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{{Infobox music genre
{{Infobox music genre
| name = Indie rock
| name = Indie rock
| stylistic_origins = {{hlist|[[Alternative rock]]|[[punk rock]]|[[post-punk]]|[[college rock]]|[[Dunedin sound]]}}
| stylistic_origins = {{hlist|[[Jangle pop]]|[[post-punk]]|[[Dunedin sound]]}}
| cultural_origins = Late 1970s to early 1980s, United States, United Kingdom and Australia
| cultural_origins = Early to mid–1980s, United States, United Kingdom and New Zealand
| derivatives = {{hlist|[[Chillwave]]|[[chamber pop]]|[[grunge]]<ref name="DiBlasi, Alex 2013. p. 520">DiBlasi, Alex. "Grunge" in ''Music in American Life: An Encyclopedia of the Songs, Styles, Stars and Stories that Shaped Our Culture'', p. 520-524. Edited by Jacqueline Edmondson. ABC-CLIO, 2013. p. e520</ref>| [[post-rock]]}}
| derivatives = {{hlist|[[Chillwave]]|[[Britpop]]|[[chamber pop]]|[[grunge]]|[[post-Britpop]]|[[post-rock]]}}
| subgenres = {{hlist|[[Emo]]|[[math rock]]|[[noise pop]]|[[post-punk revival]]|[[sadcore]]|[[slacker rock]]|[[slowcore]]|[[shoegaze]]}}
| subgenres = {{hlist|[[Grebo (music)|Grebo]]|[[math rock]]|[[Midwest emo]]|[[noise pop]]|[[post-punk revival]]|[[sadcore]]|[[slacker rock]]|[[slowcore]]|[[shoegaze]]}}
| fusiongenres = {{hlist|[[Alternative dance]]|[[alternative R&B]]|[[grindie]]|[[indie folk]]|[[new rave]]}}
| fusiongenres = {{hlist|[[Alternative dance]] ([[baggy]])|[[alternative R&B]]|[[grindie]]|[[indie folk]]|[[new rave]]}}
| regional_scenes = {{hlist|[[Australian indie rock|Australia]]|[[Indie rock in Belgium|Belgium]]|[[Rock music in the Netherlands#Indie rock|Netherlands]]|[[Music of Nevada#Indie|Nevada]]|[[New Yorkshire|Yorkshire]]}}
| regional_scenes = {{hlist|[[Australian indie rock|Australia]]|[[Indie rock in Belgium|Belgium]]|[[Paisley Underground|California]]|[[Rock music in the Netherlands#Indie rock|Netherlands]]|[[Music of Nevada#Indie|Nevada]]|[[The Scene That Celebrates Itself|Thames Valley]]|[[New Yorkshire|Yorkshire]]}}
| local_scenes = {{hlist|[[Popular music of Birmingham#Indie and post-punk revival|Birmingham]]|[[Dunedin sound|Dunedin]]|[[Madchester|Manchester]]|[[Culture of Sheffield#Popular music|Sheffield]]|[[Music in Leeds#Alternative rock|Leeds]]|[[Hamburger Schule|Hamburg]]}}
| local_scenes = {{hlist|[[Popular music of Birmingham#Indie and post-punk revival|Birmingham]]|[[Dunedin sound|Dunedin]]|[[Hamburger Schule|Hamburg]]|[[Music in Leeds#Alternative rock|Leeds]]|[[Madchester|Manchester]]|[[Culture of Sheffield#Popular music|Sheffield]]}}
| other_topics = {{hlist|[[Indie pop]]|[[Britpop]]|[[DIY ethic]]|[[jangle pop]]|[[Lo-fi music|lo-fi]]|[[noise rock]]}}
| other_topics = {{hlist|[[Indie pop]]|[[DIY ethic]]|[[alternative rock]]|[[Lo-fi music|lo-fi]]|[[noise rock]]}}
}}
}}


'''Indie rock''' is a [[Music subgenre|subgenre]] of [[rock music]] that originated in the United States, United Kingdom and New Zealand in the early to mid–1980s. Originally used to describe rock music released through [[independent record label]]s, by the 1990s, the term became more widely associated with the music the bands produced.
'''Indie rock''' is a [[Music subgenre|subgenre]] of [[rock music]] that originated in the United States, United Kingdom, and New Zealand in the 1970s and 80s.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2019-04-03 |title=How did the Dunedin Sound influence the |url=https://savedelicious.com/how-did-the-dunedin-sound-influence-the-music-scene-in-dunedin-and-the-rest-of-new-zealand-as-a-whole/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220527150211/https://savedelicious.com/how-did-the-dunedin-sound-influence-the-music-scene-in-dunedin-and-the-rest-of-new-zealand-as-a-whole/ |archive-date=May 27, 2022 |access-date=2022-05-22 |website=SaveDelicious |language=en-US}}</ref><ref>{{Cite news |title=Nuns at the altar of rock |url=https://www.theguardian.com/music/2009/may/15/flying-nun-indie-rought-trade |last=Aston |first=Martin |date=2009-05-15 |access-date=2023-03-12 |work=The Guardian}}</ref> Originally used to describe rock music released through [[independent record label]]s, the term became more widely associated with the music the bands produced and was initially used interchangeably with [[alternative rock]] or "[[Pop rock|guitar pop rock]]".<ref>{{cite book|first=Katja|last=Plemenitas|chapter=The Complexity of Lyrics in Indie Music: The Example of Mumford & Sons|editor-last1=Kennedy|editor-first1=Victor|editor-last2=Gadpaille|editor-first2=Michelle|title=Words and Music|chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=E9UxBwAAQBAJ&pg=PA79|date=2014|publisher=Cambridge Scholars Publishing|isbn=978-1-4438-6438-1|page=79}}</ref>


The sound of indie rock has its origins in the New Zealand [[Dunedin sound]] and early 1980s [[college rock]] radio stations who would frequently play [[jangle pop]] bands like [[the Smiths]] and [[R.E.M.]]. The genre solidified itself during the mid–1980s with ''[[NME]]'''s ''[[C86]]'' cassette in the United Kingdom and the underground success of [[Sonic Youth]], [[Dinosaur Jr.]] and [[Unrest (band)|Unrest]] in the United States. By this time, "indie" had become used to refer to bands whose music was released on independent record labels, in addition to the record labels themselves. As the decade progressed many individual local scenes developed their own distinct takes on the genre: [[baggy]] in [[Manchester]]; [[Grebo (music)|grebo]] in [[Stourbridge]] and [[Leicester]]; and [[shoegaze]] in London and the [[Thames Valley]].
In the 1980s, the use of the term "[[independent music|indie]]" (or "[[indie pop]]") started to shift from its reference to recording companies to describe the style of music produced on [[punk rock|punk]] and [[post-punk]] labels.<ref name="BrownandVolgsten2006p.194">S. Brown and U. Volgsten, ''[[iarchive:musicmanipulatio0000unse|Music and Manipulation: on the Social Uses and Social Control of Music]]'' (Berghahn Books, 2006), {{ISBN|1-84545-098-1}}, p. 194.</ref> During the 1990s, [[grunge]] and [[Punk rock#Punk revival and mainstream success|punk revival]] bands in the US and [[Britpop]] bands in the UK broke into the mainstream, and the term "alternative" lost its original [[Counterculture|counter-cultural]] meaning. The term "indie rock" became associated with the bands and genres that remained dedicated to their independent status.<ref name=AllMusicIndie/> By the end of the 1990s, indie rock developed several subgenres and related styles, including [[slacker rock|lo-fi]], [[noise pop]], [[emo]], [[slowcore]], [[post-rock]], and [[math rock]].<ref name=AllMusicIndie/>


During the 1990s, the mainstream success of [[grunge]] and [[Britpop]], two movements influenced by indie rock, brought increased attention to the genre and saw record labels use their independent status as a marketing tactic. This led to a split within indie rock: one side conforming to mainstream radio; the other becoming increasingly experimental. By this point "indie rock" referred to the musical style rather than ties to the independent music scene. During the decade, indie rock bands like Sonic Youth, [[the Pixies]] and [[Radiohead]] all released album on major labels and subgenres like [[slowcore]], [[Midwest emo]], [[slacker rock]] and [[space rock]] began. In the 2000s, indie rock reentered the mainstream through the [[garage rock revival|garage rock]] and [[post-punk revival]] and the influence of [[the Strokes]] and [[the Libertines]]. This success was exacerbated in the middle of the decade by [[Bloc Party]], the [[Arctic Monkeys]] and [[the Killers]] and indie rock proliferated into the landfill indie movement.
In the early 2000s, a new group of bands that played a stripped-down, back-to-basics version of guitar rock emerged into the mainstream. The commercial breakthrough from these scenes was led by four bands: [[the Strokes]], [[the White Stripes]], [[the Hives]] and [[the Vines (band)|the Vines]]. Emo also broke into mainstream culture in the early 2000s.<ref name="DeRogatis2003">{{Citation |last=DeRogatis |first=J. |title=True Confessional? |date=October 3, 2003 |url=http://www.jimdero.com/News2003/Oct3LiveDashboard.htm |journal=Chicago Sun-Times |df=mdy-all |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110501150556/http://www.jimdero.com/News2003/Oct3LiveDashboard.htm |archive-date=May 1, 2011 |url-status=dead}}.</ref> By the end of the decade, the proliferation of indie bands was being referred to as an "indie landfill",<ref name="T. Walker">{{Citation |last=T. |first=Walker |title=Does the world need another indie band? |date=January 21, 2010 |url=https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/music/features/does-the-world-need-another-indie-band-870520.html |journal=Independent |df=mdy-all |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100304122059/http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/music/features/does-the-world-need-another-indie-band-870520.html |archive-date=March 4, 2010 |url-status=dead}}.</ref> with the term "landfill indie" becoming used by some critics/websites as subgenre for a certain type of 2000s indie band, in the same way Britpop is used for British guitar music of the 1990s.<ref>{{Cite web |last=Power |first=Ed |date=July 28, 2019 |title=How landfill indie swallowed guitar music in the mid-Noughties |url=https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/music/features/landfill-indie-kaiser-chiefs-album-razorlight-kooks-ricky-wilson-a9022051.html |url-access=registration |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221206010156/https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/music/features/landfill-indie-kaiser-chiefs-album-razorlight-the-kooks-ricky-wilson-a9022051.html |archive-date=Dec 6, 2022 |website=The Independent}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |last=Sanchez |first=Miguel |date=September 4, 2020 |title=The Top 50 Greatest Landfill Indie Songs of All-Time (Vice) |url=https://www.pieandbovril.com/forum/index.php?/topic/265539-the-top-50-greatest-landfill-indie-songs-of-all-time-vice/ |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221024102720/https://www.pieandbovril.com/forum/index.php?/topic/265539-the-top-50-greatest-landfill-indie-songs-of-all-time-vice/ |archive-date=Oct 24, 2022 |website=The Pie Shop}}</ref><ref name="vice.com">{{Cite web |last1=Akinfenwa |first1=Jumi |last2=Joshi |first2=Tara |last3=Garland |first3=Emma |date=August 27, 2020 |title=The Top 50 Greatest Landfill Indie Songs of All Time |url=https://www.vice.com/en/article/bv8a8w/the-top-50-greatest-landfill-indie-songs-of-all-time |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221111203505/https://www.vice.com/en/article/bv8a8w/the-top-50-greatest-landfill-indie-songs-of-all-time |archive-date=Nov 11, 2022 |website=Vice}}</ref>

