narrow AND LIMITED music tastes!

DJ Martian, Wednesday, 2 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

i know two girls on makeoutclub, one i still talk to occasionally and is amiable although we disagree on everything tastewise, the other is my horrid former coworker who used to constantly drunkenly hit on me and smack my ass. i don't know any males on the site.

ethan, Wednesday, 2 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I am on it! Alas most the folks there are just kiddies so I gave up on it like a year ago. Still, every once and a while I get im's from random indiekids who spotted my profile there. And the few net friends I have made via makeoutclub are quite intelligent and fall well outside the indie stereotype.

bnw, Wednesday, 2 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

shit, this makeoutclub sounds alright!

gareth, Thursday, 3 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

EAZY E, does anyone like him or used to like his rap music?

Rob A, Thursday, 3 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Many of the young women on makeoutclub are adorable-looking indeed and the profiles show quite a bit of diversity in their musical tastes. Most have roughly the same haircut, but it's a good one.

dan, Thursday, 3 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

If you want to get laid, Peggy Lee is where it's at.

Tracer Hand, Thursday, 3 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

It depresses me when I think to myself "i'm so sick of that indie girl haircut" and realise my girlfriend sports the same 'do. I wish she'd just shave her head like I've been hassling her to do for ages.

electric sound of jim, Thursday, 3 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Theres one of these clubs out in Compton, CA,i hear its mad nice out there. Get laid a lot.

Rob A, Friday, 4 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

A girl on MoC used a picture I took of her on her profile. Guess which one! Win a prize!

JM, Friday, 4 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I think the reason the girls tend to be less obsessive about the music than the guys is the same reason that girls tend to be less obsessive about almost everything - they don't have the time or money to be so obsessed.

This is just daft.

N., Friday, 4 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

Yeah, the word "Beatlemania" comes to mind, for starters...

Phil, Friday, 4 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

I just checked out some of the bois on makeoutclub and they're a pretty sad lot. So much bad taste, smugness, posing, obesity, general fakeness. The young women really shine in comparison. I'm not sure if this is an "indie" phenomenon or if it applies to people in general of that age, but I do think there's something to it.
Sorry if this comes across as sexist.

dan, Friday, 4 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

So, Nick, what's your explanation for guys generally being more obsessive about music, surfing, skating, cars, hunting, football, computers, stereos, movies, gaming, and all the other things that so many guys are obsessed with, than girls? Do you think it is less about society and upbringing and more about the intrinsic differences between male and female?

toraneko, Saturday, 5 January 2002 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

two months pass...
i am really hating "indie kid" traits at the moment.
partly because i have some things in common [preference for writing in lowercase; love of vinyl recs, thrift stores/diy/secondhand stuff; into zines; wear jeans and tee shirts; love kids books; am hypocritical and not as smart as i should be; use the internet quite alot; blah blah blah].
i don't know if i'm just hating predictability/group cohesion or if it's something particular to "indie-dom". One thing i suspect bugs me, is that i think the growth of "indie"ness (don't know what else to call it, since it's not that well defined, and crosses over with punky riotgrrl type stuff) seems to have made young nz'ers more american influenced in recent years. (factor here might be the net).
and i have some "issues" and confusion over the whole "cuteness" thing. I feel like defining myself as "anti-cute" but is that just reactionary, and is the cuteness thing itself reactionary in this context (like it seems to me to be in the context of japanese kawaii cultural stuff). is it always bad to be reactionary? am i anti-social because i don't like it when people exhibit too many common traits - or is it okay to suspect them of some kind of "insincerity", of just trying to fit in [which i especially hate to come across in "subcultures" that are at least in part, or have been, should be or are supposed to be "counterculture"]. i don't even know whether to think of myself as "anti-social". i guess that would be a stupid generalisation itself. does it mean you feel at odds with most social groupings, or that you would rather be alone, or you hate everybody? i am none of the former things. oh well who cares what anti-social means. sorry for this ridiculously diffuse post.

elizabeth anne marjorie, Tuesday, 5 March 2002 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

oh, except for being at odds with most social groupings, duh.

elizabeth anne marjorie, Tuesday, 5 March 2002 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

