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Posted by avstar on Nov-28-2005 03:11:

Smiley DJ trance culture, need some feedback!

I'm doing research for anthropology class on what trance culture is all about.

This isn't aimed at the history of trance and where EDM came from but more towards how the culture behaves at a show. For example, I recently saw Tiesto and I noticed that the DJ has some superior power over everyone else. When Tiesto clapped his hands, everyone followed. Witnessing this behavior can make an observer think that the DJ is the "god" and that everyone worships him or her.

This is just one example of the culture of EDM and live performances of DJs. I'm trying to come up with more good stuff about your personal experiences in going to these shows and observing what kind of culture surrounds you.

You'r input would very much be appreciated!


Posted by Skylight on Nov-28-2005 07:09:

You could add that with trance and other electronic styles that there is an appriciation for more than just the creators of music. For example barely anyone only plays songs that they made.


Posted by Ishkur on Nov-28-2005 11:03:

Trance has no culture.

cult, maybe.

But not a culture.


Posted by Ted Promo on Nov-28-2005 11:07:

quote:
Originally posted by Ishkur
Trance has no culture.

cult, maybe.

But not a culture.


Funny how you can't spell culture without cult.


Posted by Aquarian on Nov-28-2005 13:46:

I'd say it's really a mixed bag. On one side you have this DJ worship , which is kind of a pop culture thing if you think about it - young kids used to watching MTV and thinking artists are gods, they flip over to EDM and they try to do the same. But at the same time you've got the opposite going on; more respect for the music itself and not just idol worship. I don't know if you've noticed but in pop music a song would be titled like "Britney spears - song name", even when britney spears had no part in writing the lyrics, writing the music, producing the music, or anything besides performing the lyrics. Britney spears is really just a product. She's something for the little teenage girls to worship. In EDM, you don't have that. The exact same track would be labeled "[producer] feat. Britney Spears - Track name" Or even just "[producer] - track name". You can criticize Tiesto as much as you want, but at least he had a part in creating what gets put out under his name.


Posted by SYSTEM-J on Nov-28-2005 13:53:

quote:
Originally posted by Demoted
Funny how you can't spell culture without cult.


Deep man, deep.


Posted by Ted Promo on Nov-28-2005 13:55:

quote:
Originally posted by SYSTEM-J
Deep man, deep.


I know


Posted by Zombie0915 on Nov-28-2005 15:53:

Some parties I go to, it seems like they don't really hold their own culture, but rather they just depart completely from the usual pop culture without actually having their own identity. Like anything goes EXCEPT for the normal stuff people have to deal with in the daytime. It would be the last place where you would expect to find kids participating in everyday behavior like discussing politics or finding professional hookups or trying to pick up somebody of the opposite sex or doing some gimmicky makarena type of dance. It is a departure from everyday life if only for a single night. Crazy and naughty behavior is encouraged.

Other than that I dont think the world of trance fans really have much in common with each other. People are welcome to come and do whatever the hell they want and the more outragous it gets the more fun the parties seem to be. There is no "fitting in" with the trance crowd, because nobody really seems to fit in and everyone just lets themselves go and follows their feelings without regard to what it means or how people will react to it. It's just complete chaos accompanied by loud repetitive music. Like a modern day speakeasy where all things prohibited by authority are encouraged but kept secret.

Alot of trance parties have been tamed and don't really happen as I described, but those aren't the kind of parties I try to go to. I prefer the outings in basements out in the rural country, or the trips to the hole-in-the-wall businesses up in the mountains that occasionally get converted into a party place for the night. Established clubs usually host the tamer parties, they are relatively stable businesses and they have dress codes and pre-established limits for how long they can be open. They are like a teen club party or hanging out between classes at a high school. Kids form their cliques and try to look cooler than each other. They idolize the flavor of the month who is selected by the big magazine vote or clearchannel or whatever other large media outlet is in favor with the crowd.


Posted by avstar on Nov-28-2005 18:49:

quote:
Originally posted by Ishkur
Trance has no culture.

cult, maybe.

But not a culture.


Haha, if trance had no culture, then why do we all go to tranceaddict and talk on these forums about music. Culture is everywhere dude.