In the 2000s, changes in the music industry and the growing importance of the [[internet]] enabled a new wave of indie rock bands to achieve mainstream success, leading to questions about its meaningfulness as a term.<ref name="N. Abebe">{{Citation |last=Abebe |first=N. |title=The Decade in Indie |date=February 25, 2010 |url=https://pitchfork.com/features/articles/7704-the-decade-in-indie/ |journal=Pitchfork |access-date=April 30, 2011}}.</ref>


==Characteristics==
==Characteristics==
The term indie rock, which comes from "independent", describes the small and relatively low-budget [[independent record label|label]]s on which it is released and the [[DIY ethic|do-it-yourself]] attitude of the bands and artists involved. Although distribution deals are often struck with major corporate companies, these labels and the bands they host have attempted to retain their autonomy, leaving them free to explore sounds, emotions and subjects of limited appeal to large, mainstream audiences.<ref name="AllMusicIndie">{{Citation |title=Indie rock |url=https://www.allmusic.com/explore/style/d2687 |journal=AllMusic |df=mdy-all |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110105070517/http://www.allmusic.com/explore/style/d2687 |archive-date=January 5, 2011 |url-status=dead}}.</ref> The influences and styles of the artists have been extremely diverse, including [[punk rock|punk]], [[psychedelic rock|psychedelia]], [[post-punk]] and [[country music|country]].<ref name=BrownandVolgsten2006p.194/> The terms "[[alternative rock]]" and "indie rock" were used interchangeably in the 1980s, but after many alternative bands followed [[Nirvana (band)|Nirvana]] into the mainstream in the early 1990s, "indie rock" began to be used to describe those bands, working in a variety of styles, that did not pursue or achieve commercial success.<ref name=AllMusicIndie/> Aesthetically speaking, indie rock is characterized as having a careful balance of pop accessibility with noise, experimentation with pop music formulae, sensitive lyrics masked by ironic posturing, a concern with authenticity, and the depiction of a simple guy or girl.<ref>{{cite journal|last1=Henry|first1=Stephen|last2=Novara|first2=Vincent J|title=Sound Recording Review: A Guide to Essential American Indie Rock (1980–2005)|journal=Notes: Quarterly Journal of the Music Library Association|date=2009|volume=65|issue=4|pages=816–33}}</ref>
The term indie rock, which comes from "independent", describes the small and relatively low-budget [[independent record label|label]]s on which it is released and the [[DIY ethic|do-it-yourself]] attitude of the bands and artists involved. Although distribution deals are often struck with major corporate companies, these labels and the bands they host have attempted to retain their autonomy, leaving them free to explore sounds, emotions and subjects of limited appeal to large, mainstream audiences.<ref name="AllMusicIndie">{{Citation |title=Indie rock |url=https://www.allmusic.com/explore/style/d2687 |journal=AllMusic |df=mdy-all |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110105070517/http://www.allmusic.com/explore/style/d2687 |archive-date=January 5, 2011 |url-status=dead}}.</ref> The influences and styles of the artists have been extremely diverse, including [[punk rock|punk]], [[psychedelic rock|psychedelia]], [[post-punk]] and [[country music|country]].<ref name="BrownandVolgsten2006p.194">S. Brown and U. Volgsten, ''[[iarchive:musicmanipulatio0000unse|Music and Manipulation: on the Social Uses and Social Control of Music]]'' (Berghahn Books, 2006), {{ISBN|1-84545-098-1}}, p. 194.</ref>


''Allmusic'' identifies indie rock as including a number of "varying musical approaches [not] compatible with mainstream tastes".<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.allmusic.com/style/indie-rock-ma0000004453|title=Indie Rock – Significant Albums, Artists and Songs – AllMusic|work=AllMusic}}</ref> Linked by an ethos more than a musical approach, the indie rock movement encompassed a wide range of styles, from hard-edged, grunge-influenced bands, through do-it-yourself experimental bands like [[Pavement (band)|Pavement]], to punk-folk singers such as [[Ani DiFranco]].<ref name=Bogdanov2002USAlternative>S. T. Erlewine, "American Alternative Rock / Post Punk", in V. Bogdanov, C. Woodstra and S. T. Erlewine, ''All Music Guide to Rock: the Definitive Guide to Rock, Pop, and Soul'' (Milwaukee, WI: Backbeat Books, 3rd edn., 2002), {{ISBN|0-87930-653-X}}, pp. 1344–6.</ref> In fact, there is an everlasting list of genres and subgenres of indie rock.<ref>{{cite news|author=SISARIO, B.|date=January 3, 2010|title=When indie-rock genres outnumber the bands|work=[[The New York Times]]}}</ref> Many countries have developed an extensive local [[Independent music|indie]] scene, flourishing with bands with enough popularity to survive inside the respective country, but virtually unknown elsewhere. However, there are still indie bands that start off locally, but eventually attract an international audience.<ref>{{cite news|author=PARELES, J.|date=October 16, 2004|title=Feeling hyper, indie rock casts off its slacker image|work=[[The New York Times]]}}</ref><ref>J. Connell and C. Gibson, ''Sound Tracks: Popular Music, Identity, and Place'' (Abingdon: Routledge, 2003), {{ISBN|0-415-17028-1}}, pp. 101–3.</ref>
''Allmusic'' identifies indie rock as including a number of "varying musical approaches [not] compatible with mainstream tastes".<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.allmusic.com/style/indie-rock-ma0000004453|title=Indie Rock – Significant Albums, Artists and Songs – AllMusic|work=AllMusic}}</ref> Linked by an ethos more than a musical approach, the indie rock movement encompassed a wide range of styles, from hard-edged, grunge-influenced bands, through do-it-yourself experimental bands like [[Pavement (band)|Pavement]], to punk-folk singers such as [[Ani DiFranco]].<ref name=Bogdanov2002USAlternative>S. T. Erlewine, "American Alternative Rock / Post Punk", in V. Bogdanov, C. Woodstra and S. T. Erlewine, ''All Music Guide to Rock: the Definitive Guide to Rock, Pop, and Soul'' (Milwaukee, WI: Backbeat Books, 3rd edn., 2002), {{ISBN|0-87930-653-X}}, pp. 1344–6.</ref> In his book ''DIY Style: Fashion, Music and Global Digital Cultures'', Dr Brent Luvaas described the genre as rooted in nostalgia, citing the influence of [[garage rock]] and [[psychedelic rock]] of the 1960s in progenitors [[the Stone Roses]] and [[the Smiths]], in addition to a lyrical preoccupation with literature.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Luvaas |first1=Brent |title=DIY Style Fashion, Music and Global Digital Cultures |date=2012 |publisher=[[Bloomsbury Publishing]] |quote= In the UK, on the other hand, indie was used as a descriptive moniker from the mid- 1980s onwards, largely among industry insiders and journalists (Wendy Fonarow, personal communication, 2011). It referred, ostensibly, to the independent status of a band's record label, but also to something of its general sensibility, a preferencing of earlier aesthetics of pop rooted in the folksier, less improvisational genres of garage and psychedelic rock. As in the United States, it was a largely white, middle-class phenomenon, rooted in a nostalgia for an imagined, pre-corporate past (Hesmondhalgh 1999; Fonarow 2006), when there was still some aspect of everyday life as of yet outside the commodity system. In the UK, it could have been The Smiths or The Stone Roses who deserve to be called the first genuine indie rock bands, groups with a throwback 1960s sound and a fey, bookish disposition.}}</ref> In this same vein, Dr [[Matthew Bannister (musician)|Matthew Bannister]] defined indie rock as "small groups of white men playing guitars, influenced by punks and 1960s white pop/rock, within a broader discourse and practice of (degrees of) independence from mainstream musical values."<ref name="Huq 2016" /> According to anthropologist [[Wendy Fonarow]], a key element of indie is the dichotomy between a "puritan ethos" and a "romantic one", with the former using austere ethics, and the latter being eccentric. This is best seen in the contrast between the indie music of United States and the United Kingdom in the 1990s, with British acts being flamboyant performers, while American acts used their lack of virtuosity as a mark of authenticity.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Barker |first1=Nicola |title=Nicola Barker Critical Essays |date=20 October 2020 |quote=As Wendy Fonarow argues, a tension between a puritan ethos (representing an austere aesthetics and ethics) and a romantic one (flamboyant and eccentric) has come to define indie music as a genre (Fonarow, 2006). This is mirrored in the genre's identity tug-of-war between a communal and individualist ethos. There is perhaps also a distinction to be made between an American brand of lo-fi indie bands for whom anti-virtuosity and non-style are badges of sincerity and authenticity, on the one hand, and the flamboyant performativity of Britpop indie bands like Pulp and Blur, on the other.}}</ref>


