shakahislop
Well-known member
music taken as a whole is probably the least gentrified artform
his music does sound posh. it fits in that massive attack niche. they were mostly posh weren't they. xx's schoolmate four tet's music sounds a bit posh as well for that matter. burial is arguable, because i loved his music so much and my vision is cloudy, but he probably overall does have a .......actually writing this probably the most interesting thing is that the three of them (xx four tet burial) all went to the same school and presumably all grew up in putney and all put out music that audience-wise and to some extent sonically is pretty similar. i don't know anything about any of those lads' lives.
Like Burial for example was obviously influenced hugely by garage and jungle etc but the melancholy/Romantic harmonies in his music ties it to more of a middle class indie world (ditto james blake, jamie xx etc.)It is interesting to consider what effect being upper-middle class might have on your musical influences – a cursory glance at some of the names mentioned in these threads reveals that quite a few of them had parents who were musicians and were influenced by classical music as well as dance music
was noticeable being a teenager how differently people who played an instrument would do it depending on if they'd had lessons or not. people who went through the school system where there's formal grades ('he plays grade 8 clarinet) have such a different way of thinking about it then people who got their brother to show them chords or figured it out themselves. it must be an almost irreversible experience if you do it when you're a child. sometimes i think that is almost the specific contour that my own taste divides down, the formally trained vs the pop work it out yourself sensibilityIt is interesting to consider what effect being upper-middle class might have on your musical influences – a cursory glance at some of the names mentioned in these threads reveals that quite a few of them had parents who were muscians and were influenced by classical music as well as dance music
it's hard to untangle the sequence of events for me. coz of course you have the origins of house and techno being american. and outside the numm i'd see them as the ur-source. probably most people on here have a better understanding of all of this than me, i've never been interested enough in early house or techno to read much about it.It's a european import, like how only middle class Americans watch soccer
Sketch comedy as wellThere is something almost effete about raving in New York. America's heartland and provinces experience techno/rave almost exclusively via cruise ship dockings.
it's hard to untangle the sequence of events for me. coz of course you have the origins of house and techno being american. and outside the numm i'd see them as the ur-source. probably most people on here have a better understanding of all of this than me, i've never been interested enough in early house or techno to read much about it.
i've always assumed that there might / must be messier stuff that is more word of mouth. in the clubs i go to it never gets lary. but people are not that boozy. the one big downside of nowadays is the crowd. it's fine when you're on the floor in the dark. but it is far far far too cool and dressed up. there is something about that place where they are trying hard to make it pleasant, comfortable and unintimidatingThere is something almost effete about raving in New York. America's heartland and provinces experience techno/rave almost exclusively via cruise ship dockings.
@shakahislop RTTG host has a cheesy earnestness but a grim backstory and was fully initiated into the Nottingham outpost hubs, eg Lord Harrison a while back