Indie pop: Difference between revisions
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{{Short description|Genre of alternative pop music}} |
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{{genrebox|name=Indie pop |
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{{For|the pop music scene of India alternately called "Indi-pop"|Indian pop}} |
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|color=crimson |
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{{Use dmy dates|date=July 2020}} |
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{{Infobox music genre |
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|stylistic_origins= [[New Wave music|New Wave]], [[Punk rock]], [[Post-punk]], [[Pop music|pop]] |
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| name = Indie pop |
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|cultural_origins=early [[1980s]], [[United Kingdom]] |
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| stylistic_origins = * [[Punk rock]]<ref name="TAF">{{Citation|title=Twee as Fuck: The Story of Indie Pop |first=Nitsuh |last=Abebe |work=Pitchfork Media |date=24 October 2005 |url=http://pitchfork.com/features/articles/6176-twee-as-fuck/ |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110203183515/http://pitchfork.com/features/articles/6176-twee-as-fuck/ |archive-date=3 February 2011}}</ref> |
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|instruments=[[Guitar]] - [[Bass guitar|Bass]] - [[Drums]] |
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* [[Pop music|pop]]<ref name="Dolan"/><ref name="TAF"/> |
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|popularity=[[1980s]] [[United Kingdom]] |
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* [[Pop rock|guitar pop]]<ref name="Aux2014"/><ref name="Heaton2013"/> |
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|subgenrelist=Indie Pop |
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* [[post-punk]]<ref name="Heaton2013"/> |
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|subgenres=[[Twee pop]] |
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* [[indie rock]]<ref name="AMIndiePop"/> |
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|regional_scenes=[[Music of England|England]] - [[Music of Scotland|Scotland]] - [[Music of Wales|Wales]] - [[Sweden]] - [[Music of Ireland|Ireland]], [[Music of the United States|USA]], [[Music of Australia|Australia]] |
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| cultural_origins = Late 1970s, United Kingdom |
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|other_topics=[[Timeline of alternative rock]] |
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| derivatives = * [[Alternative pop]] |
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* [[chillwave]]<ref>{{cite web|author1=The Week Staff|title=Washed Out: ''Within and Without''|url=http://theweek.com/articles/483036/washed-within-without|website=[[The Week]]|date=22 July 2011}}</ref> |
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* {{lang|ja-latn|[[Shibuya-kei]]|italic=no}}{{sfn|Reynolds|2011|p=168}} |
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| subgenres = * [[Chamber pop]]<ref name="AMIndiePop">{{cite web |title=Indie Pop |url= http://www.allmusic.com/style/indie-pop-ma0000004494 |website= [[AllMusic]]}}</ref> |
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* [[twee pop]]<ref name="AMIndiePop"/> |
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| fusiongenres = * [[Indietronica]] |
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| local_scenes = [[Dunedin sound|Dunedin]] |
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| other_topics = * [[Indie rock]] |
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* [[alternative dance]] |
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* [[alternative R&B]] |
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* [[Anorak (slang)|anorak]] |
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* ''[[C86 (album)|C86]]'' |
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* [[dream pop]] |
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* [[lo-fi music]] |
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* [[New wave music|new wave]] |
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* [[noise pop]] |
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* [[pop punk]] |
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* [[northern soul]] |
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}} |
}} |
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'''Indie pop''' (also typeset as '''indie-pop''' or '''indiepop''') is a subgenre of alternative rock and subculture<ref name="TAF"/> that combines [[<!--- Source states "guitar pop" not "indie pop" or "pop rock"---->guitar pop]] with [[DIY ethic]]<ref name="Aux2014">{{cite web |last1=Tea |first1=Mark |date=14 April 2014 |title=10 Canadian jangle and indie pop bands that will improve your day |url=http://www.aux.tv/2014/04/9-canadian-jangle-indie-pop-bands-vastly-improved-day/ |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180615004350/http://ontheaside.com/uncategorized/9-canadian-jangle-indie-pop-bands-vastly-improved-day/ |archive-date=Jun 15, 2018 |website=Aux |quote=Instead, we're focusing on a more classic definition of the genre, one that marries guitar pop with D.I.Y. ethics.}}</ref> in opposition to the style and tone of mainstream [[pop music]].{{sfn|Frith|Horne|2016|p=139}} It originated from British [[post-punk]]<ref name="Heaton2013">{{cite web|last1=Heaton|first1=Dave|title=The Best Indie-Pop of 2013|url=http://www.popmatters.com/feature/176889-the-indie-pop-of-2013/|website=[[PopMatters]]|date=5 December 2013}}</ref> in the late 1970s and subsequently generated a thriving [[fanzine]], [[Independent record label|label]], and club and gig circuit. Compared to its counterpart, [[indie rock]],<ref name="AMIndiePop"/> the genre is more melodic, less abrasive, and relatively angst-free.<ref name="AMIndiePop"/> In later years, the definition of ''indie pop'' has bifurcated to also mean bands from unrelated DIY scenes/movements with pop leanings.<ref name="Heaton2013"/> Subgenres include [[chamber pop]] and [[twee pop]].<ref name="AMIndiePop"/> |
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'''Indie pop''' refers to [[Indie (music)|indie music]] which is considered to be based on the conventions of [[pop music]]. The term is nebulous. Because [[indie rock]] is sometimes used to mean indie music as a whole, indie pop can be discussed as a sub-set of indie rock, but other times the terms are used to illustrate a pop-rock dichotomy within the indie music scene. The term is further blurred by disagreement over what qualifies as pop music. Pop is seen as being radio-friendly and disposable, two things that indie music generally eschews. Indie pop is thus the pop music that operates outside of the boundaries of conventional pop music. It is often [[lo-fi music|lo-fi]], or otherwise unusual. |
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==Development and characteristics== |
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== History == |
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{{multiple issues|section=yes| |
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===Roots=== |
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{{Missing information|section|[[post-punk]], [[él Records]], [[K Records]], and [[Sarah Records]]|date=February 2017}} |