Indie rock is noted for having a relatively high proportion of female artists compared with preceding rock genres, a tendency exemplified by the development of the feminist-informed [[riot grrrl]] music of acts like [[Bikini Kill]], [[Bratmobile]], [[7 Year Bitch]], [[Team Dresch]] and [[Huggy Bear (band)|Huggy Bear]].<ref>M. Leonard, ''Gender in the Music Industry: Rock, Discourse and Girl Power'' (Aldershot: Ashgate, 2007), {{ISBN|0-7546-3862-6}}, p. 2.</ref> However, Cortney Harding pointed out that this sense of equality is not reflected in the number of women running indie labels.<ref>{{Cite magazine|title = UpFront: The Indies – Where the Girls Aren't: Why Aren't More Women Running Indie Labels|last = Harding|first = Cortney|date = October 13, 2007|magazine = Billboard }}</ref>
Indie rock is noted for having a relatively high proportion of female artists compared with preceding rock genres, a tendency exemplified by the development of the feminist-informed [[riot grrrl]] music of acts like [[Bikini Kill]], [[Bratmobile]], [[7 Year Bitch]], [[Team Dresch]] and [[Huggy Bear (band)|Huggy Bear]].<ref>M. Leonard, ''Gender in the Music Industry: Rock, Discourse and Girl Power'' (Aldershot: Ashgate, 2007), {{ISBN|0-7546-3862-6}}, p. 2.</ref> However, Cortney Harding pointed out that this sense of equality is not reflected in the number of women running indie labels.<ref>{{Cite magazine|title = UpFront: The Indies – Where the Girls Aren't: Why Aren't More Women Running Indie Labels|last = Harding|first = Cortney|date = October 13, 2007|magazine = Billboard }}</ref>


==History==
==History==
=== Post-punk and indie pop ===
=== Origins ===
{{Main|Post-punk|Indie pop}}
{{See also|College rock|Jangle pop}}
{{See also|College rock|Jangle pop}}
[[File:Jesus and Mary Chain 2007.jpg|thumb|[[The Jesus and Mary Chain]] performing in California in 2007]]
[[File:Jesus and Mary Chain 2007.jpg|thumb|[[The Jesus and Mary Chain]] performing in California in 2007]]


The BBC documentary ''Music for Misfits: The Story of Indie''<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b06g64wb/episodes/guide|title=Music for Misfits: The Story of Indie – Episode guide – BBC Four|website=BBC|access-date=2016-03-21}}</ref> pinpoints the birth of indie as the 1977 self-publication of the [[Spiral Scratch (EP)|Spiral Scratch EP]] by Manchester band [[Buzzcocks]]. Although Buzzcocks are often classified as a punk band, it has been argued by the BBC and others<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.23indie.com|title=A definition of indie music|website=23indie.com|access-date=2016-03-21}}</ref> that the publication of Spiral Scratch independently of a major label led to the coining of the name "indie" ("indie" being the shortened form of "independent").
The BBC documentary ''Music for Misfits: The Story of Indie'' pinpoints the coining of the term "indie" to the 1977 self-publication of the ''[[Spiral Scratch (EP)|Spiral Scratch EP]]'' by Manchester [[punk rock]] band the [[Buzzcocks]], on their [[Independent record label|''Ind''ependent record label]] [[New Hormones]].<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.23indie.com|title=A definition of indie music|website=23indie.com|access-date=2016-03-21}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/programmes/b06g64wb/episodes/guide|title=Music for Misfits: The Story of Indie Episode guide BBC Four|website=BBC|access-date=2016-03-21}}</ref> By the 1980s, the term had begun to be used to describe the bands who produced music on independent record labels, rather than simply the record labels themselves. This made it the only genre at the time which was defined by the methods by which the music was distributed rather than the sound of said music.<ref name="BrownandVolgsten2006p.194" />


The [[New Zealand]] city of [[Dunedin]] produced the independent record label [[Flying Nun Records]], whose artists defined the [[Dunedin sound]], which would be particularly influential on the development of indie rock's sound.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Gordon |first1=Alastair |last2=Dines |first2=Mike |last3=Guerra |first3=Paula |last4=Bestley |first4=Russ |title=Trans-Global Punk Scenes The Punk Reader Volume 2 · Volume 2 |date=15 February 2021 |quote=Dunedin, the second-largest city in the South Island after Christchurch, known for its geographical isolation, Scottish heritage and Gothic architecture, 'in a very good way' (Chapman 2016: 13), would become famous for the 'Dunedin Sound'. The term 'refers loosely to the output of a number of acts affiliated with the Flying Nun label during the 1980s, whose legacy is celebrated among indie rock circles internationally' (Wilson and Holland 2018: 69). The Dunedin Sound produced bands such as the Chills and the Clean and many others emerged due to 'much intermingling of artists, with group members often moving from one group to another or playing for several groups at one time' (McLeay 1994: 38). While the Dunedin Sound was predominately associated with indie rock, Aotearoa has since produced diverse bands, such as the Datsuns, Suburban Reptiles and Die! Die! Die! that encompass a mix of genres, such as rock, punk and post-punk respectively.}}</ref> The scene saw bands take influence from punk rock, but strip away its aggression for a [[reverb]] heavy, [[pop music|pop]]–influenced sound. Marked on the 1982 ''[[Dunedin Double (EP)|Dunedin Double]]'' EP featuring [[the Chills]], [[Sneaky Feelings]], [[the Verlaines]] and [[The Stones (band)|the Stones]], its guitars were often jangly and droning and vocals indistinct.<ref>{{Cite web|last=Bannister|first=Matthew|date=|title=Anything Could Happen - Flying Nun History 1980-1995|url=http://www.undertheradar.co.nz/utr/article/UAID/3/Flying-Nun-History-1980-1995.utr|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171028164654/http://www.undertheradar.co.nz/utr/article/UAID/3/Flying-Nun-History-1980-1995.utr|archive-date=2017-10-28|access-date=2021-02-13|website=Under the Radar}}</ref>
"[[Indie pop]]" and "indie" were originally synonymous.<ref name="Abebe2005"/> In the mid-1980s, "indie" began to be used to describe the music produced on [[post-punk]] labels rather than the labels themselves.<ref name="BrownandVolgsten2006p.194" /> The indie rock scene in the US was prefigured by the [[college rock]]<ref>A. Earles, ''Husker Du: The Story of the Noise-Pop Pioneers Who Launched Modern Rock'' (Voyageur Press, 2010), {{ISBN|0-7603-3504-4}}, p. 140.</ref> that dominated [[Campus radio|college radio]] playlists, which included key bands like [[R.E.M.]] from the US and [[The Smiths]] from the UK.<ref name="AMCollegeRock">{{Citation|title=College rock |journal=Allmusic |url=https://www.allmusic.com/explore/style/d11971 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101229184652/http://www.allmusic.com/explore/style/d11971 |archive-date=December 29, 2010 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all }}.</ref> These two bands rejected the dominant [[synthpop]] of the early 1980s,<ref>{{Citation|last=S. T. Erlewine |title=The Smiths |journal=Allmusic |url=https://www.allmusic.com/artist/the-smiths-p5466/biography |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110716055657/http://allmusic.com/artist/rem-p116437/biography |archive-date=July 16, 2011 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all }}.</ref><ref>{{Citation|last=S. T. Erlewine |title=R.E.M. |journal=Allmusic |url=https://www.allmusic.com/artist/the-smiths-p5466/biography |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110729132146/http://www.allmusic.com/artist/the-smiths-p5466/biography |archive-date=July 29, 2011 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all }}.</ref> and helped inspire guitar-based [[jangle pop]]; other important bands in the genre included [[10,000 Maniacs]] and [[the dB's]] from the US, and [[the Housemartins]] and [[the La's]] from the UK. In the United States, the term was particularly associated with the abrasive, distortion-heavy sounds of the [[Pixies (band)|Pixies]], [[Hüsker Dü]], [[Minutemen (band)|Minutemen]], [[Meat Puppets]], [[Dinosaur Jr.]], and [[The Replacements (band)|the Replacements]].<ref name="AMCollegeRock" />


