I don't really understand your righteous anger about the subject. I
agree, a lot of "indie" folks were nerds or burnouts or losers from
high school, who now have carved out their own social scene.
You're almost right, but the tense is wrong. They still are, for the most part, "burnouts" and "losers" who have glommed on to existing social scenes (to the point of essentially driving out the people who actually did carve out those scenes to begin with). Like the music they support, these scenes have become about the appearance of independence, rather than the reality of it.
Countercultures are created by groups who feel persecuted or rejected
from the mainstream. I'm not trying to defend presumptuous assholes, or
anyone who drinks PBR. All social groups include people who believe
their self-worth is based on possessions and tastes.
But contemporary indie/hipster culture is almost entirely defined by its status markers, albeit in an inverted version of the traditional mainstream obsession with popularity, these status markers are constantly in flux in a race to the bottom (exclusivity through obscurity). I repeat yet again: shell game.
It's silly to
claim that hipsters are the only people who judge others based on
esoteric criteria.
No one has claimed otherwise.
People who do that are assholes and phonies, no
argument. People of a certain age strive to form their own scene, where
they can be accepted and understood, to whatever degree they please.
Raging against being young and insecure is fruitless. You can't argue
with a cultural fact.
No one is against being "young and insecure," I just question the practice of deifying that state as if it were culturally revelatory.
Mostly I was trying to say that enjoying "indie" music isn't a crime,
just a matter of taste. I believe that talented bands, whether or not
they're derrived from 70s era rock or pyschedelic pop or whatever,
exist outside the mainstream, and these bands aren't given a chance to
become as successful as the garbage that gets radio play.
I think you'd have a really hard time arguing that most indie actually sits outside the "mainstream" in any sense but a narrow count of units moved: most of it amounts to little more than tarted up expressions of styles already well-known to the mainstream.
I've never heard of Ear Pwr in my life. With 150,000 myspace views,
it's a bit of a stretch to call them "indie dance darlings".
But that's just the indie shell game in action, isn't it? You're only the scene "darlings" until someone has heard of you.
I can't
really see anyone holding them up as legitimate artists either, just a
bunch of kids that like dancing and having fun and being goofy. That's
the real problem with these hipster/scenester/indie labels, they don't
really mean shit, or rather they mean too much shit.
But that's sort of the point: there's no real difference between the "indie" artists you put on the pedestal and the "mainstream" artists you deride as soulless money whores. Take album sales out of the equation, and there's nothing really to choose from between Lady Gaga and her indie dance equivalents, and, for all the lit-major pretentiousness adopted by the Decemberists, they're still a lot closer to Coldplay than to the artists they clearly would like to be compared to. Shell. Game.
You are condemning people you don't know based on their taste in music
and attire, which is what you complain about hipsters doing. What's the
difference?
For starters, I'm not claiming that my views are original or fetishizing my tastes as if they were some grand morality play being acted out against a backdrop of evil corporations out to crush art.
You only give credence to judgmental cocks by hating them
so much. Is everyone in skinny jeans and flannel a pretentious
douchebag who listens to trashy dance pop and art rock?
When I meet one who isn't, I'll let you know.