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Indie pop's sonic roots lie in pioneers like [[Jonathan Richman]] and the quieter songs of [[The Velvet Underground]]. The sweeter sounds of 1960s garage pop/rock, as well as mainstream 1960s artists like [[The Beatles]], [[The Beach Boys]] and the early [[Syd Barrett]]-led [[Pink Floyd]]. 1960's girl groups also heavily influenced indiepop, both musically and stylistically, with [[The Shangri-Las]] or [[The Ronettes]] being the most obvious. [[The Ramones]] mixture of 60's melodies with a crudely played wall of sound guitar was also a key influence. The British punk-pop group [[Buzzcocks]], adapted The Ramones' sound into a speedy jangle with high whining boy voice, elements that were to become keystones of the later indie pop sound. |
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{{cite-check|date=June 2016}}}} |
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===Origins and etymology=== |
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{{Sound sample box align right|Music samples:}} |
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{{See also|Post-punk|DIY music|Indie rock|Jangle pop|C86}} |
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|description=Sample of "Truck Train Tractor" by [[The Pastels]]. |
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|description=Sample of "Once More" by [[The Wedding Present]]. |
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|title="All That Ever Mattered" |
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|description=Sample of "All That Ever Mattered" by [[Shop Assistants]]. |
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|description=Sample of "Bringing Up Baby" by [[Talulah Gosh]]. |
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|description=Sample of "Cool Guitar Boy" by [[Heavenly]]. |
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|title="I'll Still Be There" |
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|description=Sample of "I'll Still Be There" by [[Razorcuts]]. |
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|description=Sample of "Happy All The Time" by [[The Flatmates]]. |
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|description=Sample of "Emma's House" by [[The Field Mice]]. |
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|description=Sample of "Anorak City" by [[Another Sunny Day]]. |
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|filename=Beat_Happening_-_Indian_Summer.ogg |
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|title="Indian Summer" |
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|description=Sample of "Indian Summer" by [[Beat Happening]]. |
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|description=Sample of "Untidy Towns" by [[The Lucksmiths]]. |
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|filename=Camera_Obscura_-_Eighties_Fan.ogg |
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|title="Eighties Fan" (1984) |
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|description=Sample of "Eighties Fan" by [[Camera Obscura]]. |
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{{Quote box |
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===British indie pop=== |
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|text= Indie pop is not just "indie" that is "pop." Not too many people realize this, or really care either way. But you can be sure indie pop's fans know it. They have their own names for themselves ... the music they listen to ... their own canon of legendary bands ... and legendary labels ... their own pop stars ... their own zines ... websites ... mailing lists ... aesthetics ... festivals ... iconography ... fashion accessories ... and in-jokes ... in short, their own culture. |
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| source=—Nitsuh Abebe, ''[[Pitchfork Media|Pitchfork]]''<ref name="TAF"/> |
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|}} |
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|text= Within indie genres, issues of authenticity are especially prominent: indie was born in a Utopian attempt to stop the inevitable cycle of bands being co-opted - and, it is assumed, corrupted - by the mainstream. |
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| source=—Emily I. Dolan, ''[[Cambridge University Press|Popular Music]]''<ref name="Dolan"/> |
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|}} |
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Both ''indie'' and ''indie pop'' had originally referred to the same thing during the late 1970s, originally abbreviations for ''[[Independent music|independent]]'' and ''[[Popular music|popular]]''. Inspired more by [[punk rock]]'s DIY ethos than its style, guitar bands were formed on the then-novel premise that one could record and release their own music instead of having to procure a [[record contract]] from a major label.<ref name="TAF"/> According to Emily Dolan, indie is predicated on the distorted music of [[the Velvet Underground]], the "rebellious screaming" of early punk, and "some of rock's more quirky and eccentric figures", such as [[Jonathan Richman]].<ref name="Dolan"/> ''[[Pitchfork Media|Pitchfork]]''{{'}}s Nitsuh Abebe identifies the majority of indie as "all about that 60s-styled guitar [[jangle]]".<ref name="TAF"/> [[The Monochrome Set|The Monochrome Set's]]<ref>{{Cite web |title=The Monochrome Set |url=https://shop.tapeterecords.com/a-z/the-monochrome-set/ |access-date=2023-04-30 |website=Tapete Musik |language=de-DE}}</ref> early singles were so heavily influential to indie pop band [[the Smiths]] that [[Johnny Marr]] stated without them, the Smiths would not have existed.<ref>{{Cite web |title=The Monochrome Set |url=https://www.cccb.org/en/participants/file/the-monochrome-set/214217 |access-date=2023-04-30 |website=CCCB |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news |last=Robb |first=John |date=2009-01-09 |title=The Monochrome Set: Remembering the band that history forgot |language=en-GB |work=The Guardian |url=https://www.theguardian.com/music/musicblog/2009/jan/09/the-monochrome-set-remembered |access-date=2023-04-30 |issn=0261-3077}}</ref> |
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Indie pop can be traced back to the [[post-punk]] explosion in small photocopied [[fanzines]], and small shop-based record labels, for example Glasgow's [[Postcard Records]] and London's [[Rough Trade Records]]. By the beginning of 1980s, there were dozens of labels in the United Kingdom. The publication in "Record Business" of the first weekly indie singles and album charts during the week ending [[January 19]] [[1980 in music|1980]] coincided with the growth of indie music in UK. The following year was the fifth anniversary of the UK [[independent record label]] movement and Rough Trade Records. To commemorate this, the British musical weekly ''[[New Musical Express]]'' released an era-defining compilation cassette called [[C81]]. This cassette featured a wide range of groups, reflecting the different approaches of the immediate post-punk era. Three Scottish groups on C81: [[Orange Juice]], [[Aztec Camera]] and [[Josef K]] featured a sound that used jangly guitars mixed with scratchy white funk. It was this thread of post-punk that evenutally developed into indiepop, although along the way the funk element was dropped, replaced by the 60's pop and rock influences noted in the Roots section. These 60's groups had been targeted as the enemy by punk, but were now reclaimed as an influence. |
