this post was submitted on 10 Oct 2023
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Alternative Nation: The Fediverse's Alternative and Indie Music Community

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Alternative Nation : The Fediverse's largest alternative and indie music community! All things alternative music, from 80s college rock to today's indie and all the amazing alternative music in between. Welcome home, music nerds!

Some of y'all may remember MTV's Alternative Nation or 120 Minutes, awesome programs & incredible ways to discover #music back in the 80s & 90s...

Welcome, to the Fediverse edition!

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Share youtube, songwhip, spotify, bandcamp links, music memes, album art, articles, whatever! But avoid links to directly download music (don't want to get Lemmy.world in trouble). Songwhip links always appreciated!

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The Golden Rule: Music taste is subjective so don't be a gatekeeping asshole. There's no "bad music", only music you like or don't like.

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In the early '00s, indie rock was still a largely underground affair. That isn't to say that there were no indie records making it to the mainstream if we look at cases like The Smiths or The Stone Roses.

However, notable indie artists with large fan bases like Pavement, Modest Mouse, and Sonic Youth, while no strangers to commercial success, were predominantly featured in college radio and weren't exactly dominating pop culture discourse.

And even though it's hard to attribute the moment when indie rock became the most mainstream form of guitar-driven music to a single album or artist, there is a candidate that undeniably changed the scene.

Death Cab for Cutie, already sporting an enviable underground reputation, used inner tensions and a newfound creative spirit to write their 4th album, "Transatlanticism".

The record was a critical and commercial hit, and it kickstarted a very particular brand of indie rock that ended up taking over the world, with ripples that are still felt in the mainstream today.

To celebrate its 20th anniversary, we decided to dive into the making of this album, and what makes it so special that it was enough to put indie rock on the pop culture map.

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[โ€“] contortions@lemm.ee 2 points 1 year ago (2 children)

This is hogwash, but mainly because "indie" was/is used so ambiguously and interchangeably to refer to emerging genre conventions, production processes, promotion, distribution, etc. What's "indie" is all just vibes

[โ€“] ren@lemmy.world 2 points 1 year ago

don't get hung up on the words - "indie" became a genre of it's own, much like "college rock" left college. The early 2000s were a boon for indie artists, and some hit it pretty big. It was peak mp3 blog years (I ran one myself). Not all bands were technically indie, but the music from the era launched what became known as the "indie music" genre.

It's language. Meanings aren't always literal. Hell, "literally" doesn't mean literally anymore!

[โ€“] contortions@lemm.ee 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

besides, the Death Cab parts were pretty much in place by We Have the Facts...