loserdork Wrote:
I don't know about where everyone else lives, but here in Lawrence, I feel like the local music scene has died down quite a bit. I've noticed it ever since I moved here 7 years ago. Don't get me wrong, we have some great bands here in town, but in general I feel like there's not really much going on.
In previous generations, there were scenes in which people followed. In Lawrence, the particular big ones I remember have been punk, ska, hardcore, and emo. The only sort of scene that I see that exists currently seems to be hipster. The problem though is that hipster is not a type of music. With previous scenes, there were specific ways to act, dress, and play music. For better of for worse, it seemed to create a more tight knit community. With hipsters, you can pretty much dress however you want and listen to whatever you want. The only rule I see for being a hipster is that whatever you do, wear, or listen to, it has to be cool, or ironic in some way. This usually means that unless a band is particularly hot, who knows who may end up showing up to any given show. I'm generalizing, because in the past couple of years I slowed down on going to shows quite a bit.
As far as the good local bands that we have in town, they are all over the place genre-wise. And as for the shitty local bands, we have a growing number of white-boy funk jam bands that play regularly in specific bars around town that cater to the bros and hos.
Am I wrong? Does local music need a more specific scene than hipster to flourish?
You're not wrong, just getting old.
I'm sure there are several reasons you're feeling this way.
1) 7 years? The scene you have in your head is no more because people move on or do other things.
2) Sounds like you were active in that "scene" at the time so it probably felt pretty tight knit. Was it? Or did you just spend all of your time within that scene?
3) Nothing last forever
I mean, aren't all "scenes" revisionist history anyway? I went to UGA and everyone knows about the Athens scene of the early 80's but I assure you it wasn't all REM, B-52's, Pylon, etc. For every one of those bands there were 10 other bands playing Southern Rock or wanting to be the next Foreigner. Hell, during that time Widespread Panic were getting their start. By the time I got to Athens all of those bands were huge and long done being a "local" band but Athens had already morphed into something else. At that point the Elephant 6 stuff was going on but they were only a handful of bands in a town where there were around 300 bands, half of which gigged pretty regularly and were all over the map stylistically.
I consider Atlanta to have a great music scene but it's not defined by any one sound or philosophy which I think is great. If a band is good, they'll get noticed regardless of support from some "scene" IMO.
Point being, consider yourself lucky that you live in a town that has an infrastructure to support local bands in the first place. Different types of music to go see is a positive.