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Indie pop was an unprecedented contrast from the gritty and serious tones of previous [[underground rock]] styles, as well as being a departure from the glamour of contemporary [[pop music]].<ref name="TAF" /> Distinguished from the angst and abrasiveness of its indie rock counterpart,<ref name="AMIndiePop" /> the majority of indie pop borrows not only the stripped-down quality of punk, but also "the sweetness and [[catchiness]] of mainstream pop".<ref name="Dolan">{{Cite journal|jstor=40926945| title= …This little ukulele tells the truth': indie pop and kitsch authenticity. |journal=Popular Music|last=Dolan|first=Emily| year= 2010 | volume= 29 | issue= 3 | pages= 457–469 |publisher=[[Cambridge University Press]]|doi=10.1017/s0261143010000437| s2cid= 194113672 }}</ref> Music critic [[Simon Reynolds]] says that indie pop defines itself against "charting pop".{{sfn|Frith|Horne|2016|p=139}} Abebe explains:{{blockquote|One of those things was the idea that rock music was supposed to be cool – "cool" meaning sexy, tough, arty, fiery, or fantastical... The charts had "cool" covered – these kids, in their basements and bedrooms, were trying to hand-craft a mirror-image of it, a pop world where they were the stars... and a little bit of a raspberry blown at the larger musical world, which (sensibly) went right on preferring something more interesting than average white kids playing simple pop songs.<ref name="TAF"/>}} |
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Although never part of the indiepop scene, [[The Smiths]] ([[Rough Trade Records]]); songwriters [[Morrissey]] and [[Johnny Marr]] used guitar driven sound and lyrics with social statements on life in [[Thatcher]] Britain, covering topics from sexual ambiguity, loneliness and death to vegetarianism and vicars in tutus, and were a great influence on many groups. The debut album by [[The Jesus and Mary Chain]], Psychocandy was also an influence, as can clearly be heard in groups such as the Shop Assistants. |
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Despite their relatively minor commercial success (their third album was sardonically titled ''[[They Could Have Been Bigger than the Beatles]]''), the [[Television Personalities]] are highly regarded by critics and have been widely influential, especially on the [[C86]] generation.<ref>Buckley, Peter. ''The Rough Guide to Rock''. Rough Guides, 2003.</ref> Reynolds has said that "what we now know as indie music was invented in Scotland,"<ref>{{Cite web |title=Big Gold Dream: Norman Blake, Russell Burn, Tam Dean Bum, Grant McPhee: Amazon Digital Services LLC |url=https://www.amazon.com/Big-Gold-Dream-Norman-Blake/dp/B07CGPTYNV |access-date=2018-05-07 |website=Amazon.com}}</ref> with reference to the emergence of [[Postcard Records]] in 1979. However, some have posited that the concept of indie music did not crystallise until the late 1980s and early 1990s.<ref name="Dolan"/> Brisbane band [[the Go-Betweens]] were an early influential indie pop band, releasing their first single "[[Lee Remick (The Go-Betweens song)|Lee Remick]]" in 1978.<ref>{{Cite web |last= |date=2015-07-11 |title=Record Bin: The jangling pop brilliance of The Go-Betweens' "16 Lovers Lane" |url=https://noogatoday.6amcity.com/record-bin-the-jangling-pop-brilliance-of-the-go-betweens-16-lovers-lane/ |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190902232938/https://noogatoday.6amcity.com/record-bin-the-jangling-pop-brilliance-of-the-go-betweens-16-lovers-lane/ |archive-date=2019-09-02 |access-date=2019-09-02 |website=NOOGAtoday |language=en-US}}</ref> American indie pop band [[Beat Happening]]'s 1985 [[Beat Happening (album)|eponymous debut album]] was also influential in the development of the indie pop sound, particularly in North America.<ref>{{cite web |last=Abebe |first=Nitsuh |title=''Beat Happening'' - Beat Happening |url=http://www.allmusic.com/album/beat-happening-mw0000648080 |access-date=25 March 2015 |website=[[AllMusic]] |quote=Beat Happening can't be given credit for creating the indie pop genre, but they certainly gave it life in America.}}</ref> In the early 1990s, English indie pop influenced and branched off to a variety of styles. The US, which did not have as much of a scene in the 1980s, had many indie pop enthusiasts by the mid 1990s.<ref name="TAF" /> Most of the modern notion of indie music stems from ''[[NME]]''{{'}}s 1986 compilation ''C86'', which collects many guitar bands who were inspired by the early [[psychedelic music|psychedelic]] sounds of 1960s [[garage rock]].<ref name="Martin2013c86">{{cite news |last1=Martin |first1=Ian |date=10 July 2013 |title=C86 sound jangles on in the Japanese indie scene |website=[[The Japan Times]] |url=http://www.japantimes.co.jp/culture/2013/07/10/music/c86-sound-jangles-on-in-the-japanese-indie-scene/#.WJWJlFUrJvw |url-access=subscription |quote=The modern notion of indie music was formed to a large extent by the sounds of melodic guitar bands from declining industrial cities in Margaret Thatcher's Britain, many of which were collected by music weekly the NME on its iconic "C86" compilation album. Disaffected by the implosion of punk and inspired by the proto-psychedelic sounds of '60s garage rock, bands such as The Wedding Present, The Pastels, Close Lobsters and others retained punk's wariness of the commercial music industry but developed a more tuneful, occasionally whimsical musical style. |url-status=live |archive-url= https://web.archive.org/web/20231014175053/https://www.japantimes.co.jp/culture/2013/07/10/music/c86-sound-jangles-on-in-the-japanese-indie-scene/#.WJWJlFUrJvw |archive-date= Oct 14, 2023 }}</ref> |
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In [[1986 in music|1986]], the British musical weekly ''[[New Musical Express]]'' released another compilation cassette, entitled ''[[C86 (music)|C86]]'', that attempted to promote the lighter pop sound of the UK independent music scene. This introduced a wider public to acts including [[The Pastels]], [[The Wedding Present]], [[The Soup Dragons]], [[Primal Scream]], and [[The Bodines]]. Significantly, the C86 compilation received critical attention in United States where an embryonic scene which merged the poppier sound of the Ramones, against the more rock sound of [[The Sex Pistols]]. |
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[[File:Allo Darlin' onstage IndiePopDays 01 - Berlin Sept 2010.jpg|thumb|Indie pop band ''[[Allo Darlin']]'' performing at Indie Pop Days (2010)]] |
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Names that indie pop fans use for themselves are ''popkids'' and ''popgeeks'', and for the music they listen to, ''p!o!p'', ''twee'', ''[[anorak (slang)|anorak]]'' and ''C86''. Abebe says that the Scottish group [[the Pastels]] typified the "hip end of 'anorak': Their lazy melodies, lackadaisical strum, and naive attitude transformed the idea of the rock band into something casual, intimate, and free from the pretense of cool".<ref name="TAF" /> |
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===Record labels=== |
