Your Band Sucks: Jon Fine on How the Indie Cultural Revolution Changed America for the Better
"If you're telling me Amazon is bad for culture, like seriously, fuck you," says memoirist of '90s alt-music scene.
"We're now in distribution abundance," says Jon Fine, "so if you're telling me that Amazon is bad for culture, like seriously, fuck you."
Fine is the executive editor of Inc. and the author of the acclaimed new memoir, Your Band Sucks: What I Saw at Indie Rock's Failed Revolution (But Can No Longer Hear), a rollicking tour of his days in the alternative music scene of the late 1980s and '90s.
"Somewhere in the latter half of the eighties, it became much easier for weird bands to do band things: play shows, make records, go on tour. The hows and whys that had been so elusive just a few years earlier were now shared through surprisingly effective samizdat and word-of-mouth networks," writes Fine, a member of "resolutely non-famous bands" such as Bitch Magnet and Coptic Light.
Your Band Sucks is at once a remembrance of things past and a polemic against the generic, mainstream culture and political correctness that Fine found deadening while growing up in New Jersey and attending college at Oberlin. It's a book that is by turns angry, funny, and infuriating. Throughout, it perfectly captures the adolescent anger and inchoate longing that has always fueled rock music and provided the soundtrack to DIY forms of cultural production and consumption.
"If there's anything that will turn you into a foaming-at-the-mouth Tea Party[er] and get you throwing stones at every liberal shibboleth you can get your hands on, it's going to Oberlin," Fine says. At the same time, his urge to create radically different music far beyond anything that was being played on MTV or commercial radio. "I felt like there was a lot not being said" in the mainstream, he explains. "Howard Jones had a song called 'Things Can Only Get Better,' really bouncy, annoying optimistic. I was like, 'You're actually wrong! Things suck and they are getting worse!'…I actually got mad about it: 'How dare you say that!' You couldn't find music easily that was talking about the other stuff….There was so much shading I wanted to get at."
"Any time you're identifying strongly with a subculture that's a minority in America, whether it's weird underground music or libertarianism, you've gotta know that you're gonna be kind of despised," says Fine, drawing an analogy between outre art and politics. "You've got to be a little bit pugilistic about it and furthermore, you understand yourself not just by the people around you but the people who are not around you and are doing the things you think are weak and inept."
Nick Gillespie talked to Fine about how alternative and independent culture has flourished over the past 30 years and whether—Howard Jones be praised!—things may actually be getting better.
About 7.30 minutes. Produced by Joshua Swain, with camera by Swain and Todd Krainin.
Special Note: Scroll down for a special MP3 recording of the full conversation between Fine and Gillespie. This 44-minute conversation ranges as widely and obscurely as a Bitch Magnet tour across questions of politics, music, and culture.
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Second paragraph, your hyperlink misquotes the book. "Here" should be "hear."
Here, hear!
I've found that Amazon, combined with Pandora, can turn you on to some weird and wonderful groups, new and old. Decent college stations help too. (XPN out of Philly here - more NPR than college, but it works)
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The great thing about the internet as a whole is the opening up access to the 5% of music that is listenable over the whole life of popular music. So much is terrible, whether it's "corporate rock" or "indie rock" or whatever. But with the internet (with the assistance of the cable all-music stations and alt-radio) can quickly turn someone on to great music through the last 80-90 years that you wouldn't otherwise get through brick and mortar distribution. Of course, once the vector is discovered (like esoteric compilations like the Nugget series) then others jump on board, diluting the "credibility", but then there's something else to jump to. In short, there's a TON of great music out there you've likely never heard and it's great to discover it. And that the internet is one big area to canvas to look for it instead of waiting for "deep cuts" on whatever radio station(s) you might listen to. It's as simple as discovering a new band (to you, could be from the 60's) and type in "similar to -________" and you get even better suggestions from the results, and quick jump over to youtube or Pandora or whatever and you're on your way to increasing your library 200 songs (legally obtained of course).
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Still working. Pandora + Amazon + iTunes makes for a decent part time income. Artists can lease instrumentals online, record at home, and collect residuals in a way that was never possible before. Good for the future of music.
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