The decade then saw the growing popularity of [[Campus radio|college radio]] stations, primarily in the United States, who would play independent artists of various genres, including [[alternative rock]], [[new wave]], [[post-hardcore]] and [[post-punk]]. The bands broadcast on these station became dubbed "[[college rock]]" by fans, another term which lacked any stylistic implication. The most prominent college rock bands were [[jangle pop]] groups [[R.E.M.]], from the US, and [[the Smiths]], from the UK, who Dr [[Matthew Bannister (musician)|Matthew Bannister]] states were the earliest indie rock groups.<ref name="Bannister" /> These bands' influence was showcased quickly seen in the formation of [[Let's Active]], [[the Housemartins]] and [[the La's]].<ref name="AMCollegeRock">{{Citation|title=College rock |journal=Allmusic |url=https://www.allmusic.com/explore/style/d11971 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101229184652/http://www.allmusic.com/explore/style/d11971 |archive-date=29 December 2010 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all }}.</ref> Journalist Steve Taylor also cited the bands involved in the [[Paisley Underground]] scene as early indie groups.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Taylor |first1=Steve |title=The A to X of Alternative Music |publisher=[[Bloomsbury Academic]] |date=27 September 2006 |page=129 |quote=There was nothing going on in the British music scene in 1984. Even the new romantic scene was dying a slow and painful death. Howard Jones, Eurythmics and Nik Kershaw were the bright new pop things and as far as the indie scene was concerned, it started and ended with the Smiths. American bands led by REM and the Paisley Underground scene were clearing up on the gig circuit and in the music press.}}</ref> However, this jangly style became increasingly mainstream as the decade progressed leading subsequent indie rock bands to abandon this style. Instead, in the following years [[the Jesus and Mary Chain]] and Flying Nun Records bands like the [[Jean-Paul Sartre Experience]] morphed the genre into a slower, darker and more hypnotic style.<ref name="Bannister">{{cite book|title=White Boys, White Noise: Masculinities and 1980s Indie Guitar Rock|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=Lt2hAgAAQBAJ|year=2013|publisher=Ashgate Publishing, Ltd.|isbn=978-1-4094-9374-7|pages=87 |author=[[Matthew Bannister (musician)|Matthew Bannister]] |quote=If early indie's biggest bands were jangle pop groups like R.E.M. and The Smiths, then their relative success made them and similar groups no longer indie - in order to go on being different, the style had to go on remaining different from the mainstream. As the 1980s progressed, Flying Nun bands tended towards a slower, more hypnotic feel, increased use of the 'wall of guitars, more distortion, more aggression and a generally 'darker", gloomier, more 'rock' sound, contemporaneous with the increasing influence of groups like The Jesus and Mary Chain and Sonic Youth. The Jean-Paul Sartre Experience typify this progression, initially experimenting with pop and soul styles before settling into the classic indie mould.}}</ref> The number of college radio stations in the US decreased significantly following [[NPR]]'s lobbying against noncommercial station during the 1980s. In turn, the name "college rock" fell into disfavour, soon being replaced by "indie".<ref>{{cite web |last1=Svenonius |first1=Ian |title=The Rise and Fall of College Rock |url=https://newrepublic.com/article/123187/how-npr-killed-college-rock |website=[[The New Republic]] |access-date=16 June 2023}}</ref>
In the United Kingdom the ''[[C86]]'' cassette, a 1986 ''[[NME]]'' compilation featuring [[Primal Scream]], [[the Pastels]], [[the Wedding Present]] and other bands, was a document of the UK indie scene. It gave its name to the indie pop scene that followed, which was a major influence on the development of the British [[Indie music scene|indie scene]] as a whole.<ref>{{Citation|last=M. Hann |title=Fey City Rollers |journal=Guardian.co.uk |date=April 23, 2001 |url=https://www.theguardian.com/music/2004/oct/13/popandrock |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110605002754/http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/2004/oct/13/popandrock |archive-date=June 5, 2011 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all }}.</ref><ref>{{Citation|last=N. Hasted |title=How an NME cassette launched indie music |journal=Independent.co.uk |date=October 27, 2006 |url=https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/music/news/how-an-nme-cassette-launched-indie-music-421802.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120727024017/http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/music/news/how-an-nme-cassette-launched-indie-music-421802.html |archive-date=July 27, 2012 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all }}.</ref> Major precursors of [[indie pop]] included [[Postcard Records|Postcard]] bands [[Josef K (band)|Josef K]] and [[Orange Juice (band)|Orange Juice]], and significant labels included [[Creation Records|Creation]], [[The Subway Organization|Subway]] and [[Glass Records|Glass]].<ref name="Abebe2005">{{Citation|title=Twee as Fuck: The Story of Indie Pop |last=N. Abebe |work=Pitchfork Media |date=October 24, 2005 |url=https://pitchfork.com/features/articles/6176-twee-as-fuck/ |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110224073504/http://pitchfork.com/features/articles/6176-twee-as-fuck |archive-date=February 24, 2011 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all }}.</ref> [[the Jesus and Mary Chain]]'s sound combined the [[Velvet Underground]]'s "melancholy noise" with [[Beach Boys]] pop melodies and [[Phil Spector]]'s "[[Wall of Sound]]" production,<ref>{{Citation|title=The Jesus and Mary Chain Biography |magazine=Rolling Stone |url=https://www.rollingstone.com/music/artists/the-jesus-and-mary-chain/biography |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120829125745/http://www.rollingstone.com/music/artists/the-jesus-and-mary-chain/biography |archive-date=August 29, 2012 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all }}.</ref><ref>{{Citation|title=the Jesus and Mary Chain |journal=Encyclopædia Britannica |url=https://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/303087/the-Jesus-and-Mary-Chain?anchor=ref666600 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111202161103/https://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/303087/the-Jesus-and-Mary-Chain?anchor=ref666600 |archive-date=December 2, 2011 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all }}.</ref>{{importance example}} while [[New Order (band)|New Order]] emerged from the demise of post-punk band [[Joy Division]] and experimented with [[techno]] and [[house music]].<ref name=Bogdanov2002UKAlternative>S. T. Erlewine, "British Alternative Rock", in V. Bogdanov, C. Woodstra and S. T. Erlewine, ''All Music Guide to Rock: the Definitive Guide to Rock, Pop, and Soul'' (Milwaukee, WI: Backbeat Books, 3rd edn., 2002), {{ISBN|0-87930-653-X}}, pp. 1346–7.</ref>{{importance example}}


===Development===
=== Noise rock and shoegazing ===
[[File:Bilinda Butcher (cropped 2).jpg|thumb|left|150px|[[My Bloody Valentine (band)|My Bloody Valentine]] pioneered the indie rock subgenre [[shoegaze]]]]
{{Main|Noise rock|Shoegazing}}
In the United Kingdom, ''[[NME]]'' released the ''[[C86]]'' compilation cassette, which consisted of tracks by groups including [[Primal Scream]], [[the Pastels]] and [[the Wedding Present]]. Intended to showcase the UK's current independent music scene, the album was made up of groups combining elements of jangle pop, post-punk and [[Phil Spector]] indebted [[Wall of Sound|Walls of Sound]]. In 2006, [[Bob Stanley (musician)|Bob Stanley]] called it "the beginning of indie music".<ref>{{Citation|last=N. Hasted |title=How an NME cassette launched indie music |journal=Independent.co.uk |date=October 27, 2006 |url=https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/music/news/how-an-nme-cassette-launched-indie-music-421802.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120727024017/http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/music/news/how-an-nme-cassette-launched-indie-music-421802.html |archive-date=July 27, 2012 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all }}.</ref> C86 became a descriptor in its own right, describing not only the bands on the tape but also bands who it influenced, often used alongside terms like "anorak pop" and "shambling". <ref>{{cite web |title=C86 |url=https://www.allmusic.com/style/c-86-ma0000011816 |website=[[AllMusic]] |access-date=18 June 2023}}</ref> Some C86 bands found significant commercial success: [[the Soup Dragons]] went on to sell out [[Madison Square Garden]]; Primal Scream were critically acclaimed, receiving the first ever [[Mercury Prize]] in 1992; the Wedding Present charted eighteen times in the Top 40; however many bands in its twenty-two track runtime also fell into obscurity.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Tassell |first1=Nige |title=Reel lives: how I tracked down the class of NME’s C86 album |url=https://www.theguardian.com/music/2022/aug/08/reel-lives-how-i-tracked-down-the-class-of-nmes-c86-album |website=[[The Guardian]] |access-date=18 June 2023}}</ref>


In the United States, the popularity R.E.M. allowed those disliking of [[hardcore punk]]'s aggression to become a part of the underground music scene. This empowered an array of musicians, particularly those in what would become the [[post-hardcore]] scene. Furthermore, major labels began to pursue underground bands, with both [[Hüsker Dü]] and [[The Replacements (band)|the Replacements]] releasing albums on majors in the middle of the decade. While these albums did not see the same success as R.E.M., and major labels soon lost interest in the scene, they did have a large impact on younger bands. In the following years, [[Sonic Youth]], [[Dinosaur Jr.]] and [[Unrest (band)|Unrest]] began to release music on independent labels indebted to these bands, and soon too picked up the categorisation of indie rock.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Aaron |first1=Charles |title=Notes from the Underground |journal=[[Spin (magazine)|Spin]] |date=October 2005 |volume=21 |issue=10 |quote=R.E.M., in their way, made the country seem less foreboding and more inclusive, replacing hardcore's iconoclasm with a warm invitation to less-hip kids who didn't live in California or the Northeast. "When I was 15 years old in Richmond, Virginia, they were a very important part of my life, as they were for all the members of our band," said Bob Nastanovich, of '90s indie-rock doyens Pavement... "They were the first [underground] band that the frat guys looked at and didn't say, 'Oh, let's beat up some fags.""...<br>By the mid-'80s, the raw sprawl of post-hardcore "underground rock" was coalescing, and after R.E.M.'s success, a number of bands started to think they could also buy in. Major-label reps were showing more interest... Still, in 1985, the most incorrigibly ill-behaved rock band in America, Minneapolis' the Replacements, signed to Sire and released their major-label debut, Tim, a perfectly ragged collection of anthemic pleas written by singer/guitarist Paul Westerberg... Former hardcore punks Hüsker Dü (Minneapolis natives like the Replacements) recorded their major-label debut, Candy Apple Grey, for Warner Bros., a ten-song stunner of punk-pop head trips, but it never earned a nod from commercial radio. The moment's hopeful ambition faded...<br>As major labels moved on to hump the L.A. hair-metal ass party, underground rockers began to lose their craving for mainstream validation. The new role models became uncompromising label owners like Greg Ginn of Southern California's SST, and Ian MacKaye of Washington, D.C.'s Dischord. SST, which had started in the late '70s with Ginn's pioneering Black Flag, was a relentless force, signing up the most significant underground bands of the early to mid-'80s, including Minutemen, Hüsker Dü, Meat Puppets, Sonic Youth, Dinosaur Jr....<br>As this shift took place in the underground scene, a new tag for the music began to crop up: "indie rock"... Unrest mixed winsome, strummy love songs with a brash, pop-culture irony that would later become a defining indie-rock trait}}</ref> As the 1980s closed, both Sonic Youth and [[the Pixies]] signed to major labels.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Aaron |first1=Charles |title=Notes from the Underground |journal=[[Spin (magazine)|Spin]] |date=October 2005 |volume=21 |issue=10 |quote=Bookending this period were two bands: Sonic Youth spent the pre-indie era as a cooler-than-you, downtown New York art-noise clique before developing into a R.E.M.-like presence through the mid-to late '80s; and Boston's Pixies, who bypassed the U.S. indie circuit, first finding success for their abstract pop squall in the U.K. Both were led by male-female duos-Sonic Youth's Thurston Moore and Kim Gordon, Pixies' Black Francis and Kim Deal-and their music could feel like an ongoing 3 A.M. heart-to-heart, flipping from eerie whispers to alien croons to gnomic shouts. So when they signed to major labels-Pixies to Elektra in 1988 and Sonic Youth to Geffen in 1989-it was an acknowledgment that indie's reinvigorated version of rock might finally be market ready.}}</ref>
The most abrasive and discordant outgrowth of punk was [[noise rock]], which emphasised loud distorted electric guitars and powerful drums, and was pioneered by bands including [[Sonic Youth]], [[Big Black]] and [[Butthole Surfers]].<ref>{{Citation|title=Noise Rock |journal=Allmusic |url=https://www.allmusic.com/explore/style/noise-rock-d2925 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110509093542/http://www.allmusic.com/explore/style/noise-rock-d2925 |archive-date=May 9, 2011 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all}}.</ref>