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[[BBC Radio 1]] DJs [[John Peel]] , [[Janice Long]] and [[David Jensen]] promoted the scene through their evening show playlists. The NME both championed and derided the scene, reflecting the highly polarised views of different writers. Their attack on [[Talulah Gosh]] was extreme enough to still be remembered today. Musical preferences changed rapidly with the rise of [[hip hop]], [[acid house]] and [[rave]], and several of the indiepop groups that continued changed style by the end of the 1980's. The prime example would be Primal Scream who were early exponents of [[indie dance]]. Latecomers to the indiepop scene, such as The Soup Dragons, quickly changed their style to indie dance after Primal Scream's success. |
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Following on from the aforementioned Postcard Records, in the UK, Bristol-based [[Sarah Records]] became the archetypal indie pop record label. They began releasing 7" singles in 1987 by bands with overt [[feminist]] and [[left wing]] principles that made "sweet pop".<ref name="P90s">{{cite web|url=https://pitchfork.com/features/lists-and-guides/the-best-indie-pop-albums-of-the-90s/|title=The 25 Best Indie Pop Albums of the ’90s|website=[[Pitchfork (website)|Pitchfork]]|date=27 October 2022}}</ref> |
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In the US, Beat Happening's [[Calvin Johnson (musician)|Calvin Johnson]] founded [[K Records]] in [[Olympia, Washington]], and later labels like [[Slumberland Records|Slumberland]] and [[Harriet Records|Harriet]] encouraged the genre's spread across the country.<ref name="P90s"/> |
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[[The Pink Label]], [[53rd & 3rd]], and [[The Subway Organisation]] were just some of the labels putting out singles by important indiepop groups like The Shop Assistants, [[Razorcuts]], [[The June Brides]], [[The Flatmates]] and [[Talulah Gosh]]; the last-named can probably be considered the first of the C86 influenced groups, founding group of indiepop's second wave, "[[Twee pop]]". |
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===Disputed significance of ''C86''=== |
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Many of these groups prominently featured female members, still considered a notable thing at the time. Indie pop has always had a very strong streak of gender equity; perhaps its most prominent philosophical note has been the championing of anti-macho points of view, whether from women or from men refusing to buy into traditional rock'n'roll male aggression. |
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[[Everett True]], a writer for ''NME'' in the 1980s, believes that ''C86'' was not the main factor behind indie pop, arguing that [[Sarah Records]] was more responsible for sticking to a particular sound, and that: "C86 didn't actually exist as a sound, or style. ... I find it weird, bordering on surreal, that people are starting to use it as a description again".<ref name="planb">{{citation |last=True |first=Everett |title=Friday 22 July |date=22 July 2005 |url=http://planbmag.com/blogs/staff/2005/07/22/friday-22-july/ |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070501212612/http://planbmag.com/blogs/staff/2005/07/22/friday-22-july/ |publisher=Plan B Magazine Blog |access-date=12 January 2016 |archive-date=1 May 2007}}</ref> |
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[[Bob Stanley (Saint Etienne)|Bob Stanley]], a ''[[Melody Maker]]'' journalist in the late 1980s and founding member of pop band [[Saint Etienne (band)|Saint Etienne]], acknowledges that participants at the time reacted against lazy labelling, but insists they shared an approach: "Of course the 'scene', like any scene, barely existed. Like squabbling [[Marxism|Marxist]] factions, groups who had much in common built up petty rivalries. [[The June Brides]] and [[the Jasmine Minks]] were the biggest names at [[Alan McGee]]'s Living Room Club and couldn't stand the sight of each other. Only when [[the Jesus and Mary Chain]] exploded and stole their two-headed crown did they realise they were basically soulmates".<ref name="ReferenceA">{{Cite AV media notes |title=CD86 - 48 tracks from the birth of indie pop |last=Stanley |first=Bob |url=https://www.saintetiennedisco.com/compile/u/cd86.html |date=2006 |access-date=6 November 2024 |page=11 |publisher=[[Sanctuary Records]]}}</ref> [[Manic Street Preachers]] bassist [[Nicky Wire]] remembers that it was the bands' very independence that gave the scene coherence: "People were doing everything themselves - making their own records, doing the artwork, gluing the sleeves together, releasing them and sending them out, writing fanzines because the music press lost interest really quickly."<ref>{{Citation |last=Wire |first= Nicky |title= The Birth of Uncool |newspaper=[[The Guardian]]|date=25 October 2006 |url= http://arts.guardian.co.uk/features/story/0,,1930836,00.html}}</ref> |
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===American indie pop=== |
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Many of the actual ''C86'' bands distanced themselves from the scene cultivated around them by the UK music press - in its time, ''C86'' became a [[pejorative]] term for its associations with so-called "shambling" (a [[John Peel]]-coined description celebrating the self-conscious primitive approach of some of the music) and [[Underachiever|underachievement]].<ref name="timeout.com">{{cite web|url=http://www.timeout.com/london/music/features/2167/The_C86_indie_scene_is_back.html|author-link=Simon Reynolds|website=Time Out!|date=23 October 2006|last=Reynolds|first=Simon|title=The C86 indie scene is back!|access-date=2 January 2012|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20121002142154/http://www.timeout.com/london/music/features/2167/The_C86_indie_scene_is_back.html|archive-date=2 October 2012|url-status=dead}}</ref>{{verification needed|date=July 2016}} |
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In the United States, a similar revolution in underground pop had been taking place in Olympia, Washington. [[Beat Happening]], an indie band fronted by [[Calvin Johnson (musician)|Calvin Johnson]] and [[Heather Lewis]], who additionally started a record label called [[K Records]]. Their aesthetic was quite similar to their British cohorts, with hand-drawn photocopied sleeves and stripped-down instrumentation playing pure pop gems that were well out of step with the then-current hardcore punk scene. The first Beat Happening record, on K, was released in 1985. Other labels sprang up across the country, including [[Bus Stop]] (Champaign-Urbana, Illinois, from 1987); [[Picturebook]] (Barrington, Illinois, from 1987), [[Harriet]] (Cambridge, Massachusetts, from 1989) and [[Slumberland]] (Silver Spring, Maryland, from 1989, later California), bringing together the American sound of Beat Happening, which was a little rawer and more pared-down, with the British indie pop of Sarah and others, which was sometimes softer, more harmonious, and more twee. Important groups included [[The Springfields]] and [[Honeybunch]] -- both part of the vast and complicated [[Velvet Crush]] group that's been making "indie pop" singles since long before indie pop. |
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==Related genres== |
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===International reach=== |
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===Twee pop=== |
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{{Main|Twee pop}} |
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[[File:AcidHouseKings.jpg|thumb|[[Acid House Kings]], a twee pop band.]] |
