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Indie music scene

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An independent music scene is a localized independent music-oriented (or, more specifically, indie rock/indie pop-oriented) community of bands and their audiences. Local scenes can play a key role in musical history and lead to the development of influential genres; for example, no wave from New York City, United States; Madchester from Manchester, England; and grunge from Seattle.

Indie scenes are often created as a response to mainstream or popular music. These scenes are created in opposition of mainstream culture and music and often contribute to the formation of oppositional identities among individuals involved in the scene.[1]

Notable scenes

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Asia

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Japan

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The Japanese indie music scene began gaining mainstream success in the late 1990s with the so-called "indie boom".[2] Musicians involved with this scene, referred to as "individual producer-composers," included Haruomi Hosono, Oyamada Keigo (also known as Cornelius), and Oda Tetsuro. Cornelius pioneered an indie music movement called Shibuya-kei and released songs that gained international success, such as the Pizzicato Five.[3] Supercar's 1998 debut album, Three Out Change,[4] has been described as having "almost foundational importance to 21st-century Japanese indie rock."[5]

A Japanese protectionist licensing policy prevents indie music from being sold via major media distribution networks.[6] Indie records are only sold in small retail stores that import foreign records, which are not part of the industrial channels. This relegates Japanese indie music to the context of a global scene.[7]

Current Japanese indie bands include The Pillows,[8] Asian Kung-Fu Generation[9],Straightener,[10] Sakanaction, Acidman, fujifabric, and Beat Crusaders.

South Korea

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The indie scene in South Korea is sometimes referred to as "K-Indie", a neologism derived from K-pop.[11] The center of the Korean indie scene is the Hongdae area.[12] Korean indie has gained international exposure via YouTube. Bands and artists include The RockTigers, 10cm, Yozo, Jang Jae-in, Jang Jae-in, Hyukoh, and Jannabi.

Australasia

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Australia

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New Zealand

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North America

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Canada

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United States

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Europe

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Hungary

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The Hungarian indie scene is mainly active in the capital city, Budapest. In the early 2000s, Hungary's indie revival included Ligeti's The Puzzle from Kaposvár. In 2006 Amber Smith's album RePRINT was released by the German label Kalinkaland Records. In 2007, The Moog's Sold for Tomorrow was released by the US label MuSick Records. Other indie bands include EZ Basic, The KOLIN, Supersonic, The Poster Boy and Dawnstar. Two of the most important and prolific musicians are Imre Poniklo and György Ligeti.

Sweden

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A number of Swedish indie musicians have become famous internationally, mostly singing in English. The Cardigans gained early success in the mid-1990s. Some notable acts include: The Sounds, Lykke Li, Robyn, The Tallest Man on Earth, The Hives, Eskobar, The Soundtrack of Our Lives, Kent, First Aid Kit, Air France, Jens Lekman, The Knife, Shout Out Louds, The Radio Dept., Fever Ray, The Tough Alliance, and Life on Earth.

