Fan Culture and its Obsession With Music
By: David Miller
Music has always
been understood as a mode of relaxation, a form of artistic expression and a
popular past time amongst our generation.
It can be said that music also serves as a powerful communication
vessel that allows individuals to relate to one another and come together
as a cohesive body. However, what seems
to lie beneath the surface, is the realization that music seems to be deeply
correlated with notions power and influence that seem to establish an identity
in its listeners.
Online portals,
such as wrongplant.net,
exist in order to provide online chats where any individual can discuss and
share their favorite musicians within cyberspace forums that mirror the concept
of the
public sphere. Additionally, it
gives everyday citizens the ability to inquire and converse about the modes in
which bands and songs have affected their daily routines. As a permanent aspect of someone’s daily
routine, Lisa
Lewis suggests that popular music has become an integral aspect of the
process known as fandom. It is suggested
that fandom
resembles a microcosm that is comprised of people who are fans of a genre of
subgenre, whom has their own sets of clubs, conventions and amateur entities
(Urbandictionary.com).
These fandom
communities have become recognized as forms of subcultures that mirror popular
mainstream fan communities that have adopted their own forms cultural practices
and specific attitudes- such as Trekkies. The most popular fandom community that is
associated with popular music revolves around the iconic band Phish. This
musical group is classified as a “jam band,” and through their instrumental influence
have constructed traditional elements as well as cultural practices that
promote fan participation.
Phish is most
notably appreciated for their live shows, which have transcended above the
simplicity of a typical performance and have become correlated with a profound
cultural experience. Notably, fans from
all over the world use these shows as a form of escapism, which allow them to
temporarily fall into an alternate reality where they can simply indulge in
music and nothing else. As a documented “Phish-Head,” Chris Hedges promotes the idea
that these spectacles have often approached something akin to worship. These followers describe Phish events as
spiritual encounters that allow an entire crowd to fall into an ecstatic bliss
and bond with one another in a deeply reflective sense. (Hedges, 2002). Furthermore, popular conventions associated
with the attendance of Phish shows include the consumption of hallucinogenic
drugs and the acceptance of dressing one’s self in bizarre hippy-related
clothing.
This example of
fan culture and fandom promotes the idea that music has the capacity to unite
its fans through the participation in forms of subcultures and cultural
experiences. It seems that music has
risen beyond its initial function of entertainment and has transcended into the
initialization of a specific lifestyle.
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ReplyDeleteI really like how you use the band Phish to get your point across. Another good example of fandom is the band Insane Clown Posse, as their fans call themselves Juggalo's (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Juggalo).
ReplyDeleteCheck out my blog on "What is a Fan?" I touch on Trekkies as well.
http://adamabelson.blogspot.ca/2013/04/what-is-fan.html
Adam