I understand where you guys are coming from in the sense that trance can be more on a personal level than a social one. People let the music enter them personally. From watching everyone in the room, it seems that people are all moving the same way as if they are part of a whole community. And without the DJ, the community falls apart.

When I saw Tiesto, everyone was chanting "Ti-Es-To, Ti-Es-To". This is culture. It's just like seeing the Red Sox. Sure, it means something very personal to Boston fans, but when everyone chants "Yankees suck!", you join them.

In the rave scene, I see that a lot of people dress in the same fashion. I'm not saying EVERYONE!, but just I feel that most people dress metro or they definitely separate themselves fromt he rock style, goth, or any other kind of music ways of dressing.

Someone comment.


Posted by Kooshtie on Nov-28-2005 19:49:

I dont think u can say there is "trance" culture ...There's obviously dj culture, underground culture, edm culture,ibiza culture, turntable culture ...its all there, just not so specific as to "trance culture" theres a trance following so maybe its more cult. You could of maybe said trance culture existed but not anymore ...i mean its not a prospering genre like it used to be. It def had cultural elements to it especially because of Ibiza, you could always tie in trance with Ibiza..and that was def a culture. :P


Posted by avstar on Nov-28-2005 23:34:

quote:
Originally posted by Remiks
I dont think u can say there is "trance" culture ...There's obviously dj culture, underground culture, edm culture,ibiza culture, turntable culture ...its all there, just not so specific as to "trance culture" theres a trance following so maybe its more cult. You could of maybe said trance culture existed but not anymore ...i mean its not a prospering genre like it used to be. It def had cultural elements to it especially because of Ibiza, you could always tie in trance with Ibiza..and that was def a culture. :P


What's the difference between dj culture, edm culture, ibiza culture, and TRANCE CULTURE?

In what category would AVB and Tiesto fans be then?


Posted by Zombie0915 on Nov-28-2005 23:57:

pop/teen culture


Posted by avstar on Nov-29-2005 01:23:

yeah cuz you see Van Buuren come up on the number 2 spot this week in TRL right after Kanye West...I dunno what you're talking about dude. Armin is not pop/teen culture.


Posted by Ishkur on Nov-29-2005 01:41:

Maybe it's just me, but a culture is something you partake in. It's something you contribute to, and add to its growing aesthete. A culture embodies a living lifestyle of a group of people. It goes beyond just an inane special interest. A culture is a way of life. It is music, yes. But it is also language and dialect. It is clothing, it is style, it is a core group of moral values, interests, and views about life and social living that you can express, raise a family and hold a meaningful occupation under. A culture is what you feel, who you are, and what means the most to you. And more than anything, a culture is how you live your life.

A culture is not something you purchase. You can't buy culture, though the hi-jacking of the term by consumer magnates to convince us that it is possible through the gross obsession over their products would like to tell you otherwise. Don't be deceived. Culture is not defined by commercial interests. It is defined by life and how one lives it.


Posted by A.J. on Nov-29-2005 02:49:

quote:
Originally posted by Ishkur
A culture is not something you purchase


I disagree.

The capitalist, consumer culture is alive and well. Maybe it is not a "culture" in the traditional sense of the word, but it certainly exists.

Many people base their identity on what they wear, where they shop, what music they listen to, what brand of coffee or beer they drink and what they eat.

A culture of "owning things" and 'belonging' to a tribe of people exists. Whether it's goths, punks, teenyboppers. trance ravers, househeads, hippies, baby boomers, jocks, nerds or any number of different groups that people like to categorise themselves in, it seems like all of these groups have all been commercialised, marketed and neatly packaged for the next disconnected individual to gobble up. It could be argued that culture is for sale.


The "brand as personality" that was pioneered by the famous marketer David Ogilvy has grown to be one of the most important ideas in marketing, if not business, today. Many companies no longer have the goal of "producing things". Major companies like Nike, Tommy Hilfiger and Wal Mart barely produce anything at all these days. Instead, they contract out their labour and manufacturing to cheap, third-world markets and the core value of the companies lies in brand equity.

These companies are focused on cultivating and growing a brand - an ideal, a lifestyle, a view. (a culture? :eek Not only do they seek to create a powerful "superbrand" with its own personality and culture, like the Malboro Cowboy, or the Tommy Hilfiger hip hop style. Increasingly, these companies are integrating popular culture into their brands, but even more than that, many of them are trying to influence and subvert culture itself.

