Talk about this article @ WikipediaIndie Rock
Indie rock is
rock music that falls within the
indie music description. The term is sometimes used interchangeably with indie music as a whole, though more specifically implies that the music meets the criteria of being rock, as opposed to
indie pop or other possible matchups. These criteria vary from an emphasis on rock instrumentation (electric guitars, bass guitar and live drums) to more abstract (and debatable)
rockist constructions of authenticity.The music commonly regarded as indie rock is descended from what was known as
alternative rock during the
1980s; this name refers to the fact that it was an alternative to
mainstream rock. Alternative bands of the time, in turn, were influenced by the
punk rock,
post-punk, and
New Wave movements of the
1970s and early
1980s. During the first half of the
1990s alternative music, led by
grunge bands such as
Nirvana and
Pearl Jam, broke into the mainstream and achieved commercial chart success. Shortly thereafter, the alternative genre became commercialised, as mainstream success attracted major-label investment and commercially-oriented or manufactured acts with a formulaic, conservative approach. With this, the meaning of the label "alternative" changed away from its original, more countercultural meaning, and the term "indie rock" fell into greater use."Indie rock" is shorthand for "independent rock," which stems from the general rule that most of its artists are signed to
independent record labels, rather than
major record labels. It is not strictly a genre of music (given that musical style and independence are not always correlated), but is often used as an umbrella term covering a wide range of artists and styles, connected by some degree of allegiance to the values of
underground culture, and (usually) describable as
rock and roll. Genres or subgenres often associated with indie rock include
lo-fi,
post-rock,
shoegazer,
garage punk,
emo,
slowcore,
c86,
twee pop, and
math rock, to list but a few; other related (and sometimes overlapping) categories include
alternative rock and
indie pop. Typically, indie artists place a premium on maintaining complete control of their music and careers, often releasing albums on their own independent record labels and relying on touring, word-of-mouth, and airplay on independent or college radio stations for promotion. Some of its more popular artists, however, may end up signing to major labels, though often on favourable terms won by their prior independent success.
Indie: status or genre?
In the UK, indie music charts have been compiled since at least the
1980s. These charts initially featured independent bands that emerged from
punk and
post-punk, as well as
indie pop artists such as
Aztec Camera and
Orange Juice, the
C86 jangle-pop movement and the
twee pop of
Sarah Records artists. The bands were distinguished by having their records released by small labels, independently of the major record companies. The 1980s indie scene directly influenced
1990s Britpop artists such as
Blur and
Suede (though many of these were technically not wholly "indepedent" artists, being signed to major labels). More recently, the term "indie rock" has become so incredibly broad that almost anything from
post-punk to
alt-country to
synth-pop to
afrobeat to ambient to
noise pop to
IDM to
psychedelic folk to hundreds of other genres can fall under its umbrella.In fact, there are likely to be several popular, and wildly varying, strains of indie rock going at any given time. For example, some of the more popular recent strains include:*
New folk, an updated take on the
folk music of the 1960s, typically designated by quiet vocals and more ornate, orchestral instrumentation and arrangements. (See:
Sufjan Stevens,
Iron and Wine)*
Freak-folk, a more experimental take on New Folk that generally revolves around quirky, psych-inflected folk songs and ballads. (See:
Devendra Banhart,
Joanna Newsom,
Animal Collective,
Six Organs of Admittance)*
New Weird America, the most heavily psych-damaged strain of New Folk, frequently consisting of avant-garde noise, drones, or dissonance, and often employing natural field recordings for added atmosphere. (See:
No-Neck Blues Band,
Tower Recordings,
Wooden Wand and the Vanishing Voice)*
Dance-punk, a hybridization of electronic dance music and
punk rock aesthetics. (See:
LCD Soundsystem,
The Rapture,
!!!,
Out Hud,
Radio 4)*
Garage rock revival, a throwback to a more primitive 60s
rock and roll sound which was heavily influenced by
Delta blues. (See:
The White Stripes,
The Strokes,
The Hives,
The Von Bondies)*
Nu-gaze, an updated version of
shoegazer that tends to lean more heavily on synths than its more guitar-focused predecessor. (See:
Sigur Ros,
Ulrich Schnauss,
M83, Serena Maneesh)*
Indietronic, a descendent of
electropop that finds a more conventional approach to indie rock or
indie pop backed almost exclusively by highly digitized electronic instrumentation. (See:
The Postal Service,
The Notwist,
Manitoba,
Dntel,
Lali Puna)Also among the most popular strains of indie rock at present is
Neo-Wave. Popularized by bands such as
Franz Ferdinand,
Bloc Party and
Futureheads, it is influenced primarily by the
New Wave and
post-punk movements of the 1980s. The core of this movement has mostly been the resurgence of spiky 80's
post punk rhythms and riffs akin to those played by
Gang of Four,
Television and
Wire. Often this style has been blended with other alternative genres such as
garage rock (
Death From Above 1979), synth rock (
The Killers) and post-punk (
Interpol). Some would also classify the
Scissor Sisters and many others within this genre, which is very popular in the UK, forming the backbone of the
Zane Lowe show, a popular evening radio show on
Radio 1.Whether this particular movement embodies the indie ethos is debatable. Many of these bands are signed to independent labels, and express a disdain of the major-label marketing apparatus. (In the 8th January 2005 issue of NME, Alex Kapranos of Franz Ferdinand authored an article championing the genre, saying independent labels 'have character', how they are 'run by people who are passionate about music' and stressing 'why independent record labels are so important' as the saviour of good music.) Critics point out that, while many of the bands are signed to labels technically independent of the Big Four, the movement is highly commercial, image-oriented and market-driven, with millions of dollars spent on marketing and the investment of corporate promoters such as
MTV,
Clear Channel and
Carling; a far cry from the traditional indie world of labels run out of bedrooms by friends of the bands and unconcerned with commercial success. Furthermore, much of this movement has been said to be rigidly formulaic, with a set of aesthetic stances (i.e., the severe black suits and thin ties of bands such as Interpol and Kaiser Chiefs) and sounds imitating a small number of 1970s/1980s
post-punk and
New Wave bands, and thus not particularly independent in spirit. While some artists in this movement may embody the DIY aesthetic and unconcerned attitude of indie more than others, it cannot be said to infuse the entire movement.Further muddying the waters of the technical definition of "indie" is the fact that independence from major labels and independence from market-driven commercialism are not always correlated. For a time in the late
1990s, three of the most successful artists in the
UK indie charts were
*NSYNC, the
Backstreet Boys and
Britney Spears. All three were signed to
Zomba, which was technically an independent label at the time. (Zomba has since become part of major label
Sony BMG). In contrast, there have been a small number of notable artists (such as
Radiohead,
Pulp and
The Flaming Lips) who have maintained considerable creative independence and won critical acclaim whilst signed to major labels.
Indie Rock in North America