axel
Tennalaga Class
- Joined
- Apr 21, 2011
Hi everybody,
anyone afraid of analysis or "over-analysis", just close this right away.
I like to see things from a broader perspective. After all I'm a "homo sapiens", or more precisely a "homo sapiens sapiens". So gathering records is great. Dropping names of bands and labels is cool. Enjoying the music is wonderful. But not to be allowed to think about something as a certain cultural phenomenon, in a forum like this here, is devastating!
I like to think of 60s garage music as a cultural phenomenon, and I always wondered since being in this forum, that inspite of all the love for the genre, it is sometimes pretty easily dismissed as: "just a fad", "extinct", "huddled together by spotty kids" etc.
There are all kinds of dismissive language being expressed here when it comes to seeing the genre from a broader perspective. This always seemed highly contradictory to me.
The little discussion about "60s garage music" as "pop culture" with Mr.Taylor (that was ended by two comments, accusing me to suck the fun out of everything, and finally, more pleasantly, by a shower of garage band cards), left me puzzled as to how this discussion could arise in the first place.
A little research revealed that there are indeed rather differing definitions of the term "pop culture" in the US (and presumably Australia) on one side and in Europe (at least Germany) on the other.
I was never aware of this, and in fact, THAT is why I like to discuss things like that. Next time I come up with the term "pop culture" when talking to an American, I will be more careful, or not bring it up at all.
"Pop Culture"
In the US "pop culture" is fundamentally defined as being expressed by the "mainstream". That leads to the thought that something which is not "popular" is not "pop culture". It's a matter of "popularity" (= quantity of consumers).
Originally the term was meant as an opposite towards "classical" culture, or "aristocratical" culture. The term "popular" not meaning the measure of popularity, but "by/for the people" (=populus; lat. people). Of course aiming at popularity (sometimes not even that), but not necessarily gaining it.
The problem I see with the US American definition of the term, the close connection to the mainstream, is that a lot of things are thus not regarded as culture of any significance. The mainstream rules, so to speak.
This made terms like "counter-culture" necessary. Or "alternative". The problem with those terms is, and always has been, that something "counter-culture" can turn into mainstream in about an instant.
And, that is even more important, a lot of high quality pop culture, is clearly NOT intended as "counter-culture". It doesn't have any political connotation of that sort. It's not "counter" anything. Such is the case with 60s garage music, for example.
"60s Garage Bands"
So, "US American garage band music" (use a better term, if you want), is not just a copy of British bands, representing the mainstream of those days. Of course it is following it, but by this it's creating its very own distinct shape.
The garage band cards are a great example for that. Did you ever see a British band use those old English letters like "The Krispy Kritters", "The Barons" etc.? A lot of US bands (and not the popular ones!) are using those, probably to look more British. It gives them a certain shape that differs from the "original".
And this is just one example...
anyone afraid of analysis or "over-analysis", just close this right away.
I like to see things from a broader perspective. After all I'm a "homo sapiens", or more precisely a "homo sapiens sapiens". So gathering records is great. Dropping names of bands and labels is cool. Enjoying the music is wonderful. But not to be allowed to think about something as a certain cultural phenomenon, in a forum like this here, is devastating!
I like to think of 60s garage music as a cultural phenomenon, and I always wondered since being in this forum, that inspite of all the love for the genre, it is sometimes pretty easily dismissed as: "just a fad", "extinct", "huddled together by spotty kids" etc.
There are all kinds of dismissive language being expressed here when it comes to seeing the genre from a broader perspective. This always seemed highly contradictory to me.
The little discussion about "60s garage music" as "pop culture" with Mr.Taylor (that was ended by two comments, accusing me to suck the fun out of everything, and finally, more pleasantly, by a shower of garage band cards), left me puzzled as to how this discussion could arise in the first place.
A little research revealed that there are indeed rather differing definitions of the term "pop culture" in the US (and presumably Australia) on one side and in Europe (at least Germany) on the other.
I was never aware of this, and in fact, THAT is why I like to discuss things like that. Next time I come up with the term "pop culture" when talking to an American, I will be more careful, or not bring it up at all.
"Pop Culture"
In the US "pop culture" is fundamentally defined as being expressed by the "mainstream". That leads to the thought that something which is not "popular" is not "pop culture". It's a matter of "popularity" (= quantity of consumers).
Originally the term was meant as an opposite towards "classical" culture, or "aristocratical" culture. The term "popular" not meaning the measure of popularity, but "by/for the people" (=populus; lat. people). Of course aiming at popularity (sometimes not even that), but not necessarily gaining it.
The problem I see with the US American definition of the term, the close connection to the mainstream, is that a lot of things are thus not regarded as culture of any significance. The mainstream rules, so to speak.
This made terms like "counter-culture" necessary. Or "alternative". The problem with those terms is, and always has been, that something "counter-culture" can turn into mainstream in about an instant.
And, that is even more important, a lot of high quality pop culture, is clearly NOT intended as "counter-culture". It doesn't have any political connotation of that sort. It's not "counter" anything. Such is the case with 60s garage music, for example.
"60s Garage Bands"
So, "US American garage band music" (use a better term, if you want), is not just a copy of British bands, representing the mainstream of those days. Of course it is following it, but by this it's creating its very own distinct shape.
The garage band cards are a great example for that. Did you ever see a British band use those old English letters like "The Krispy Kritters", "The Barons" etc.? A lot of US bands (and not the popular ones!) are using those, probably to look more British. It gives them a certain shape that differs from the "original".
And this is just one example...