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Twee pop is a subgenre of indie pop<ref name="AMIndiePop"/> that originates from ''C86''. Characterised by its simplicity and perceived innocence, some of its defining features are boy-girl harmonies, catchy melodies, and lyrics about love. For many years, most bands were distributed by Sarah Records (in the UK) and [[K Records]] (in the US).<ref name="AMTwee">{{cite web |title=Twee Pop |url=http://www.allmusic.com/style/twee-pop-ma0000012201 |website=[[AllMusic]] |quote=In the U.K., the hub of the twee-pop scene was for many years the now-legendary Sarah label, home of groups including the Field Mice, Heavenly, and the Orchids; upon Sarah's demise, its founders created a new label, Shinkansen. In the U.S., the twee-pop scene took root most notably in the Olympia, WA area, the home of K Records, a label owned and operated by Beat Happening's Calvin Johnson. |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231110053012/https://www.allmusic.com/style/twee-pop-ma0000012201 |archive-date= Nov 10, 2023 }}</ref> |
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=== Shibuya-kei === |
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One striking feature of indie pop is its unusual international reach. In addition to the United Kingdom and the United States, there has been a significant school of bands since 1985 in New Zealand, recording for [[Flying Nun Records]], most notably the trio of [[The Bats]], [[The Chills]], and [[The Clean]]. Instantly recognizable for their insistent jangle-guitar strums and sweet, high male choirboy voices, these bands were the model for much of what followed in other countries. Not just English-speaking countries, either; Germany, Sweden, Japan, Philippines, Greece, Spain, and Canada all have longstanding significant indie pop scenes. Australia has always been an important indie pop country, going back as far as [[The Go-Betweens]], who, while considered pop and indie, were not really indie pop; up through [[the Sugargliders]], who were; to [[The Lucksmiths]] today. |
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{{Main|Shibuya-kei}} |
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{{lang|ja-latn|[[Shibuya-kei]]}} is a Japanese style from the 1990s that was embraced by indie pop enthusiasts, partly because many of its bands were distributed in the United States through major [[indie label]]s like [[Matador Records|Matador]] and [[Grand Royal]]. Out of all the Japanese groups from the scene, [[Pizzicato Five]] was the closest to achieving mainstream success in the US.<ref name="Ohanesian2013">{{cite journal |last1=Ohanesian |first1=Liz |date=13 April 2011 |title=Japanese Indie Pop: The Beginner's Guide to Shibuya-Kei |url=http://www.laweekly.com/music/japanese-indie-pop-the-beginners-guide-to-shibuya-kei-2408911 |journal=[[LA Weekly]] |quote=If you're going to start digging around in the {{lang|ja-latn|Shibuya-kei|italic=no}} crates, Pizzicato 5 is the best place to start. Our reasoning for this is simple, out of all the bands that came out of this scene, they came closest to breaking through on a wide scale in the U.S. |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230709203903/https://www.laweekly.com/japanese-indie-pop-the-beginners-guide-to-shibuya-kei/ |archive-date= Jul 9, 2023 }}</ref> |
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=== |
===Chamber pop=== |
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{{Main|Chamber pop}} |
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[[Chamber pop]] is a subgenre of indie pop that features lush orchestrations. Heavily influenced by [[Brian Wilson]] and [[Burt Bacharach]],<ref name="AMIndiePop" /> the majority of [[Louis Philippe (musician)|Louis Phillipe]]'s productions for [[él Records]] embodied the sophisticated use of orchestras and voices that typified the style,<ref name="tango">{{cite web|last1=Marmoro|first1=Gianfranco|title=The Ocean Tango|url=http://www.ondarock.it/recensioni/2010_theoceantango.htm|website=Ondarock|language=it|date=12 January 2010 |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20231117112633/https://www.ondarock.it/recensioni/2010_theoceantango.htm |archive-date= Nov 17, 2023 }}</ref> whilst [[The Divine Comedy (band)|the Divine Comedy]] were the most popular chamber pop act of the [[Britpop]] era.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Kok |first=Dan |date=13 September 2016 |title=The Divine Comedy: Foreverland |url=https://www.popmatters.com/the-divine-comedy-foreverland-2495416625.html |access-date=7 January 2021 |website=PopMatters}}</ref> |
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== See also == |
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Two of the most significant fanzines of the day were ''[[Are You Scared To Get Happy?]]'', written by [[Matt Haynes]] and ''Kvatch'', written by [[Clare Wadd]], both then living in Bristol, England. ''AYSTGH?'', as was common then, featured an attached [[flexidisc]], on the bedroom label [[Sha-La-La]]. Flexidiscs embodied the in-the-moment throwaway vision of perfect two-minute pop gems, even more so than did regular vinyl singles. When ''Are You Scared To Get Happy?'' stopped publishing in 1987, Matt and Clare joined forces, and Sha-La-La evolved into a real record label called [[Sarah Records]]. Many people now consider Sarah, which ended in 1995, to be the archetypical indie pop label. It is certainly hard to overstate Sarah's influence on the bands that followed, not just with the sound of the records but the graphical style of the record sleeves and the bitingly funny sleevenotes. |
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* [[List of indie pop artists]] |
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== |
==References== |
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{{Reflist}} |
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=== Works cited === |
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Since the early 1990s, indie pop has been growing in popularity. Elements of indie pop sound have broken through into the mainstream through bands like [[Belle & Sebastian]] and [[Camera Obscura (band)|Camera Obscura]]. In 1985 or 1995, it was impossible to hear an indie pop record on any kind of commercial radio station, and even most college and alternative radio stations abhorred the soft sounds of "Twee pop," preferring aggressive testosterone-charged grunge and punk sounds. By 2005, however, it was quite common. Some veteran bands formerly noted for a sound typical of indie rock, such as [[Yo La Tengo]] (and the [[Flaming Lips]], although they record for a major label) have moved increasingly to an indie pop approach in recent years. |
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* {{cite book|last1=Frith|first1=Simon|author-link1=Simon Frith|last2=Horne|first2=Howard|title=Art into Pop|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2Ej7CwAAQBAJ|date= 2016|orig-year=First published 1988|publisher=Routledge|isbn=978-1-317-22803-5}} |
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* {{cite book|last=Reynolds|first=Simon|author-link=Simon Reynolds|title=Retromania: Pop Culture's Addiction to Its Own Past|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=8FI3dVT9t34C|year=2011|publisher=Farrar, Straus and Giroux|isbn=978-1-4299-6858-4}} |
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==Further reading== |
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==Some indie pop artists== |
