Theory and Ethnography of Affective Participation at DIY Shows in U.S.

Author:

Verbuč David1

Affiliation:

1. Charles University, Prague

Abstract

Many scholars have argued that live concerts constitute a community. My question in this article is how is this achieved, what kind of community is generated in the process, and how do we analytically approach answering these questions? In this regard, Thomas Turino suggests that community can be generated through an active and synchronous physical and music-related participation at live events. As a corrective to his deductive model of participatory and presentational music, I propose an inductive model of socio-musical participation, based on practices of DIY (“do-it-yourself”) music communities in the US. In the article, I engage with various theories of audience participation, as well as analyze different types of DIY music participation through the ethnographic study of American DIY shows. The interaction between DIY performers, audiences, and organizers, and the various forms of their social and musical participation at DIY shows suggest not only physical, music-related, and synchronous, but also spectatorial, non-synchronous, and co-creational participation; and not only harmonious but also antagonistic participation. This approach utilizes affect theory, recognizes difference and conflict in the constitution of a music community, and refutes some prevalent assumptions about the notion of audience participation.

Publisher

University of California Press

Subject

Music

Reference231 articles.

1. The research for and the writing of this article was supported by the Faculty of Humanities, Charles University Prague (grant FHS 260 47001).

2. Wendy Fonarow, Empire of Dirt: The Aesthetics and Rituals of British Indie Music (Middletown, CT: Wesleyan University Press, 2006), 192–95.

3. Moshing is a form of crowd dancing at punk and other energetic DIY shows that involve audiences bouncing and pushing each other, often in an aestheticized and routinized manner. See William Tsitsos, “Rules of Rebellion: Slamdancing, Moshing, and the American Alternative Scene,” Popular Music 18, no. 3 (1999): 397–414.

4. Crowdsurfing is a form of dance participation at DIY shows where individuals are lifted over the crowd and “surf” in a horizontal position over their heads. The crowds help with their hands to hold and pass the crowdsurfers around.

5. The research for this paper is a part of my larger doctoral research focused on DIY house concerts and DIY venues, communities, and scenes in the US, mostly on the American West Coast. I conducted interviews, attended concerts, lived in DIY houses, toured with DIY musicians, and studied the DIY literature (e.g., DIY zines, comic books, and blogs). Before I moved to the US for my doctoral studies, I was also a part of similar DIY communities in Slovenia, mostly participating in local scenes as a music journalist and concert organizer.

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