I think stuff like this is way overanalyzed.
We're at the point where any black person who wants to play indie rock will be welcomed into the culture. If the music's good, they will be a success by selling 3400 records and being poor. If it's bad, they will play to 5 people, like other shitty bands, and be really, really poor.
Great life, this indie rock.
Bloc Party has done quite well for themsleves, though, no?
It's just cultural, and things are changing fast. When I was growing up, the black kids at my school, even the ones that I was really good friends with, could not dig the punk rock.
Think about it - If your dad listened to James Brown or Earth Wind And Fire around the house, brass section in overdrive, and then you heard Johnny Rotten's snivling bullshit, what would you think? Kind of a step down in quality, right? I would tap my foot when I heard Kool and The Gang, but I don't think my friend Marchelino thought the Kinks' "Give The People What They Want" was very good music.
And let's not forget integration - REAL integration.
I was one of the few kids in my school, who wasn't a jock, to have black friends. This is just 1983 we're talking about, not 1960. That is not the case so much these days.
I didn't know a lot of Asian kids who listened to indie/punk when I was 15 either. I had 3 really good Korean friends and they all loved Duran Duran and stuff. Now the indie scene has lots of Asian kids doing their thing, and much of it is the best music being made.
It's taken awhile for white kids to genuinely break into rap music circles too. There are still very few white rappers who are taken seriously by afficiandos.
Very rarely is it talked about that sometimes people of a culture just *don't want* to participate.
"You know, the kids above 110th street aren't coming downtown to the punk rock clubs. Do you think they feel unwelcome?"
No, I think they think the music sucks.
To be clear, this wasn't just a white club, it was a white *boys* club when it started. As late as 1992, Jenny Toomey and Kristin Thompson were still considered "women who rocked!" and Tsunami was a "girl band" even though Andrew Webster and John Pammer made up half the band. Do people think of Deerhoof as a "girl band?"
It just takes time for things to integrate, for the culture to both expand and let outsiders in and for the word to get out. A lot of time, actually.
No amount of rushing or concern will help it. Nobody needs to start a Balkin Punk Rock Outreach Program.
Along the way, "mavericks" like Scrawl or The Bad Brains come along and truly take risks. Their children will just be considered part of the scene.
-A
Race and music.
61Itchy McGoo wrote:I would like to be a "shoop-shoop" girl in whatever band Alex Maiolo is in.