Consider this:

When a kid in Nepal is eating McDonalds, or a teenager in the jungles of Brazil is drinking Coca Cola, or a grandmother in China is reading the latest Harry Potter book, is this not the spread of global "culture" (cringe) ????? As sad as it may be, I feel that brands, products and the latest Simpsons episode dubbed into Tagalog are just as much a part of culture as the music, language, moral values etc that you have cited.

You list the following prerequisites for culture (which i agree with):

* Something you partake in
* Something you contribute to
* A Way of life
* Music, language, dialect, clothing, style, food, religion, customs, moral values, laws, interests, views.......
* "what you feel, who you are, and what means the most to you"

Is it not true that people participate in and contrubute to this 'consumer culture'?


Posted by Ishkur on Nov-29-2005 03:39:

The Basque are a culture. The Etruscans were a culture. Tolkien's Yanyar, Noldar and Teleri tribes are cultures.

Playing Everquest 24 hours a day and associating yourself with other people who play Everquest 24 hours a day is not a culture.

Because some marketer thought up the idea to brandish it alongside pop consumerism as a way to sell more junk does not divorce you from the history, linguistics, art, laws, productivity and moral values of the culture you already partake in.

But what you are talking about is not culture, but rather subcultural social tribes. The reason, however, that to be part of a culture entails contribution rather than consumption is because a culture based on consumerism can not last. It will devour itself due to stagnation.

Consumers aren't producers. You typically do not consume and produce at the same time. The avowed mandate of consumer behavior is to be a (often mindless) devourer of the means of production. Your role is to swallow culture, not create it. To be a spectator of your own life, not a participant. Consumer "culture" is a "culture" of passivity, of under-achievement, of purchasing the hollow shell of the ideal lifestyle (As Seen on TV), not working towards achieving it. Where every flavour of creativity, ambition, originality and diversity is mashed into the omnipresent control of market uniformity.

Personality is defined not as who you are or what you do or even what you can achieve, but by what you can acquire; by what you can accumulate; what you can possess. You rely on things to define you. You rely on others to think for you. Ultimately, within our lifetimes, this will make the domain of free thought, free expression and free will literally impossible. Not through force, as totalitarian regimes have done in the past, but through applied docility, through conscious negligence--the populace will do it willfully, discarding it as deftly as taking out the garbage and treating it as such. Identifying yourself with consumer "culture" is akin to avoiding someone murdering you by committing suicide.

I won't say anymore, because there's a big section in my book about subcultural social tribes....


Posted by DTTA on Nov-29-2005 04:11:

quote:
Originally posted by Zombie0915
pop/teen culture


Shortest post I think you've ever written dude!

AJ: I question your assertion of a 'global culture'. When kids in Asia are scarfing down McBurgers, they're being influenced by exported aspects of American culture. I don't think you could have a global culture, by definition.

Ishkur: You ought to reference that excellent cartoon you posted on your site with the one-eyed granddad. Captures your views nicely. (funny too)

Interesting thread....


Posted by A.J. on Nov-29-2005 04:55:

OK, I read over my first post again and realised that I wasn't making myself clear. Please let me clarify.


quote:
Originally posted by Ishkur
Playing Everquest 24 hours a day and associating yourself with other people who play Everquest 24 hours a day is not a culture.


Technology, entertainment, rituals. Aren't these things a part of culture? I'm not saying that playing "everquest" (whatever that is ) is a culture in itself, because obviously it is not. I'm not disputing that point. Rather, I propose that these things are part of culture.

Similarly, fashion, food, entertainment, trance music, techno, house....whatever....these things are part of culture. In turn, the brands/companies that represent and influence these things could be seen to be a part of culture. Is an ipod just a product, a functional item to listen to music, or has it become a part of popular culture? If you limit your definition of "culture", and exclude the blatent consumerism and marketing frenzy that is our world today, then you are limiting your depth of understanding and analysis of culture.

