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(idm) bay guardian article...

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1997-04-16 20:19Andy Thomas (idm) bay guardian article...
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1997-04-16 20:19Andy Thomasthe cover story of this week's sf bay guardian is "the future of music", with a panel disc
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Andy Thomas
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Wed, 16 Apr 1997 13:19:20 -0700 (PDT)
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(idm) bay guardian article...
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the cover story of this week's sf bay guardian is "the future of music", with a panel discusion that includes representation from idm lurker and dropbeat records co-owner mike schulman. the full text can be found at www.sfbg.com, below is an excerpt: BG: How significant is the American music media's recent turn toward DJ culture and electronic music -- MTV's formatting shift, for instance? Is this a grassroots phenomenon that finally caught on, or the construct of an industry that's run out of ideas? MS: The media's idea of electronica is so limited and ill-informed that I can't imagine a full movement being brought about. Bands like Underworld and Prodigy aren't especially different in sound or intent from a typical big rock band, so it isn't a big stretch to get kids to buy those records. The real DJ culture of vinyl records and homebrew mix tapes is a million miles from that, as is the genuine underground techno and jungle coming out on tiny labels all over the U.S. and Europe. Whatever the industry has caught hold of is a very tiny piece of the picture, dictated by the need to sell units to a lot of people with relatively pedestrian tastes. AW: Journalists and TV program directors are not divine; they're depressingly mediocre people who only know how to latch on to what is being sold -- not what people actually like, or what's really good. Such trends only represent the directives of commerce.... Whenever I'm in a record store, customers crowd the pop aisles while the techno, acid jazz, electronic aisles are virtually empty. Maybe electronicats are getting what they need on-line. In the real world, love makes things spin and the music that gets people happy, that makes them need each other, still goes pop-ular. Given this need to connect, the music and news media's desperate search to segregate music -- ignoring black beats for faceless doodlings of white electronic musicians -- is just the latest wrinkle on rockism. And it will fail -- even if it doesn't end. WC: By and large, mainstream white culture (you can read "major-label rock" into that if you like) is bankrupt, and astute youth recognized that some time ago. Underground hip-hop/DJ/turntablist culture is alive and vital and has got originality coming out of its ears. BG: Do you view electronic music as the music of the future? Are you optimistic about its creative potential and the changing role of technology in music production? WC: Um, hello? Much of the groundbreaking in electronic music occurred in the '40s, '50s, and '60s. Stockhausen et al., baby. Though contemporaries such as Oval, Boredoms, the Invisibl Skratch Piklz turntablists, and even, yes, DJ Shadow are consistently redefining and gleefully obliterating genre boundaries, it is at best naive and at worst offensive to lump them together under the umbrella term "electronica" and presume they started it. AG: So-called electronica is the music of the future in the same way that Disney's Tomorrowland is a place of the future. Anyone with an ounce of interest in, and feel for, pop could have told you 20 years ago that Kraftwerk was the future. Africa Bambaataa understood that, too. The future arrived years ago, while half of America was listening to Bruce Springsteen. MS: The most creative music I'm hearing lately is coming from the electronic side of things. Savvy jungle producers are making tracks as avant-garde and theoretically grounded as any piece of rock-snob noise. A lot of people seem to have a real aversion to any music that has a beat, a relic of that whole "disco sucks" mind-set of the early punk years. And that's a shame, because what's happening with experimental beat science is creating a revolution in sound, and exciting records are coming out every week completely independent of the usual channels of distribution and press. It's really very punk rock in a totally now way -- independent labels, distributors, shops, fuck-off attitudes. The folks making great electronic music right now couldn't care less about MTV, unlike your typical "punk" band, which rehashes boring 1978 pseudo-politics (and music) and poses for Alternative Press fashion layouts. BG: Will "electronica" supplant rock culture or be absorbed into it? What does the recent shift toward non-rock styles say about the cultural mood? WC: This is like asking if black people will take over America, or if aspects of black culture will be co-opted (once again) by the white mainstream. What do you think? Commercial "success" is all about power and who holds the reins. Rock will flip its ungainly wig for a while over how cool it is to have Photek remix your next Blues Explosion atrocity, then eventually discard the multisubcultures, proclaiming them spent, too digital, too whatever, and then all the rock critics will start rhapsodizing over plain ole rock and roll's newfound renaissance.