United Kingdom

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  • One of the first scenes recognized as being associated with the term 'indie music' rather than post-punk, new wave or new music[35] was C86, named after the release of the C86 cassette, a 1986 NME compilation featuring Primal Scream and other bands.[36] The significance of C86 is recognized in the subtitle of its 2006 extended reissue: CD86: 48 Tracks from the Birth of Indie Pop. C86 was a document of the UK indie scene at the start of 1986, and it gave its name to the indie pop scene that followed, which was a major influence on the development of indie music as a whole.[37] Significant record labels included Creation, Subway and Glass.[38]
  • The shoegazing scene of the late 1980s was named for band members' tendency to stare at their feet and guitar effects pedals onstage rather than interact with the audience. My Bloody Valentine and others created a loud "wash of sound" that obscured vocals and melodies with long, droning riffs, distortion, and feedback.[39] Within the same decade, labels such as Cheree Records and Ché Trading amalgamated into an entity that the industry now refers to as Rocket Girl, which has since contributed significantly.[40]
  • The end of the 1980s saw the Madchester scene. Based around The Haçienda, a nightclub in Manchester owned by New Order and Factory Records, Madchester bands such as Happy Mondays and the Stone Roses mixed acid house dance rhythms, Northern soul and funk with melodic guitar pop.[41]
  • The early 1990s rave scene, a successor to the acid house parties of the late 1980s, spawned the closely associated breakbeat hardcore, jungle and jungle techno[42] styles of electronic music which developed in tandem in England, initially in cities such as London, Stafford and Coventry (where London's RAGE nights at Heaven, Charing Cross and Coventry's Eclipse nightclub regularly featured the music).[43][44][45] They peaked in popularity between 1990-1994, the years immediately prior to the Criminal Justice and Public Order Act 1994 placing restrictions on free parties and outdoor raves. A tight knit, almost completely British community of producers, DJs, record labels and rave promoters deployed an independent DIY approach, sharing the music on cassettes, acetates and vinyl in limited quantities. Many artists used one-off monikers, satirical names or released white label records with no details initially, rather than willingly marketing themselves. However, some acts such as The Prodigy, Acen, Isotonik and Altern-8 did eventually achieve UK chart success or appear on Top of the Pops, for example in the case of "Different Strokes" by Isotonik. Altern-8 often blurred the line between trying to get the attention of the press, but also staying true to an antiestablishment ethos (on their 12" release of the single "Frequency", a live recording in which the band were arrested at the end of a set at an illegal rave was included), one such gimmick being to run during the 1992 general election in their local constituency, Stafford, as "The Altern8-ive Party".[46] Conversely, artists who had already achieved some commercial success such as UB40, MC Duke, The Shamen, Everything But The Girl and Nick Nicely dabbled in releasing breakbeat hardcore or jungle, including the launch of UB40's label Rough Tone Recordings. The music included counterculture elements such as making use of sampling other songs (which in some cases, such as "Raving I'm Raving" by Shut Up and Dance, led to legal action being taken), and featured dissonant aspects in a similar manner to post-punk such as clashing notes or distortion. Producers and label owners involved were often from working class backgrounds,[47] the Amiga home computer and Akai S series of samplers became popular choices due to being affordable gateways into producing initially, and later due to a fondness for their distinctive sounds. Sonically, this also meant the music bore similarities to, and crossed over with, tracks produced on Amiga computers as part of the MOD scene.[48] While messing around with the equipment, techniques such as time stretching were popularised, especially when used on sampled breakbeats.[49] Some artists made a point of referencing the area where they were based, in turn forging hyperlocalised scenes, such as Altern-8 member Mark Archer (who named his label Stafford North), and DJ SS, who made references to his home city of Leicester across his releases (one single, "Best In The U.S.", was outright released under the alias Leicester). A significant number of the earliest artists to be involved in the scene such as Mad P, Shut Up and Dance, Rebel MC and DJ Skie, came from the Broadwater Farm estate in Tottenham, London, known for its community of Caribbean descent. Influences from dub, reggae, ragga and sound system culture, as well as outright sampling of reggae songs, became ubiquitous in the music as a result of their contributions.[50][51] The impact of the Cynthia Jarrett case on the community was referenced in the track "Police Tottenham", released on the Shut Up and Dance label by Konspiracy (an alias of MC Duke) in 1992. Notable labels associated with the sound included XL Recordings, Moving Shadow, Reinforced Records, Tam Tam Records, Atmosphere Records, Formation Records, Good Looking Records, Strictly Underground, De Underground Records, Shut Up and Dance, Production House, Ibiza Records, Dee Jay Recordings, V Recordings, Metalheadz, Brain Records, Hardcore Urban Music, Rhythm Section, Kniteforce, Sound Entity and Boogie Times, whilst Dreamscape, Fantazia and Amnesia House (which also had an associated label, NMI International) were key in archiving their live events on mixtapes.
  • The Britpop scene developed in the early 1990s as part of a larger British cultural movement called Cool Britannia. In the wake of the musical invasion into the UK of American grunge bands, British bands positioned themselves as an opposing musical force. Influenced by the key British band of the 1980s, the Smiths, and adopting the unashamed commercial approach to which the C86 bands had seemed sometimes ideologically opposed, Britpop acts such as Oasis, Blur, Suede and Pulp referenced British guitar music of the past and aimed at writing about British topics and concerns.[52] Commentary on Britpop noted a north–south divide, with The Good Mixer pub in Camden Town strongly identified with the Britpop scene in the south, though Oasis were signed to Creation Records in nearby Primrose Hill.[53]
  • Trip hop is a genre of electronic music that originated in the early 1990s in Bristol. The most notable artists are Massive Attack, Tricky and Portishead.
  • Thamesbeat[54][55] was an early 2000s scene based around Eel Pie Island in London featuring acts like Jamie T,[56] Larrikin Love and Mystery Jets.
  • In Liverpool, a 'cosmic Scouse' scene (sometimes referred to as 'Scallydelica'[57][58][59]) developed in the 2000s with neo-psychedelia acts like the Coral,[60][61] record labels like Deltasonic and Skeleton Key [62] and events like the annual Liverpool International Festival of Psychedelia (also known as PZYK).[63][64][65] Sometimes the scene would be expanded to include acts such as the Bees and the Earlies under the 'Shroomadelica' definition[55]

References

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