I'm interested to know.....do you consider Tommy Hilfiger urban hip hop wear that is worn by millions in America and around the world to be less a part of culture than traditional African dress worn by tribes in the Kalahari? Do you consider the Starbucks coffee that is consumed by millions in America and around the world every morning to be less a part of culture than the baguette that features on breakfast tables in France every day, or the Soup that is consumed in Japan? Brands and advertising are pervasive in modern life. The fact that something or someone is branded should not mean that it is immediately excluded from a definition of culture.

quote:

Because some marketer thought up the idea to brandish it alongside pop consumerism as a way to sell more junk does not divorce you from the history, linguistics, art, laws, productivity and moral values of the culture you already partake in.


I'm sorry, but I really don't think that you can create a clear separation between consumerism (and products) with "the culture you already partake in". Consumerism is a part of our culture.

What do farmers in Calgary do?
What does McDonalds on Ambleside do?
What does the Trout Farm on the Capilano River do?
What does an accounting firm do?
What does GM Place do?

They provide or facilitate the provision of products and services for us to CONSUME.

These things are part of everyday life. Every day, when you walk down the street, you will see franchises, brands, signs, advertising. You can eat at some random fast food chain, you can go buy CDs at the Future Shop or whatever it is they have in Vancouver, you can go shop at any number of shopping malls...Park Royal in West Van is probably the one I'm most familiar with. I'll say it again: these things are a part of the way of life, and they are part of culture.

quote:

But what you are talking about is not culture, but rather subcultural social tribes. The reason, however, that to be part of a culture entails contribution rather than consumption is because a culture based on consumerism can not last. It will devour itself due to stagnation.


I guess I got a bit sidetracked by those subcultural tribes and they were secondary to my main argument . However, I don't believe that culture ONLY entails contribution. The food you eat, the clothes you wear and the music you listen to are part of the culture that you are living in. Where is the contribution? The only thing you have contributed is money to purchase these things. All I'm saying is that you don't only have contribution to culture. How would that work? I think it is better to say that we are all involved with culture - we are living and experiencing it - and people can both contribute and consume those things that make up culture.

quote:

Consumers aren't producers. You typically do not consume and produce at the same time.


How so?

If we are living in a culture and experiencing it, then we can consume and produce things simultaneously. One of the fundamental properties of a service is that it is often produced and consumed at the same time. A haircut, a massage, a physical checkup by a doctor or the table service in a restaurant...all of these things at the same time. And just to prove that I learnt something this semester - developed countries such as Canada or Australia typically have an economy where 70-80% of the GDP comes from services.

quote:

The avowed mandate of consumer behavior is to be a (often mindless) devourer of the means of production.


The avowed mandate of consumer behaviour is to satisfy our need and wants.

quote:
Your role is to swallow culture, not create it. To be a spectator of your own life, not a participant. Consumer "culture" is a "culture" of passivity, of under-achievement, of purchasing the hollow shell of the ideal lifestyle (As Seen on TV), not working towards achieving it. Where every flavour of creativity, ambition, originality and diversity is mashed into the omnipresent control of market uniformity.


Like I said before, I think that consumerism is part of our culture, not the be-all-to-end-all. I don't think that there are cultures here, there and everywhere - a consumer culture, a trance culture, a fashion culture und so weiter. Culture to me is an all-encompassing term, the sum of its parts.

quote:

Personality is defined not as who you are or what you do or even what you can achieve, but by what you can acquire; by what you can accumulate; what you can possess. You rely on things to define you. You rely on others to think for you. Ultimately, within our lifetimes, this will make the domain of free thought, free expression and free will literally impossible.


This is quite a horrifying thought, isn't it? The sad thing is, there are people like this who judge other and themselves according to brands, logos, and the acquisition of 'things'. How many people do you know that go through life seeking a better car, a bigger house, a more expensive wardrobe?

I think you said it best when you said creativity, ambition, originality and diversity - that is what the true culture is about. I see where you are going, and I think I am beginning to understand your point of view.

I just think that consumerism, and all that entails, has sadly become a part of our culture. It really isn't a move for the better, but that is the way that I see things.

quote:

creativity, ambition, originality and diversity


^ ^ ^

That is what culture SHOULD be about.

quote:
mashed into the omnipresent control of market uniformity


^ ^ ^

That is what I'm afraid of.

Sadly, we seem to be experiencing the homogenisation of the world's culture in many respects. This is fueled in part by the spread of globalisation and the rise of global powerhouses like Nike, Coca Cola, Wal Mart and Microsoft.