So I read this article and being a misanthrope found it good fun to laugh, but after reading the entire thread I've become very interested in what the article and the subsequent responses have to indirectly say about culture and human interactions as a whole. So some people are lumped into mass/pop culture, others associate with something more underground, but regardless they both result from the same desire to fit into a group. Britney Spears types like the music b/c it fits an image they prefer-it helps them fit into the group they most want to be a part of. The same go for indie- scenesters. They don't like whats offered by the mainstream-it doesn't fit their personal preferences so they go for a scene that they feel is more representative of their character or that will get them what they want. Its the same thing as those who follow pop culture. Disdainful/ironic elitism is the same too. Its all behaviour meant to help and individual fit into a group or social strata, or in the case of many elitists, to raise that individual to some self- ordained elevation that enables them to feel better about themselves. OF course, I'm personally guilty of this since i've claimed I'm a misanthrope. I think I'm stating some pretty obvious Soc. 101 stuff here, but its still interesting. Personally, I think that scenes should be avoided like the plague. Listen to the music you like b/c you like it, not b/c it helps you fit into a group. I do like articles and discussions like this though, b/c it really helps(or should help) you evaluate why you like the music you like. Good stuff.

cottonboll, Monday, 18 March 2002 01:00 (twenty-two years ago) link

two years pass...
I think the indie-rock thing is some kind of natural outgrowth of a certain age, the 1980-1985 set. I went through high school oblivious to subcultures and the only one I could relate to were the cool grunge kids that i never talked to; thrift shop hipsters that got me into Smashing Pumpkins when Siamese Dream came out and sat on the floor at lunchtime, away from the Southern Baptist yuppie sperm that swarmed around posting flyers for church get-togethers and the like.

I grew up in a suburb of Georgia and removed completely from any scene at all, until high school when i made the periodic trips to Athens to see Olivia Tremor Control or Elf Power and started making pseudo-Flaming Lips songs on my 4-track at home. I had read alot about my parents' 60s revolution and was in love with the music; the way people dressed at these shows felt good, Mr. Roger sweaters and all, like a cheerier, more fun version of Nirvana. At school i wore ties and blazers and t-shirts cos I saw a picture of Syd Barrett and he looked so dandy and experimental at the same time. My parents thought I was crazy and/or on drugs, and asked me several times in fact.

Around this time I started hanging out with people in Atlanta, who had impeccable thrift store post-Grunge fashions and were making improvizational music with old synthesizers and cheap guitars and stuff. They referred to each other as 'kids' and this was the first time I ever heard the term. It seemed to ecompass a lot of the musical/stylistic ideas i was pursuing at the time.

My little brother was into hardcore and screamo and i would drive him around to all these shows and i looked weird enough to fit in and get into the pit and all that. I moved into a punk rock house with some kids that were members of a band that is now A Small Victory, and they were nice guys, we stayed up late nights dumpster diving and listening to Bjork and all that. I met and fell in love with a goth girl and died my hair black, which has since then morphed from a shaggy-haired George Harrison '68 look to an Oliver Twist look to a Classical Greek cherub look. I never thought that i should imitate others but i did like the look of black and ran with it.

I tried to listen to At the Drive In and couldn't get into it. My roommates also had a lot of non-ironic pop around like the Dirty Pop of N*Sync and Britney Spears and all that. Anyways, over the years I bounced between hanging out with different scenes (mostly the local punk scene), becoming increasingly conscious of the Stylism that worked its way into them.

It's funny cos today maybe I would be a stereotypical indie kid; last week my mom called me up to say that she went to a department store and all the styles looked exactly the way i dressed in high school.

Nowadays I go to school for art and live with two private art-school kids, and they constantly look like models. It seems like that whole group kind of stems from the indie kid elitist model (especially since they're all at the right age) but more elegant and self-defined. Sorry for the long post.

Oh, and I do love The Smiths and The Cure (go ahead, cruxify me).

Adam Bruneau (oliver8bit), Wednesday, 23 February 2005 21:34 (nineteen years ago) link

All their records sound the same, due to influence inbreeding. The gene pool of influences on indie rock has been shrinking steadily since 1977, thanks to paranoid scenester tastemaking...

#15 (plus 16 and 17) articulates something I've been sensing for some time. This shrinking of the genepool is progressive, such that you can't possibly have too many more generations of some of these strains of indie before the perpetual inbreeding between simplicity and amateurism results in collapse into demented whimpers. It's like generation 0 offered a refreshing DIY reaction to the most ornate popular music of the 70's. But by generation 23 or whatever those living in the self-referencing cave so long without allowing themselves to appreciate a truly swinging brass arrangement first hand or, I dunno, even a genuinely driving or complex or funky rhythm, are going to have too few tools to construct even the most rudimentary pop song. Presumably most have broader tastes, it sounds like it in fewer and fewer cases, and I can feel my brain cells dying.

