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From:
Kent Williams
To:
intelligent dance
Date:
Tue, 16 Jul 1996 15:53:18 -0500 (CDT)
Subject:
Re: (idm) Keep Music Underground
Msg-Id:
<Pine.LNX.3.91.960716153421.1659A-100000@soli.inav.net>
In-Reply-To:
<199607161757.NAA28044@pilot05.cl.msu.edu>
Mbox:
idm.9607.gz
This is a moot discussion -- probably of little interest to most IDM'ers. You can get good results on cheap equipment. But cheap equipment only goes so far. At a certain point, musician look to get the proper tools to more efficiently realize their ideas. And it doesn't have anything to do with the money -- it has to do with the commitment. You can be making $15K and if you eat cheap, and share a rathole apartment with friends, you can shake loose $2K or $3K a year to spend on gear. And all this 'keep it underground' stuff isn't just 'keep it within the clique.' Techno has artists, labels, distributors, and promoters that all are working outside the regular music industry, and by NOT being tied to the old hierarchy they can break the rules. To people who manage to cross over somehow, more power to them. But there is, and I hope there will always be, economic free zones like the underground techno industry. Things founded on person to person cooperation will always, to my way of thinking, be more real than things constructed by corporate entities operating in a consumer economy. What if it happened that in the US people stopped hanging out in bars and started going to parties and dancing? That's what has happened in the UK, and the pubs are hurting. And like the UK this will mean more cheesy dance clubs in malls, just like in the 70's. Most people want their entertainment packaged for them, and so will not seek out the independent operators on the margins. But that doesn't mean the independent scene won't thrive. History lesson -- before Disco was disco, the dance clubs, gay and straight, were doing their thing. Disco hit, and what had been a gay/black/puerto rican thing became part of the mass culture. When the wave crashed, people didn't stop dancing -- they went back underground. There is an uninterrupted line going back to the early 70's of independent labels pressing 12"s for DJs. If techno breaks big, and then fizzles, the same people will keep doing their thing, regardless of the larger culture, because it's what they love. So don't worry about the underground. The street will survive when the major labels and the posers they hire to capitalize on the street move on again. --------------------------------------------------------------------- "I read Keyboard, but it's like staring at a book with pictures of simple looking but expensive machines." -- Michael Lazarev NEW CD Comp Electronic Music Project http://soli.inav.net/~kent/emp.html Kent Williams kent@inav.net CADSI 2651 Crosspark Road Coralville IA 52241 (319) 338 6053 (home) (319) 626 6700 x 219 (work) (319) 626 3489 (fax)