Hopefully that has made my point of view a little bit clearer


Posted by avstar on Nov-29-2005 05:11:

quote:
Originally posted by Ishkur

Playing Everquest 24 hours a day and associating yourself with other people who play Everquest 24 hours a day is not a culture.

But what you are talking about is not culture, but rather subcultural social tribes. The reason, however, that to be part of a culture entails contribution rather than consumption is because a culture based on consumerism can not last. It will devour itself due to stagnation.



According to my Anthropology professor, a culture doesn't need people to contribute back anything. A culture doesn't even need religion, music, government, and that crap. The simple defenition of a culture is "shared knowledge people use to generate behavior and interpret experience." Simple enough. A subculture IS a culture! So when you say that playing Everquest with your Everquest buddies isn't a culture, you're mistaken! They have their own shared knowledge and even language as to how they play the game. Same goes with rave culture. We've got our same taste in music so that when I say the breakdown of this progressive trance song is amazing (for example), ONLY other people who know trance will know what I'm talking about. THere's a Beginner's Guide to Trance at this site. This is your source of knowledge! To say that people going to rave do not share something in common is naive. They do! They have the same taste in music. That's all that culture needs. So that little consumer piece about wearing particular kinds of clothes or whatever just adds to the shared knowledge that we all have. Culture is just something that seperates a group of people from another in the way they behave.

Everyquest has their subculture, but subculture is just a culture in proportion to a larger culture. In the world of consumers, marketing creating a culture that will last is their biggest goal! It doesn't matter if it lasts or not. How many of you have an ipod? All those ipod users know about the white head buds and the scroll thingy on the thing. This is culture. We know it and we share it and we enjoy it. Same thing with trance.

Agree or disagree, when people go to see Tiesto or whatever EDM show they want, the people go because they share something that separates themselves from others. They all share music. And when the DJ (or "God"), plays the music that the crowd wants to here, the culture strengthens and it becomes richer.


Posted by Kooshtie on Nov-29-2005 05:23:

quote:
yeah cuz you see Van Buuren come up on the number 2 spot this week in TRL right after Kanye West...I dunno what you're talking about dude. Armin is not pop/teen culture.


lets clarify then if its not pop/teen culture ...mmm mainstream culture.


Posted by Ishkur on Nov-29-2005 05:30:

quote:
Originally posted by A.J.
a part of culture


stop right there. You said "part of culture". Yes. Sure. But a culture in and of itself? No. That's silly. It makes no sense. Saying trance is a culture is as nonsensical as saying your hand is still alive if you cut if off from your wrist.

quote:
Originally posted by A.J.
I'm sorry, but I really don't think that you can create a clear separation between consumerism (and products) with "the culture you already partake in".


You're misunderstanding. Again. You don't know what consumerism is, and you're mistaking it for the common practice of buying, selling, and using things. That's not consumerism. Consumerism != consuming. Everyone consumes. That's how we live.

Consumerism is the overlying 'ism' that spoke of the relatively recent aim in marketing that seeks to replace the ends with the means. Consumerism had existed as far back as the 1890s and it enjoyed wild success with the rise of the "leisure class" in the 1920s, only to totally evaporate when the Depression hit. But in the post-war period it returned on a mass level never seen before.

It is not about need or about necessities. It is about wantonness. It is about selfish desire. It is about impulses, greed, gluttony, and lipsmacking, spoonfeeding me-ism. It is a drug that hijacks the compulsive drive for material conformity. It is the state where you buy for the sake of buying. Where the purpose of buying something is so that you have bought it. There is no sustenance or self-enrichment to gain from it.

Capitalism actually hates consumerism. The system champions productivity and the role of deontological obligation (either to yourself or the system), which is the antithesis of consumerism.

quote:
Originally posted by A.J.
How so?


Who here consumes the exact products of their labour?

Can you grow food as you eat it? Can a pop song make it to #1 as you're recording it?

quote:
Originally posted by A.J.
The avowed mandate of consumer behaviour is to satisfy our need and wants.


If you didn't need the product before you knew it existed, why all of a sudden do you feel your life is incomplete unless you have it now? .....what's changed?

quote:
Originally posted by A.J.
How many people do you know that go through life seeking a better car, a bigger house, a more expensive wardrobe?


I choose not to know these people, for a very conscientious reason.