[[Swans (band)|Swans]], an influential band from New York, is identified as part of the [[No Wave]] scene which included Lydia Lunch, and James Chance & The Contortions. These bands were documented by [[Brian Eno]] on the seminal compilation album [[No New York]]. A number of prominent [[Independent record label|indie rock record labels]] were founded during the 1980s. These include Washington, D.C.'s [[Dischord Records]] in 1980, [[Seattle]]'s [[Sub Pop|Sub Pop Records]] in 1986<ref>{{Citation|last=R. Weinstein |title=An Interview with Bruce Pavitt |journal=Allmusic |date=April 23, 2001 |url=http://www.tripzine.com/listing.php?id=pavitt |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110512172329/http://www.tripzine.com/listing.php?id=pavitt |archive-date=May 12, 2011 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all}}.</ref> and New York City's [[Matador Records]] and [[Durham, North Carolina|Durham]], North Carolina's [[Merge Records]] in 1989. [[Chicago]]'s [[Touch and Go Records]] was founded as a [[fanzine]] in 1979 and began to release records during the 1980s.<ref>A. Earles, ''Husker Du: The Story of the Noise-Pop Pioneers Who Launched Modern Rock'' (Voyageur Press, 2010), {{ISBN|0-7603-3504-4}}, p. 72.</ref>
In the late 1980s, the indie rock subgenre [[shoegaze]] emerged, as a continuation of the wall of sound production being used by groups like the Jesus and Mary Chain. The genre merged this with influences from [[Dinosaur Jr.]] and the [[Cocteau Twins]], to create a dark and droning style so cacophonous that instruments were often indistinguishable. The genre was pioneered by [[My Bloody Valentine (band)|My Bloody Valentine]] on their early EPs and debut album ''[[Isn't Anything]]''.<ref name=AMShoegaze>{{Citation|title=Shoegaze |journal=Allmusic |url=https://www.allmusic.com/explore/style/shoegaze-d2680 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110224064714/http://www.allmusic.com/explore/style/shoegaze-d2680 |archive-date=February 24, 2011 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all}}.</ref> The band's style influenced a wave of bands in London and the [[Thames Valley]] area including [[Chapterhouse (band)|Chapterhouse]], [[Moose (band)|Moose]] and [[Lush (band)|Lush]]. This scene was collectively termed "the Scene That Celebrates Itself" by ''[[Melody Maker|Melody Maker's]]'' [[Steve Sutherland (DJ)|Steve Sutherland]] in 1990.<ref name="Larkin">{{cite book |last=Larkin |first=Colin |title=The Guinness Who's Who of Indie and New Wave Music |year= 1992 |publisher=Guinness Publishing |isbn=0-85112-579-4 }}</ref>


[[file:Stone Roses-17-07-2012 Milan.JPG|thumb|[[The Stone Roses]]' 1990 [[Spike Island (concert)|Spike Island]] concert was the highest attendance performance by an independent artist of its time]]
The Jesus and Mary Chain, along with Dinosaur Jr, indie pop and the [[dream pop]] of [[Cocteau Twins]], were the formative influences for the [[shoegazing]] movement of the late 1980s. Named for the band members' tendency to stare at their feet and guitar [[effects pedal]]s onstage rather than interact with the audience, acts like [[My Bloody Valentine (band)|My Bloody Valentine]], and later [[Slowdive]] and [[Ride (band)|Ride]] created a loud "wash of sound" that obscured vocals and melodies with long, droning riffs, distortion, and feedback.<ref name=AMShoegaze>{{Citation|title=Shoegaze |journal=Allmusic |url=https://www.allmusic.com/explore/style/shoegaze-d2680 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110224064714/http://www.allmusic.com/explore/style/shoegaze-d2680 |archive-date=February 24, 2011 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all}}.</ref>
[[Madchester]] was another style and scene that originated in the late 1980s. Defined by its merger of C86 indie rock, [[dance music]] and [[Hedonist]] rave culture, particularly its emphasis on the use of psychedelic drugs, the scene was centred in [[Manchester]].<ref name="Barnett 2020">{{cite web |last1=Barnett |first1=David |title=Spike Island at 30: the Stone Roses gig was scary, shambolic – and pure bliss |url=https://www.theguardian.com/music/2020/may/27/spike-island-at-30 |website=[[The Guardian]] |access-date=17 June 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Lashua |first1=Brett |last2=Spracklen |first2=Karl |last3=Yavuz |first3=M. Selim |last4=Wagg |first4=Stephen |title=Sounds and the City Volume 2 · Volume 2 |date=24 October 2018 |publisher=[[Springer Publishing]] |page=305 |quote=The 'Madchester' scene was defined by what Redhead describes as 'hedonism in hard times' (1993). The emphasis was on partying in the post-industrial, 'no future' city. At the centre of this partying was the newly arrived drug, ecstasy (3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine or MDMA). The 'spectacular' drug taking of Happy Mondays and the ravers of Manchester's club culture were part of the fuel that sparked nationwide moral panics and the subsequent regulation of 'rave' lifestyles (culminating in the 1994 Criminal Justice Act). Sarah Champion, Manchester-based music journalist during the Madchester era, summarised Madchester in the following way, 'White scallies put down guitars, picked up the groove. Indie bands released 12 inchers; clubs spun rock tunes. Happy Mondays' "Hallelujah", The Stone Roses' "Fools Gold"....' (1992: 41), and acknowledges ecstasy, which induces euphoria, empathy and heightened sensations, as being a centrally important driving force behind the Madchester scene, and highlights the fusion of 'indie' rock music with dance music.}}</ref> The scene was based around [[the Haçienda]] nightclub, which opened in May 1982 as an initiative of [[Factory Records]]. For the first few years of its life, the club played predominantly club-oriented pop music and hosted performances by artists including [[New Order (band)|New Order]], [[Cabaret Voltaire (band)|Cabaret Voltaire]], [[Culture Club]], [[Thompson Twins]] and the Smiths.<ref>John Robb, ''The North Will Rise Again'', Aurum Press, London, 2009, p 233</ref> The Madchester movement burgeoned by 1989, with the success of [[the Happy Mondays]] second album ''[[Bummed]]'' and [[the Stone Roses]]' [[The Stone Roses (album)|self-titled debut]], which became the most influential work in the scene. In the following years, addition high profile acts included [[The Charlatans (English band)|the Charlatans]], [[808 State]] and the [[Inspiral Carpets]].<ref>{{Cite news |title=Chapter Three – Madchester |url=http://www.manchester.com/music/features/music5.php |work=manchester.com |access-date=25 November 2011 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160604190208/http://www.manchester.com/music/features/music5.php |archive-date=4 June 2016 |url-status=dead }}</ref> The Madchester scene's distinct combination of indie rock and dance music became termed [[indie dance]] by critics, or more specifically the subgenre [[baggy]].<ref>{{cite web |last1=Muggs |first1=Joe |title=Twisting my melon, man! The baggy, brilliant indie-rave summer of 1990 |url=https://www.theguardian.com/music/2020/jul/07/1990s-indie-dance-boom-happy-mondays-primal-scream |website=[[The Guardian]] |access-date=17 June 2023}}</ref> Madchester and baggy's most infamous moment was the 27 May 1990 [[Spike Island (concert)|Spike Island]] concert headlined by the Stone Roses. With an attendance of around 28,000 and lasting twelve hours, it was the first event of its size and kind to be hosted by an independant act.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Stanley |first1=Bob |title=A cold night of chemical hair: the reality of the Stone Roses at Spike Island |url=https://www.theguardian.com/music/musicblog/2015/may/27/stone-roses-spike-island-the-reality |website=[[The Guardian]] |access-date=17 June 2023}}</ref>


In [[Stourbridge]], a scene of indie bands who took influence from [[electronic music|electronic]], punk, [[folk music|folk]] and [[hip-hop music]] emerged, dubbed [[Grebo (music)|grebo]] by critics. Fronted by [[Pop Will Eat Itself]], [[the Wonder Stuff]] and [[Ned's Atomic Dustbin]], "grebo" was broadly defined, and was used more as a name for the Stourbridge scene than as a genre label. However, the bands quickly gained attention: Pop Will Eat Itself's 1989 singles "[[Wise Up! Sucker]]" and "[[Can U Dig It?]]" both entered the UK Top 40 and Stourbridge briefly became a tourist attraction for young indie rock fans. The seminal albums from the scene were released between 1989 and 1993: the Wonder Stuff's ''[[Hup (album)|Hup]]'' and ''[[Never Loved Elvis]]''; Ned's Atomic Dustbin's ''[[God Fodder]]'' and ''[[Are You Normal?]]''; and Pop Will Eat Itself's ''[[This Is the Day...This Is the Hour...This Is This!]]'' and ''[[The Looks or the Lifestyle?]]''. In this period, the scene's bands became fixtures, sometimes headliners, at [[Reading Festival]], sold millions of albums and were frequently featured on the covers of magazines like ''NME'' and ''[[Melody Maker]]''.<ref name="Guardian Grebo">{{cite web |title=Wise up suckers! How grebo rivalled Britpop as the sound of 90s indie |url=https://www.theguardian.com/music/2018/mar/29/wise-up-suckers-how-grebo-rivalled-britpop-as-the-sound-of-90s-indie |website=[[The Guardian]] |access-date=17 June 2023}}</ref> Grebo bands were distinct from prior indie rock groups not only because of their broad influences, but also their subversion of the twee or unhappy moods of most other bands in the genre and their pursuing of a heavier sound and aesthetic. The scene also came to include the stylistically similar bands of nearby Leicester: [[the Bomb Party]], [[Gaye Bykers on Acid]], [[Crazyhead]], [[the Hunters Club]] and [[Scum Pups]].<ref>{{cite web |last1=Banks |first1=Joe |title="A Burst Of Dirty Thunder": The Rise And Fall Of Grebo |url=https://thequietus.com/articles/30791-rich-deakin-grebo-the-loud-and-lousy-story-of-gaye-bykers-on-acid-and-crazyhead-interview |website=[[The Quietus]] |access-date=17 June 2023}}</ref>
The other major movement at the end of the 1980s was the drug-fuelled [[Madchester]] scene. Based around [[The Haçienda]], a nightclub in Manchester owned by New Order and [[Factory Records]], Madchester bands such as [[Happy Mondays]] and [[the Stone Roses]] mixed [[acid house]] dance rhythms, [[Northern soul]] and [[funk]] with melodic guitar pop.<ref>{{Citation|title=Madchester |journal=Allmusic |url=https://www.allmusic.com/explore/style/d4391 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160916083911/http://www.allmusic.com/explore/style/d4391 |archive-date=September 16, 2016 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all}}.</ref>