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* Fonarow, Wendy, "Empire of Dirt, The Aesthetics and Rituals of British Indie Music" 2006 |
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* Hann, Michael, ''[https://www.theguardian.com/music/2004/oct/13/popandrock Fey city rollers]'' (''The Guardian'', 2004) |
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Main article: [[List of indie pop artists]] |
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* Pearce, Kevin, [http://www.tangents.co.uk/tangents/main/2001/march/junebrides.html ''A Different Story: The Ballad of the June Brides''] (''Tangents'', 2001) |
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* Rogers, Jude, [http://music.guardian.co.uk/pop/story/0,,2121219,00.html ''Smells like indie spirit''] (The Observer, 2007) |
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==Indie pop labels (currently active)== |
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* Stanley, Bob, ''[https://web.archive.org/web/20080704103719/http://entertainment.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,14932-2411784,00.html Where were you in C86?]'' (''The Times,'' 2006) |
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* [[3CG Records]] |
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* [[Arena Rock Recording Co.]] |
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* [[Asthmatic Kitty Records]] |
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* [[Barsuk Records]] |
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* [[Becalmed Records]] |
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* [[Bus Stop]] |
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* [[Candle Records]] |
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* [[Cher Doll]] |
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* [[Double Deal Brand Records]] |
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* [[Drive-In Records]] |
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* [[Eenie Meenie Records]] |
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* [[Elefant Records]] |
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* [[Firestation Records]] |
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* [[Flying Nun Records]] |
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* [[Fruit Records]] |
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* [[Fueled By Ramen|Fueled By Ramen Records]] |
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* [[Happy Happy Birthday To Me Records]] |
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* [[Harriet Records]] |
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* [[Heaven Records]] |
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* [[Hidden Agenda Records]] |
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* [[Hugpatch]] |
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* [[Jeepster Records]] |
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* [[K Records]] |
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* [[Labrador Records]] |
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* [[Lil' Chief Records]] |
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* [[Looking Glass Workshop]] |
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* [[LTM Records]] |
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* [[Magic Marker Records]] |
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* [[Marsh Marigold Records]] |
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* [[Matador Records]] |
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* [[Matinée Records]] |
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* [[Merge Records]] |
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* [[Microindie Records]] |
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* [[OK-7 Documents]] |
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* [[Orange Twin Records]] |
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* [[Parasol Records]] |
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* [[Radio Khartoum]] |
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* [[Saddle Creek Records]] |
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* [[Shelflife Records]] |
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* [[Shinkansen Records]] |
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* [[Siesta Records]] |
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* [[Slumberland Records]] |
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* [[Smallroom Records]] |
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* [[Team Love Records]] |
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* [[Total Gaylord Records]] |
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* [[Twee Kitten Records]] |
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==External links== |
==External links== |
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* |
*[http://www.twee.net TweeNet - indiepop reference web site] |
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*[https://web.archive.org/web/20210123052254/https://www.indiepop.com.br/ INDIE POP BR - Brazilian indie pop music reference web site] |
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* [http://www.indiepedia.org Indiepedia.org -- A wiki dedicated to indie music] |
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* [http://www.indiepages.com Indiepages.com -- everything indiepop] |
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* [http://www.indierockcafe.com -- Blog all about indie music] |
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Indie Pop}} |
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[[Category:Indie pop| ]] |
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[[Category:British styles of music]] |
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Latest revision as of 21:36, 16 December 2024
Indie pop | |
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Stylistic origins | |
Cultural origins | Late 1970s, United Kingdom |
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Indie pop (also typeset as indie-pop or indiepop) is a subgenre of alternative rock and subculture[1] that combines guitar pop with DIY ethic[3] in opposition to the style and tone of mainstream pop music.[8] It originated from British post-punk[4] in the late 1970s and subsequently generated a thriving fanzine, label, and club and gig circuit. Compared to its counterpart, indie rock,[5] the genre is more melodic, less abrasive, and relatively angst-free.[5] In later years, the definition of indie pop has bifurcated to also mean bands from unrelated DIY scenes/movements with pop leanings.[4] Subgenres include chamber pop and twee pop.[5]
Development and characteristics
[edit]This section has multiple issues. Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page. (Learn how and when to remove these messages)
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Origins and etymology
[edit]Indie pop is not just "indie" that is "pop." Not too many people realize this, or really care either way. But you can be sure indie pop's fans know it. They have their own names for themselves ... the music they listen to ... their own canon of legendary bands ... and legendary labels ... their own pop stars ... their own zines ... websites ... mailing lists ... aesthetics ... festivals ... iconography ... fashion accessories ... and in-jokes ... in short, their own culture.