Nag! Nag! Nag! (Nag! Nag! Nag!), Wednesday, 23 February 2005 22:51 (nineteen years ago) link

Let's not forget the original subculture that indiekids totally bit their style of dress from: nerds. Ill-fitting thrift store clothing, bad haircuts, black plastic BCGs (Birth Control Glasses, or "I'm sorry dear this is all our insurance will cover") have all been trademarks of your garden variety nerd for decades. Obviously there is an element of economic class which necessitates such a style, though not all poor kids dressed this way. When did the cool kids (who usually are considered to have ample spending money) start copping the style? How can two stereotypes at opposite ends of the social spectrum be so similar? (cue Simple Minds song)

lurk, Thursday, 24 February 2005 02:04 (nineteen years ago) link

Yeah, I mean, the possibility of indie rock culture originating from nerd culture is SO RIDICULOUS! (PS: the Feelies never existed)

Stupornaut (natepatrin), Thursday, 24 February 2005 02:41 (nineteen years ago) link

Yeah what the fuck? Most indie kids (and adults) I know are genuine nerds. myself included.

When did the cool kids (who usually are considered to have ample spending money) start copping the style? How can two stereotypes at opposite ends of the social spectrum be so similar?

or are indie kids the popular kids in high school now, like the jocks? I'm confused...maybe things have changed....I would think the popular kids all listen to rap and play sports, etc....or maybe Dave Matthews band or something....

M@tt He1geson (Matt Helgeson), Thursday, 24 February 2005 02:49 (nineteen years ago) link

But by generation 23 or whatever those living in the self-referencing cave so long without allowing themselves to appreciate a truly swinging brass arrangement first hand or, I dunno, even a genuinely driving or complex or funky rhythm, are going to have too few tools to construct even the most rudimentary pop song. Presumably most have broader tastes, it sounds like it in fewer and fewer cases, and I can feel my brain cells dying.

Man....I guess maybe the indie folks I know are different or something but the people in bands I know pride themselves on being able to play....good drummers are revered....every "indie" type person I know loves James Brown and Miles Davis...I guess I know more people that are punks not indie or something...but it seems like "indie" on this thread is becoming some kind of wierd catch-all for everything people hate or something....

M@tt He1geson (Matt Helgeson), Thursday, 24 February 2005 02:51 (nineteen years ago) link

or metal...all the indie dudes i know a few years younger than me totally love metal...really love it too, shit like Isis and Extol all that not ironic "oh iron maiden is funny"....

M@tt He1geson (Matt Helgeson), Thursday, 24 February 2005 02:53 (nineteen years ago) link

I dunno, this article seems pretty prescient in the world of "indieclick" and suicide girls.

Jacob (Jacob), Thursday, 24 February 2005 02:57 (nineteen years ago) link

were they mailing tea and crumpets to posters in 2001?

miccio (miccio), Thursday, 24 February 2005 03:08 (nineteen years ago) link

i could use some good tea and crumpets right now....


what the fuck are crumpets anyway?

M@tt He1geson (Matt Helgeson), Thursday, 24 February 2005 03:16 (nineteen years ago) link

You'll find them in Lil Jon tracks that use horn sections

Stupornaut (natepatrin), Thursday, 24 February 2005 03:47 (nineteen years ago) link

David Banner's real name is "Levell Crump"

I think that kid Chris Herbert upthread was pretty funny, and misogynistic, but i think the big tymers are funny too so whatever.

djdee2005 (djdee2005), Thursday, 24 February 2005 04:20 (nineteen years ago) link

David Banner's real name is "Levell Crump"

Really? That sounds like a character from Dickens almost....or something....that's an awesome name.

M@tt He1geson (Matt Helgeson), Thursday, 24 February 2005 04:23 (nineteen years ago) link

Man....I guess maybe the indie folks I know are different or something but the people in bands I know pride themselves on being able to play....good drummers are revered....every "indie" type person I know loves James Brown and Miles Davis...I guess I know more people that are punks not indie or something...but it seems like "indie" on this thread is becoming some kind of wierd catch-all for everything people hate or something....

-- M@tt He1geson

OTM

Hurting (Hurting), Thursday, 24 February 2005 04:27 (nineteen years ago) link

every "indie" type person I know loves James Brown and Miles Davis

genius.

NRQ, Thursday, 24 February 2005 09:56 (nineteen years ago) link

I love that the article precisely describes Seth Cohen.

jim (jim5et), Thursday, 24 February 2005 11:15 (nineteen years ago) link


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