INDIE: THE INSTITUTIONAL POLITICS AND AESTHETICS OF A POPULAR MUSIC GENRE
- 1 January 1999
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Cultural Studies
- Vol. 13 (1) , 34-61
- https://doi.org/10.1080/095023899335365
Abstract
This article is concerned with the complex relations between institutional politics and aesthetics in oppositional forms of popular culture. Indie is a contemporary genre which has its roots in punk's institutional and aesthetic challenge to the popular music industry but which, in the 1990s, has become part of the ‘mainstream’ of British pop. Case studies of two important ‘independents’, Creation and One Little Indian, are presented, and the aesthetic and institutional politics of these record companies are analysed in order to explore two related questions. First, what forces lead ‘alternative’ independent record companies towards practices of professionalization and of partnership/collaboration with major corporations? Second, what are the institutional and political-aesthetic consequences of such professionalization and partnership? In response to the first question, the article argues that pressures towards professionalization and partnership should be understood not only as an abandonment of previously held idealistic positions (a ‘sell-out’) and that deals with major record companies are not necessarily, in themselves, a source of aesthetic compromise. On the second question, it argues that collaboration with major record companies entails a relinquishing of autonomy for alternative independent record companies; but perspectives which ascribe negative aesthetic consequences directly to such problematic institutional arrangements may well be flawed.Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- The British Dance Music Industry: A Case Study of Independent Cultural ProductionBritish Journal of Sociology, 1998
- Post-Punk's attempt to democratise the music industry: the success and failure of Rough TradePopular Music, 1997
- Flexibility, post-Fordism and the music industriesMedia, Culture & Society, 1996
- Re-examining the concept of the ‘independent’ record company: the case of Wax Trax! recordsPopular Music, 1995
- Extended PlayPublished by Duke University Press ,1994
- Against negation, for a politics of cultural production: Adorno, aesthetics, the socialScreen, 1993
- Global Harmonies and Local Discords: Transnational Policies and Practices in the European Recording IndustryEuropean Journal of Communication, 1993
- Systems of articulation, logics of change: Communities and scenes in popular musicCultural Studies, 1991
- Anglo-America and its discontentsCultural Studies, 1991
- Mixing genres and reaching the public: The production of popular musicSocial Science Information, 1980