Posted by Ishkur on Nov-29-2005 05:31:

quote:
Originally posted by avstar
According to my Anthropology professor


ha ha ha ha ha.


Posted by stevieboy32808 on Nov-29-2005 06:30:

Culture is a way of life undergoing constant redefining. And because of this redefining is why there are so many disagreements in this thread. The problem here is that there is no true definition for culture because we are all right. All of us have different views on what culture is, but the bigger picture here is that culture is what we make and define it to be. The only thing we know for sure is that in order for a culture to survive is that it must have a loyal following or a community willing to continue its traditions. Otherwise consider it dead. Some off the wall examples could be the short lived disco era or the long lived Roman Empire.


Posted by A.J. on Nov-29-2005 06:43:

I used the word "culture" in my first post when perhaps I shouldn't have. I view a culture as an all-encompassing term, a way of life, and a sum of its respective parts. I didn't mean to give the impression that i judged trance or consumerism or anything else as a separate culture in itself.

It seems that we are arguing about different things.....you argueing that trance, Everquest or any other "tribe" is not a culture in its itself, while I argue that brands, consumerism etc have a place as part of culture. Culture is a very broad term, and I would usually associate it with the country or region where one lives.

Essentially, I agree with you though! There is no way that trance or house or consumerism or skateboarding is a separate culture. That is clearly an innapropriate term to use.

Moving on.....


quote:
Originally posted by Ishkur
stop right there. You said "part of culture". Yes. Sure. But a culture in and of itself? No. That's silly. It makes no sense. Saying trance is a culture is as nonsensical as saying your hand is still alive if you cut if off from your wrist.


No disagreement here.

quote:

You're misunderstanding. Again. You don't know what consumerism is, and you're mistaking it for the common practice of buying, selling, and using things. That's not consumerism. Consumerism != consuming. Everyone consumes. That's how we live.


I'm well aware of consumerism thank you very much, and I can clearly make the distinction between buying & selling and consumerism. Perhaps I should have mentioned materialism as well, since that was where I was trying to lead my argument. Consumerism can have a similar meaning to materialism - "Attachment to materialistic values or possessions: he deplored the rampant consumerism of contemporary society." and that was the particular meaning that I was actually referring to.

quote:

It is not about need or about necessities. It is about wantonness. It is about selfish desire. It is about impulses, greed, gluttony, and lipsmacking, spoonfeeding me-ism. It is a drug that hijacks the compulsive drive for material conformity. It is the state where you buy for the sake of buying. Where the purpose of buying something is so that you have bought it. There is no sustenance or self-enrichment to gain from it.


Agreed

quote:

Capitalism actually hates consumerism. The system champions productivity and the role of deontological obligation (either to yourself or the system), which is the antithesis of consumerism.


Once again, it depends which definition of consumerism you take. The definition that sees it as a consumer movement that protects and informs consumers through standards and regulations - power to the buyer - would definitely not bode well with capitalist ideals. However, if you take the meaning that sees consumerism as attachment to material goods, and buying 'things'for selfish purposes, then a capitalist would rub their hands together at the prospect of all those extra purchases.

quote:

Who here consumes the exact products of their labour?

Can you grow food as you eat it? Can a pop song make it to #1 as you're recording it?


I thought I made a clear distinction between goods and services. Obviously, you can't consume a product as you are making it. However, in many cases, a service is consumed as it is produced. The consumer can actually be a part of the production process. Like I said before, a haircut, a massage or a doctor's checkup are all services that can be consumed as they are produced. And since we both live in countries where the economies are now predominantly service-based, there is a lot of this "consumption-as-it's-produced" going on.


quote:

If you didn't need the product before you knew it existed, why all of a sudden do you feel your life is incomplete unless you have it now? .....what's changed?


"First you get the need/want, then you get the product, then you get the the power"


Posted by A.J. on Nov-29-2005 06:52:

Ishkur, lets stop arguing over Semantics and talk about something else. I basically agree with you so there's no point posting tit-for-tat replies about particular definitions and terms.


creativity, ambition, originality and diversity


It seems to me like you judge these qualities to be important in culture.



Perhaps we can talk about the degradation of culture????



(and ignore whatever problems we have with the definition of 'culture' - I agree with you dude!)


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