===Development: 1990s===
===Mainstream–underground split: 1990s===
[[File:Sonic Youth 2009.05.30 001.jpg|thumb|left|The success of grunge allowed [[Sonic Youth]] to breakthrough into the mainstream<ref name="Spin breakthrough" />]]
In the early 1990s, the Seattle [[grunge]] scene, and its most visible acts, [[Nirvana (band)|Nirvana]], [[Pearl Jam]], [[Soundgarden]] and [[Alice in Chains]], broke into the mainstream.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Childers |first1=Chad |title=Every 'Big 4' (Alice in Chains, Nirvana, Pearl Jam, Soundgarden) Grunge Album, Ranked Worst to Best |url=https://loudwire.com/every-big-4-alice-in-chains-nirvana-pearl-jam-soundgarden-grunge-album-ranked-worst-to-best/ |website=[[Loudwire]] |access-date=18 June 2023}}</ref> The monumental success of these bands, particularly Nirvana, brought increased attention to the indie rock scene, which initiated a shift in which the indie rock descriptor became displaced by the term [[alternative rock]].<ref name="Spin breakthrough">{{cite journal |last1=Aaron |first1=Charles |title=Notes from the Underground |journal=[[Spin (magazine)|Spin]] |date=October 2005 |volume=21 |issue=10 |quote=But none would have the cultural impact of Nirvana, and few would see any financial windfall. While Cobain became deeply conflicted about the media notoriety that came with Nevermind's popularity (he was constantly referred to as the voice of a generation), indie artists also grew ambivalent. Was Nirvana's success, and even Sonic Youth's safe major-label passage, a case of "we  won," or just a pathetic grab for validation? Did former indie kids-now referred to as "alternative rockers"-really believe that major labels would bestow them with expense accounts and not ask for serious concessions? Nirvana had cited the R.E.M. Model}}</ref> As a result, the term "alternative" lost its original counter-cultural meaning and began to refer to the new, commercially lighter form of music that was now achieving mainstream success. ''[[New York (magazine)|New York]]'' magazine writer Carl Swanson argued that even the term "sellout" lost its meaning as grunge made it possible for a niche movement, no matter how radical, to be co-opted by the mainstream, cementing the formation of an individualist, fragmented culture.<ref name="Swanson">Swanson, Carl[https://nymag.com/arts/art/features/1993-new-museum-exhibit/ "Are We Still Living in 1993?"], retrieved February 26, 2013.</ref> In his book ''Popular Music: The Key Concepts'', media academic Roy Shuker states that "Grunge represented the mainstreaming of the North American indie rock ethic and style of the 1980s", going on to explain that a band's status as independent became "As much a marketing device as [indie rock and alternative rock were an] identifiable 'sound'".<ref>{{cite book |last1=Shuker |first1=Roy |title=Popular Music: The Key Concepts |date=27 March 2017 |publisher=[[Taylor & Francis]] |page=162 |quote=Grunge represented the mainstreaming of the North American indie rock ethic and style of the 1980s (Azerrad, 2001). As much a marketing device as an identifiable 'sound' (cf. alternative rock, which it is often conflated into), grunge initially developed in the Seattle area (USA) in the late 1980s, associated with the influential indie label, Sub Pop. Pearl Jam and Nirvana were the two most influential bands, credited as leading the commercial break though of grunge/alternative rock into a relatively moribund music scene in the early 1990s.}}</ref> In the wake of this increased attention, indie rock experienced a split: accessible bands who catered to the now-popular alternative rock radio; and bands who continued to experiment, advancing in the underground.<ref name="AMCollegeRock" /> According to ''[[AllMusic]]'', it was during this split that "indie rock" solidified itself as a term for the style of music played by these underground artists, while the mainstream indie rock-influenced bands became termed alternative rock.<ref name="AllMusicIndie">{{Citation |title=Indie rock |url=https://www.allmusic.com/explore/style/d2687 |journal=AllMusic |df=mdy-all |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110105070517/http://www.allmusic.com/explore/style/d2687 |archive-date=January 5, 2011 |url-status=dead}}.</ref>


[[Slowcore]] developed in the United States as a direct counterpoint to the rapid growth of grunge.<ref name="Rogers p640">{{harvnb|Rogers|2008|p=640}}: "Opposition and fluidity reside at the core of the genre’s aesthetic. For example, as US rock band Nirvana succeeded commercially, indie fans grew more interested in post-rock and slow-core, both minimalist genres antithetical to Nirvana despite that band’s origins within indie."</ref> Although loosely defined, slowcore generally includes slow tempos, minimalist instrumentals and sad lyrics.<ref name="Far Out comeback">{{cite web|url=https://faroutmagazine.co.uk/slowcore-isnt-making-a-comeback-its-always-been-here/|title=Slowcore isn't making a comeback, it's always been here|work=[[Far Out (magazine)|Far Out]]|accessdate=20 May 2023|date=13 June 2022|first=Jamie|last=Kahn}}</ref> [[Galaxie 500]], particularly their second album ''[[On Fire (Galaxie 500 album)|On Fire]]'' (1989), were heavy influences on the genre,<ref name="DIS Guide">{{Cite web|date=31 January 2019|first=Samuel |last=Rosean|title=The Beginner's Guide To: Slowcore|url=http://drownedinsound.com/in_depth/4152207-the-beginners-guide-to--slowcore|access-date=23 February 2021|website=[[Drowned in Sound]]|language=en|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20230614164708/https://drownedinsound.com/in_depth/4152207-the-beginners-guide-to--slowcore|archivedate=14 June 2023|url-status=live}}</ref><ref name="Earles 124 2">{{harvnb|Earles|2014|page=124}}: "Like many bands featured in this book, Galaxie 500 was a big influence on a successive subgenre of band within indie rock. In the case of this seminal Boston trio, they are seen as progenitors of what the music press came to call 'slowcore'".</ref> with ''[[Bandcamp|Bandcamp Daily]]'' writer Robert Rubsam, calling them the "fountainhead for all that would come".<ref name="Bandcamp timeline">{{cite web|url=https://daily.bandcamp.com/lists/slowcore-a-brief-timeline|title=Slowcore: A Brief Timeline|first=Robert|last=Rubsam|date=27 April 2017|work=[[Bandcamp]]|url-status=live|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20230524135010/https://daily.bandcamp.com/lists/slowcore-a-brief-timeline|archivedate=24 May 2023|accessdate=27 May 2023}}</ref> The first wave of bands in the genre included [[Red House Painters]], [[Codeine (band)|Codeine]], [[Bedhead (band)|Bedhead]], [[Ida (band)|Ida]] and [[Low (band)|Low]]. The genre originated from around the United States, with no geographic focus, and very little interaction between its artists.<ref name="Bandcamp timeline" />
====Alternative enters the mainstream====
{{Main|Alternative rock}}
[[File:Stevemalkmus(by Scott Dudelson).jpg|left|thumb|[[Pavement (band)|Pavement]] singer/guitarist [[Stephen Malkmus]]]]
The 1990s brought major changes to the alternative rock scene. [[Grunge]] bands such as [[Nirvana (band)|Nirvana]], [[Pearl Jam]], [[Soundgarden]], and [[Alice in Chains]] broke into the mainstream, achieving commercial chart success and widespread exposure.<ref name=AllMusicIndie/> [[Punk revival]] bands like [[Green Day]] and [[The Offspring]] also became popular and were grouped under the "alternative" umbrella.<ref name=Bogdanov2002USAlternative/> Similarly, in the United Kingdom [[Britpop]] saw bands like [[Blur (band)|Blur]] and [[Oasis (band)|Oasis]] emerge into the mainstream, abandoning the regional, small-scale and political elements of the 1980s [[Indie pop|indie]] scene.<ref>A. Bennett and J. Stratton, ''Britpop and the English Music Tradition'' (Aldershot: Ashgate Publishing, 2010), {{ISBN|0-7546-6805-3}}, p. 93.</ref> Bands like [[Hüsker Dü]] and [[Violent Femmes]] were just as prominent during this time period, yet they have remained iconoclastic, and are not the bands that are frequently cited as inspirations to the current generation of indie rockers.<ref>Novara, Vincent J., and Henry Stephen. "A Guide to Essential American Indie Rock (1980–2005)." ''Notes'' 65.4 (2009): 816-33. Web.</ref>