Within indie genres, issues of authenticity are especially prominent: indie was born in a Utopian attempt to stop the inevitable cycle of bands being co-opted - and, it is assumed, corrupted - by the mainstream.
Both indie and indie pop had originally referred to the same thing during the late 1970s, originally abbreviations for independent and popular. Inspired more by punk rock's DIY ethos than its style, guitar bands were formed on the then-novel premise that one could record and release their own music instead of having to procure a record contract from a major label.[1] According to Emily Dolan, indie is predicated on the distorted music of the Velvet Underground, the "rebellious screaming" of early punk, and "some of rock's more quirky and eccentric figures", such as Jonathan Richman.[2] Pitchfork's Nitsuh Abebe identifies the majority of indie as "all about that 60s-styled guitar jangle".[1] The Monochrome Set's[9] early singles were so heavily influential to indie pop band the Smiths that Johnny Marr stated without them, the Smiths would not have existed.[10][11]
Indie pop was an unprecedented contrast from the gritty and serious tones of previous underground rock styles, as well as being a departure from the glamour of contemporary pop music.[1] Distinguished from the angst and abrasiveness of its indie rock counterpart,[5] the majority of indie pop borrows not only the stripped-down quality of punk, but also "the sweetness and catchiness of mainstream pop".[2] Music critic Simon Reynolds says that indie pop defines itself against "charting pop".[8] Abebe explains:
One of those things was the idea that rock music was supposed to be cool – "cool" meaning sexy, tough, arty, fiery, or fantastical... The charts had "cool" covered – these kids, in their basements and bedrooms, were trying to hand-craft a mirror-image of it, a pop world where they were the stars... and a little bit of a raspberry blown at the larger musical world, which (sensibly) went right on preferring something more interesting than average white kids playing simple pop songs.[1]
Despite their relatively minor commercial success (their third album was sardonically titled They Could Have Been Bigger than the Beatles), the Television Personalities are highly regarded by critics and have been widely influential, especially on the C86 generation.[12] Reynolds has said that "what we now know as indie music was invented in Scotland,"[13] with reference to the emergence of Postcard Records in 1979. However, some have posited that the concept of indie music did not crystallise until the late 1980s and early 1990s.[2] Brisbane band the Go-Betweens were an early influential indie pop band, releasing their first single "Lee Remick" in 1978.[14] American indie pop band Beat Happening's 1985 eponymous debut album was also influential in the development of the indie pop sound, particularly in North America.[15] In the early 1990s, English indie pop influenced and branched off to a variety of styles. The US, which did not have as much of a scene in the 1980s, had many indie pop enthusiasts by the mid 1990s.[1] Most of the modern notion of indie music stems from NME's 1986 compilation C86, which collects many guitar bands who were inspired by the early psychedelic sounds of 1960s garage rock.[16]
Names that indie pop fans use for themselves are popkids and popgeeks, and for the music they listen to, p!o!p, twee, anorak and C86. Abebe says that the Scottish group the Pastels typified the "hip end of 'anorak': Their lazy melodies, lackadaisical strum, and naive attitude transformed the idea of the rock band into something casual, intimate, and free from the pretense of cool".[1]
Record labels
[edit]Following on from the aforementioned Postcard Records, in the UK, Bristol-based Sarah Records became the archetypal indie pop record label. They began releasing 7" singles in 1987 by bands with overt feminist and left wing principles that made "sweet pop".[17]
In the US, Beat Happening's Calvin Johnson founded K Records in Olympia, Washington, and later labels like Slumberland and Harriet encouraged the genre's spread across the country.[17]
Disputed significance of C86
[edit]Everett True, a writer for NME in the 1980s, believes that C86 was not the main factor behind indie pop, arguing that Sarah Records was more responsible for sticking to a particular sound, and that: "C86 didn't actually exist as a sound, or style. ... I find it weird, bordering on surreal, that people are starting to use it as a description again".[18]
Bob Stanley, a Melody Maker journalist in the late 1980s and founding member of pop band Saint Etienne, acknowledges that participants at the time reacted against lazy labelling, but insists they shared an approach: "Of course the 'scene', like any scene, barely existed. Like squabbling Marxist factions, groups who had much in common built up petty rivalries. The June Brides and the Jasmine Minks were the biggest names at Alan McGee's Living Room Club and couldn't stand the sight of each other. Only when the Jesus and Mary Chain exploded and stole their two-headed crown did they realise they were basically soulmates".[19] Manic Street Preachers bassist Nicky Wire remembers that it was the bands' very independence that gave the scene coherence: "People were doing everything themselves - making their own records, doing the artwork, gluing the sleeves together, releasing them and sending them out, writing fanzines because the music press lost interest really quickly."[20]
Many of the actual C86 bands distanced themselves from the scene cultivated around them by the UK music press - in its time, C86 became a pejorative term for its associations with so-called "shambling" (a John Peel-coined description celebrating the self-conscious primitive approach of some of the music) and underachievement.[21][verification needed]
Related genres
[edit]Twee pop
[edit]Twee pop is a subgenre of indie pop[5] that originates from C86. Characterised by its simplicity and perceived innocence, some of its defining features are boy-girl harmonies, catchy melodies, and lyrics about love. For many years, most bands were distributed by Sarah Records (in the UK) and K Records (in the US).[22]
Shibuya-kei
[edit]Shibuya-kei is a Japanese style from the 1990s that was embraced by indie pop enthusiasts, partly because many of its bands were distributed in the United States through major indie labels like Matador and Grand Royal. Out of all the Japanese groups from the scene, Pizzicato Five was the closest to achieving mainstream success in the US.[23]
Chamber pop
[edit]Chamber pop is a subgenre of indie pop that features lush orchestrations. Heavily influenced by Brian Wilson and Burt Bacharach,[5] the majority of Louis Phillipe's productions for él Records embodied the sophisticated use of orchestras and voices that typified the style,[24] whilst the Divine Comedy were the most popular chamber pop act of the Britpop era.[25]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Abebe, Nitsuh (24 October 2005), "Twee as Fuck: The Story of Indie Pop", Pitchfork Media, archived from the original on 3 February 2011
- ^ a b c d e Dolan, Emily (2010). "…This little ukulele tells the truth': indie pop and kitsch authenticity". Popular Music. 29 (3). Cambridge University Press: 457–469. doi:10.1017/s0261143010000437. JSTOR 40926945. S2CID 194113672.
