Originally Posted by
DJ Bat
You just want me to write that journal paper huh?
Well.. maybe... but very basic summary in no particular weighted order:
The people in the older 80's/90's scene grew out of the scene due to, well, getting older - families, jobs, responsibility due to failing economy, needing to move from highly populated areas, failing livers, STD's, overdoses, etc.
By the late 90's, music became sub-standard / watered down / copied sounding and the artisians in the scene disappeared with little interest from the /new/ scene to embrace the passion of such endeavors be it designing clothing, painting, sculpture, tech, deviant but with a strict protocol sexual behavior (doms, dungeons), whatever.
The 90's scene of passion for these things was basically replaced with the 2000's apathetic scene of consumption and vanity. As long as the look and entertainment was presented pre-packaged to be purchased without any insight, that's what people would accept.
** NOW AGAIN: MOST PEOPLE - There ARE exceptions - I find them and so do you - but compared to the last scene - it's a major difference.
People in the late 90's/2000's scene are /mostly/ (meaning not all of them, but a good percentage of them) materialist based. They're not really into what the music/scene stood for as they weren't apart of the rise/oppression that made the scene in the 80's/90's. There is no reason today to really rebel or express yourself as there was back then. All that has been integrated into the mass media by the late 90's with such productions as the rise of BTVS, that 'goth' heroine look so dominant in fashion by the late 90's, oodles of vampire and bitey spooky type movies. More Hot Topics. etc...
In general, it's simply a different world today and this happens in EVERY SCENE and cycles with generations.
Sure there are pockets of folks like myself that can attempt to recreate the nostalgia and even some of the energy of that past dedication (which is one reason I liked Bar Sinister the best DJing back in 2000), but since that 'once upon a time underground scene' has been shoved into the public eye, it's become diluted and unfocused.
The WOW factor for the younger generation is not as compelling. Shit, who cares? People dress like they're going to a goth/industrial club in school or at IKEA these days - unheard of in the 90's without retaliation - THAT attitude created the stronger bond within the scene - THAT attitude of being the outcast created the heavy concentration of 600+ patrons at House of Usher and other venues in the 90's.
Today, you need to appeal to everyone as nothing really is Taboo like it used to be. This is why there's more of a need to create a venue that is on par with the ADHD equivalent of entertaining someone in today's scene. You need to have overload across the board AND make sure it's social based - No more can you just book a band that's cool in the scene and expect people to show up - you need to make sure all the fucking Twitter-heads and ******* Sluts are there representin and hauling their crew in so they can reinforce the fact that perhaps this band IS worth going to....
Of course, it never hurts to throw in gratuitous T&A - That's formula simply dates back to biblical times.
Fun world huh?
Bat
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