A younger subset of grebo bands emerged around 1991, who were in turn labelled "fraggle" bands.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Harris |first1=John |title=Hail! Hail! Rock'n'Roll The Ultimate Guide to the Music, the Myths and the Madness |date=7 January 2010 |publisher=[[Little, Brown and Company]] |quote='''Fraggle''' c.1991: Name for alternative rock bands, some of whom basically represented younger end of 'Grebo' genre, reputedly coined by band-booker at indie venue Harlow Square in recognition of similarity between scruffily attired groups/fans and characters from Muppets spin-off TV show Fraggle Rock. Bands: Ned's Atomic Dustbin, Senseless Things, Mega City Four}}</ref> During this movement, the dominant sound was a style of indie rock that was heavily indebted to punk and Nirvana's album ''[[Bleach (Nirvana album)|Bleach]]'' album, while also occasionally making use of [[drum machines]].<ref name="Beaumont 2018" /> ''[[Gigwise]]'' writer Steven Kline described the style as "filthy guitars, filthier hair and t-shirts only a mother would wash". Prominent fraggle acts included [[Senseless Things]], [[Mega City Four]] and [[Carter the Unstoppable Sex Machine]].<ref name="Beaumont 2018">{{cite web |last1=Beaumont |first1=Mark |title=Nine NME-invented scenes that shook the world (or didn’t) from C86 to shroomadelica, fraggle and the NAM |url=https://www.nme.com/blogs/nme-blogs/2360346-2360346 |website=[[NME]] |access-date=17 June 2023}}</ref>
As a result of alternative rock bands moving into the mainstream, the term "alternative" lost its original counter-cultural meaning and began to refer to the new, commercially lighter form of music that was now achieving mainstream success. It has been argued that even the term "sellout" lost its meaning as grunge made it possible for a niche movement, no matter how radical, to be co-opted by the mainstream, cementing the formation of an individualist, fragmented culture.<ref name="Swanson">C. Swanson [https://nymag.com/arts/art/features/1993-new-museum-exhibit/ "Are We Still Living in 1993?"], retrieved February 26, 2013.</ref> It is argued that staying independent became a career choice for bands privy to industry functions rather than an ideal, as resistance to the market evaporated in favor of a more synergistic culture.<ref name="Swanson"/>


[[File:Stevemalkmus(by Scott Dudelson).jpg|thumb|[[Pavement (band)|Pavement]] singer/guitarist [[Stephen Malkmus]]]]
====Lo-fi and 'slacker rock' scene====
''Spin'' writer Charles Aaron described [[Pavement (band)|Pavement]] and [[Guided by Voices]] as "the two bands that came to exemplify indie rock in this period, and still define the term in many people's minds". Both bands made use of a [[Lo-fi music|Lo-fi]] production style which romanticised their D.I.Y. ethos.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Aaron |first1=Charles |title=Notes from the Underground |journal=[[Spin (magazine)|Spin]] |date=October 2005 |volume=21 |issue=10 |quote=But the two bands that came to exemplify indie rock in this period, and still define the term in many people's minds, were Pavement and Guided by Voices. A furtive collective from Northern California led by singer/guitarists "SM" (Stephen Malkmus) and "Spiral Stairs" (Scott Kannberg), Pavement created lo-fi bedroom dramas that romanticized the misty bewilderment of college kids on the cusp of entering the adult straight world. Their free-associating lyrics over melodies that seemed embedded in the staticky fuzz of a transistor radio were a cryptic denial of alt rock's ambition. Malkmus had a gift (like Kurt Cobain) for inside-joke aphorisms that felt like generational broadsides. On the 1992 album Slanted and Enchanted, he mused with a stricken hauteur: "I've got a lot of things I want to sell / But not here, babe," and "All the things we had before / You sold us out and took it all." Guided by Voices, a revolving-door group led by thirtysomething Dayton, Ohio schoolteacher Robert Pollard, had been churning out blearily melodic, cruddy-sounding recordings for years, but their literate, elliptical bursts of British Invasion-tinged rock never caught much attention. However, with the release of 1994's breathtakingly composed Bee Thousand, Pollard was suddenly a mini cause célèbre, a symbol of the uncompromising, self-reliant indie artist who eventually gets the recognition he deserves.}}</ref> Pavement's 1992 album ''[[Slanted and Enchanted]]'', was one of the defining [[slacker rock]] albums of the [[slacker rock]] subgenre.<ref>{{cite web |title=A Rough Guide To: Slacker Rock |url=https://blog.roughtrade.com/gb/a-rough-guide-to-slacker-rock/ |website=[[Rough Trade (shops)|Rough Trade]] |access-date=18 June 2023}}</ref> ''Rolling Stone'' called the album "the quintessential indie rock album", placing it on the magazine's list of [[Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Albums of All Time|the 500 greatest albums of all time]].<ref name="RS2012" >{{cite news |url=https://www.rollingstone.com/music/lists/500-greatest-albums-of-all-time-20120531/pavement-slanted-and-enchanted-20120524 |title=500 Greatest Albums of All Time |magazine=Rolling Stone |at=135: ''Slanted and Enchanted'' - Pavement |author=''Rolling Stone'' Staff |date=May 31, 2012 |access-date=February 21, 2017 |archive-date=March 13, 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170313191128/http://www.rollingstone.com/music/lists/500-greatest-albums-of-all-time-20120531/pavement-slanted-and-enchanted-20120524 |url-status=dead }}</ref>
{{Main|Lo-fi music#1990s: Changed definitions of "lo-fi" and "indie"}}
The term "indie rock" became associated with the bands and genres that remained dedicated to their independent status.<ref name=AllMusicIndie/> Even grunge bands, following their break with success, began to create more independent sounding music, further blurring the lines.<ref name="Swanson"/> Ryan Moore has argued that, in the wake of the appropriation of alternative rock by the corporate music industry, what became known as indie rock increasingly turned to the past to produce forms of "retro" rock that drew on [[garage rock]], [[surf rock]], [[rockabilly]], [[blues]], [[country music|country]] and [[swing music|swing]].<ref>R. Moore, ''Sells Like Teen Spirit: Music, Youth Culture, and Social Crisis'' (New York: New York University Press, 2009), {{ISBN|0-8147-5748-0}}, p. 11.</ref>


In the North Carolina [[Research Triangle]], an indie rock scene was being spearheaded by groups enfranched [[Merge Records]] like [[Superchunk]], [[Archers of Loaf]] and [[Polvo]].
Other bands drew on a [[Lo-fi music|Lo-fi]] sound which eschewed polished recording techniques for a D.I.Y. ethos. This was spearheaded by [[Beck]], [[Sebadoh]] and [[Pavement (band)|Pavement]],<ref name=Bogdanov2002USAlternative/> who were joined by eclectic folk and rock acts of the [[The Elephant 6 Recording Company|Elephant 6]] collective, including [[Neutral Milk Hotel]], [[Elf Power]] and [[of Montreal]].<ref>D. Walk, "The Apples in Stereo: Smiley Smile", ''CMJ New Music'', Sep 1995 (25), p. 10.</ref>
describing a growing scene of indie-rock bands who were influenced by hardcore punk and post-punk.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Fidler |first1=Daniel |title=Robbing the cradle |date=Nov 1992 |publisher=SPIN Media LLC |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2bSupwnJ2pIC}}</ref> At the time, publications such as ''[[Entertainment Weekly]]'' took to calling the college town of [[Chapel Hill, North Carolina|Chapel Hill]] the "next Seattle".<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://ew.com/article/1993/01/08/chapel-hill-nc-new-seattle/|title=Chapel Hill, N.C.: The new Seattle?|website=EW.com}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |url=https://www.newsobserver.com/entertainment/music-news-reviews/article246438740.html |title=Chapel Hill NC music scene, indie rock once called Next Seattle &#124; Raleigh News & Observer |access-date=February 28, 2021 |archive-date=February 28, 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210228231436/https://www.newsobserver.com/entertainment/music-news-reviews/article246438740.html |url-status=dead }}</ref> Superchunk's single "[[Slack Motherfucker]]" has also been credited by ''Columbia'' magazine with popularizing the "[[slacker]]" stereotype, and as a defining anthem of 90s indie rock.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://magazine.columbia.edu/article/merge-records-and-explosion-american-indie-rock|title=Merge Records and the Explosion of American Indie Rock|website=Columbia Magazine}}</ref>