- ^ a b Tea, Mark (14 April 2014). "10 Canadian jangle and indie pop bands that will improve your day". Aux. Archived from the original on 15 June 2018.
Instead, we're focusing on a more classic definition of the genre, one that marries guitar pop with D.I.Y. ethics.
- ^ a b c d Heaton, Dave (5 December 2013). "The Best Indie-Pop of 2013". PopMatters.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i "Indie Pop". AllMusic.
- ^ The Week Staff (22 July 2011). "Washed Out: Within and Without". The Week.
- ^ Reynolds 2011, p. 168.
- ^ a b Frith & Horne 2016, p. 139.
- ^ "The Monochrome Set". Tapete Musik (in German). Retrieved 30 April 2023.
- ^ "The Monochrome Set". CCCB. Retrieved 30 April 2023.
- ^ Robb, John (9 January 2009). "The Monochrome Set: Remembering the band that history forgot". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 30 April 2023.
- ^ Buckley, Peter. The Rough Guide to Rock. Rough Guides, 2003.
- ^ "Big Gold Dream: Norman Blake, Russell Burn, Tam Dean Bum, Grant McPhee: Amazon Digital Services LLC". Amazon.com. Retrieved 7 May 2018.
- ^ "Record Bin: The jangling pop brilliance of The Go-Betweens' "16 Lovers Lane"". NOOGAtoday. 11 July 2015. Archived from the original on 2 September 2019. Retrieved 2 September 2019.
- ^ Abebe, Nitsuh. "Beat Happening - Beat Happening". AllMusic. Retrieved 25 March 2015.
Beat Happening can't be given credit for creating the indie pop genre, but they certainly gave it life in America.
- ^ Martin, Ian (10 July 2013). "C86 sound jangles on in the Japanese indie scene". The Japan Times. Archived from the original on 14 October 2023.
The modern notion of indie music was formed to a large extent by the sounds of melodic guitar bands from declining industrial cities in Margaret Thatcher's Britain, many of which were collected by music weekly the NME on its iconic "C86" compilation album. Disaffected by the implosion of punk and inspired by the proto-psychedelic sounds of '60s garage rock, bands such as The Wedding Present, The Pastels, Close Lobsters and others retained punk's wariness of the commercial music industry but developed a more tuneful, occasionally whimsical musical style.
- ^ a b "The 25 Best Indie Pop Albums of the '90s". Pitchfork. 27 October 2022.
- ^ True, Everett (22 July 2005), Friday 22 July, Plan B Magazine Blog, archived from the original on 1 May 2007, retrieved 12 January 2016
- ^ Stanley, Bob (2006). CD86 - 48 tracks from the birth of indie pop (Media notes). Sanctuary Records. p. 11. Retrieved 6 November 2024.
- ^ Wire, Nicky (25 October 2006), "The Birth of Uncool", The Guardian
- ^ Reynolds, Simon (23 October 2006). "The C86 indie scene is back!". Time Out!. Archived from the original on 2 October 2012. Retrieved 2 January 2012.
- ^ "Twee Pop". AllMusic. Archived from the original on 10 November 2023.
In the U.K., the hub of the twee-pop scene was for many years the now-legendary Sarah label, home of groups including the Field Mice, Heavenly, and the Orchids; upon Sarah's demise, its founders created a new label, Shinkansen. In the U.S., the twee-pop scene took root most notably in the Olympia, WA area, the home of K Records, a label owned and operated by Beat Happening's Calvin Johnson.
- ^ Ohanesian, Liz (13 April 2011). "Japanese Indie Pop: The Beginner's Guide to Shibuya-Kei". LA Weekly. Archived from the original on 9 July 2023.
If you're going to start digging around in the Shibuya-kei crates, Pizzicato 5 is the best place to start. Our reasoning for this is simple, out of all the bands that came out of this scene, they came closest to breaking through on a wide scale in the U.S.
- ^ Marmoro, Gianfranco (12 January 2010). "The Ocean Tango". Ondarock (in Italian). Archived from the original on 17 November 2023.
- ^ Kok, Dan (13 September 2016). "The Divine Comedy: Foreverland". PopMatters. Retrieved 7 January 2021.
Works cited
[edit]- Frith, Simon; Horne, Howard (2016) [First published 1988]. Art into Pop. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-317-22803-5.
- Reynolds, Simon (2011). Retromania: Pop Culture's Addiction to Its Own Past. Farrar, Straus and Giroux. ISBN 978-1-4299-6858-4.
Further reading
[edit]- Fonarow, Wendy, "Empire of Dirt, The Aesthetics and Rituals of British Indie Music" 2006
- Hann, Michael, Fey city rollers (The Guardian, 2004)
- Pearce, Kevin, A Different Story: The Ballad of the June Brides (Tangents, 2001)
- Rogers, Jude, Smells like indie spirit (The Observer, 2007)
- Stanley, Bob, Where were you in C86? (The Times, 2006)