With the rise of [[Britpop]], many of Britain's earlier indie rock bands fell into obscurity.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Thornton |first1=Tim |title=Ten Early 90s Indie Songs That Say It All |url=https://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/tim-thornton/early-90s-indie-songs_b_8636470.html |website=[[Huffington Post]] |access-date=17 June 2023}}</ref> Fronted by [[Blur (band)|Blur]], [[Oasis (band)|Oasis]], [[Pulp (band)|Pulp]] and [[Suede (band)|Suede]],<ref>{{cite web |last1=Minelle |first1=Bethany |title=Pulp are getting back together for gigs in 2023, Jarvis Cocker confirms |url=https://news.sky.com/story/pulp-are-getting-back-together-for-gigs-in-2023-jarvis-cocker-confirms-12659506 |website=[[Sky News]] |access-date=17 June 2023}}</ref> the bands in the movement were advertised as being underground artists, as a means to compete commercially with the United States' grunge scene.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Huq |first1=Rupa |title=Beyond Subculture Pop, Youth and Identity in a Postcolonial World |date=24 January 2007 |publisher=[[Taylor & Francis]] |page=142 |quote=The British music industry seized on Britpop as the impetus to revive sagging fortunes following the early 1990s grunge-led American chart-sales hegemony. Britpop's indie identification signifies autonomy from the negatively viewed major record labels, conveniently hiding the fact that many of its most successful exponents are financially backed by the multinationals. Of the US$32 billion global music fiscal cake in 1996, 16 per cent of ownership rested with Sony whose umbrella sheltered Oasis (in its 49 per cent ownership of Oasis' one-time 'independent' base Creation Records); a 14 per cent share was held by Polygram whose subsidiary Island is home to Pulp; and 13 per cent was owned by EMI, whose artists include Blur (on offshoot Food Records). This seemingly confirms Adorno's fear (1991 [1941]: 87) that the}}</ref> While Britpop was stylistically indebted to indie rock and began as an offshoot of it, Britpop bands abandoned the genre's earlier anti-establishment politics and instead brought it into the mainstream, with bands like Blur and Pulp even signing to major labels. In her essay ''Labouring the Point? The Politics of Britain in "New Britain"'', politician and academic [[Rupa Huq]] states that Britpop "began as an offshoot of the independent British music scene but arguably ended up killing it, as a convergence took place between indie and mainstream, removing the distinctive 'protest' element of British-based independent music"<ref name="Huq 2016">{{cite book |last1=Huq |first1=Rupa |title=Labouring the Point? The Politics of Britain in "New Britain" |date=15 April 2016 |publisher=[[Taylor & Francis]] |page=93 |quote=If we take the definition of indie proposed by Bannister of 'small groups of white men playing guitars, influenced by punks and 1960s white pop/rock, within a broader discourse and practice of (degrees of) independence from mainstream musical values', much of its content applies to Britpop... Early 1980s indie was not only, as Bannister notes, self-positioned away from mainstream music industry values, but often had an anti-government orientation... This oppositional element was largely missing from Britpop. Although some Britpop acts were on independent labels (for example, Oasis were signed to Creation), most were signed to mainstream labels, be they offshoots of majors (such as Blur on Food/EMI) or medium-sized companies (Pulp on Island). In some ways Britpop was indie's nemesis. It began as an offshoot of the independent British music scene but arguably ended up killing it, as a convergence took place between indie and mainstream, removing the distinctive 'protest' element of British-based independent music.}}</ref> Music journalist [[John Harris (critic)|John Harris]] has suggested that Britpop began when Blur's fourth single "[[Popscene]]" and Suede's debut "[[The Drowners]]" were released around the same time in the spring of 1992. He stated, "[I]f Britpop started anywhere, it was the deluge of acclaim that greeted Suede's first records: all of them audacious, successful and very, very British."<ref>''The Last Party: Britpop, Blair and the Demise of English Rock''; John Harris; Harper Perennial; 2003.</ref> Suede were the first of the new crop of guitar-orientated bands to be embraced by the UK music media as Britain's answer to Seattle's grunge sound. Their debut album ''[[Suede (album)|Suede]]'' for the fastest-selling debut album in the UK.<ref name="British alt-rock">Erlewine, Stephen Thomas. [https://web.archive.org/web/20101209194628/http://allmusic.com/explore/essay/british-alternative-rock-t579 "British Alternative Rock"]. ''[[AllMusic]]''. Retrieved on 21 January 2011. Archived from [https://www.allmusic.com/explore/essay/british-alternative-rock-t579 the original] on 9 December 2010.</ref>
In the United States, the 1990s indie rock scene, closely linked to the aforementioned lo-fi movement included bands such as Pavement, [[Sebadoh]], [[Guided by Voices]], [[Built to Spill]] and [[Modest Mouse]]. The 1992 album [[Slanted and Enchanted]], is considered one of the definitive albums of this era, melding indie rock, lo-fi and [[slacker rock]] characteristics.<ref>{{Cite magazine|url=http://www.billboard.com/articles/columns/rock/7767802/pavement-slanted-and-enchanted-album-indie-masterpiece|title=Pavement's 'Slanted and Enchanted' Turns 25: Why the Smart-Ass, Slacker Masterpiece Is the Definitive Indie Rock Album|date=April 20, 2017|magazine=Billboard}}</ref> ''Rolling Stone'' called ''Slanted and Enchanted'' "the quintessential indie rock album" and placed it on the magazine's list of [[Rolling Stone's 500 Greatest Albums of All Time|the 500 greatest albums of all time]].<ref name="RS2012" >{{cite news |url=https://www.rollingstone.com/music/lists/500-greatest-albums-of-all-time-20120531/pavement-slanted-and-enchanted-20120524 |title=500 Greatest Albums of All Time |magazine=Rolling Stone |at=135: ''Slanted and Enchanted'' - Pavement |author=''Rolling Stone'' Staff |date=May 31, 2012 |access-date=February 21, 2017 |archive-date=March 13, 2017 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20170313191128/http://www.rollingstone.com/music/lists/500-greatest-albums-of-all-time-20120531/pavement-slanted-and-enchanted-20120524 |url-status=dead }}</ref> There were other notable lo-fi releases during this period such as Guided by Voice's [[Bee Thousand]], which was recorded on [[Multitrack recording|four track machines]] or other home recording devices. In the second half of the decade, the Washington-based group, [[Modest Mouse]] continued with the abrasive lo-fi tradition with the 1997 release of [[the Lonesome Crowded West]].


====Diversification====
Other regional scenes existed during the early- to mid-1990s. [[Spin (magazine)|Spin]] published a 1992 feature about the North Carolina "Triangle" (Raleigh, Durham and Chapel Hill), describing a growing scene of indie-rock bands who were influenced by hardcore punk and post-punk.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Fidler |first1=Daniel |title=Robbing the cradle |date=Nov 1992 |publisher=SPIN Media LLC |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=2bSupwnJ2pIC&q=chapel+hill+indie+rock&pg=RA1-PT90}}</ref> The [[Chapel Hill, North Carolina|Chapel Hill]] college town, once dubbed the "next Seattle" by industry scouts,<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://ew.com/article/1993/01/08/chapel-hill-nc-new-seattle/|title=Chapel Hill, N.C.: The new Seattle?|website=EW.com}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |url=https://www.newsobserver.com/entertainment/music-news-reviews/article246438740.html |title=Chapel Hill NC music scene, indie rock once called Next Seattle &#124; Raleigh News & Observer |access-date=February 28, 2021 |archive-date=February 28, 2021 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210228231436/https://www.newsobserver.com/entertainment/music-news-reviews/article246438740.html |url-status=dead }}</ref> featured bands like [[Archers of Loaf]], [[Superchunk]] and [[Polvo]].<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.ncarts.org/comehearnc/365-days-music/look-indie-rock-music-scene-chapel-hill|title=A Look at the Indie Rock Music Scene in Chapel Hill|website=Ncarts.org}}</ref> Superchunk's single "[[Slack Motherfucker]]" has also been credited with popularizing the "[[slacker]]" stereotype, and has been called a defining anthem of 90s indie-rock.<ref>{{Cite news|url=https://magazine.columbia.edu/article/merge-records-and-explosion-american-indie-rock|title=Merge Records and the Explosion of American Indie Rock|website=Columbia Magazine}}</ref>
On [[Sunny Day Real Estate]]'s debut album ''[[Diary (Sunny Day Real Estate album)|Diary]]'' (1994), began a new wave of the [[emo]] genre, by incorporating elements of it into their indie rock sound.<ref name="Cateforis 2013">{{cite book |last1=Cateforis |first1=Theo |title=The Rock History Reader |date=2013 |publisher=[[Routledge]] |page=354|quote=The DC emo scene exploded and became excessively popular amongst the underground. However, it fizzled out almost as fast as it had begun.<br>In the early 90's, two new bands, Sunny Day Real Estate and Jawbreaker, started the new wave of emo music. SDRE started the "post indie emo" genre. Bands that can be categorized under this genre could be Texas Is The Reason, Taking Back Sunday, Mineral and other music following those lines, that are often confused for emo.}}</ref> Sunny Day Real Estate and other second wave emo bands, including [[Piebald (band)|Piebald]], [[the Promise Ring]] and [[Cap'n Jazz]] distanced emo from its hardcore roots and allowed the genre to develop a much more realised scene than its first wave.<ref name="Connick" /> This style of emo broke into mainstream culture in the early 2000s, with the platinum-selling success of [[Jimmy Eat World]]'s ''[[Bleed American]]'' (2001) and [[Dashboard Confessional]]'s ''[[The Places You Have Come to Fear the Most]]'' (2001).<ref name=DeRogatis2003p373-4>J. DeRogatis, ''Turn on your Mind: Four Decades of Great Psychedelic Rock'' (Milwaukee, WI: Hal Leonard Corporation, 2003), {{ISBN|0-634-05548-8}}, p. 373.</ref> One particularly notable scene during this wave was the [[Midwest emo]] bands of the latter half of the decade, who incorporated the jangly guitar tones of earlier indie rock and elements of [[math rock]] to create the distinctive style of groups like [[American Football (band)|American Football]].<ref name="Connick">{{cite web |last1=Connick |first1=Tom |title=The beginner’s guide to the evolution of emo |url=https://www.nme.com/blogs/nme-blogs/emo-wave-guide-evolution-2302802 |website=[[Alternative Press (magazine)|Alternative Press]] |access-date=18 June 2023}}</ref> The popularity of emo, also allowed a number of "not-quite-indie-not-quite-emo" bands like [[Death Cab For Cutie]], [[Modest Mouse]] and [[Karate (band)|Karate]] to gain significant attention.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Mair |first1=Rob |title=The Van Pelt – Artisans & Merchants |url=https://upsetmagazine.com/reviews/albums/the-van-pelt-artisans-merchants/ |access-date=18 June 2023}}</ref>


The loosely defined [[Elephant 6]] collective – which included [[the Apples in Stereo]], [[Beulah (band)|Beulah]], [[Circulatory System (band)|Circulatory System]], [[Elf Power]], [[the Minders]], [[Neutral Milk Hotel]], [[of Montreal]] and [[the Olivia Tremor Control]] – merged indie rock with [[psychedelic pop]]. ''Gimme Indie Rock'' author Andrew Earles stated that the collective, namely Neutral Milk Hotel on ''[[On Avery Island]]'' (1996), "helped keep the genre artistically relevant while other bands defected and other underground styles rose to prominence".<ref>{{cite book |last1=Earles |first1=Andrew |title=Gimme Indie Rock 500 Essential American Underground Rock Albums 1981-1996 |date=15 September 2014 |publisher=Voyageur Press |page=219|quote=Though overshadowed by Neutral Milk Hotel's 1998 breakthrough album, In the Aeroplane Over the Sea, the band's debut from a couple of years earlier is no small feat of mid-'90s indie rock, and it helped keep the genre artistically relevant while other bands defected and other underground styles rose to prominence in the latter half of the decade. One of the best early transmissions from the Elephant 6 collective of indie-psych-pop bands, On Avery Island is a collection of songs written by bandleader Jeff Mangum, recorded on a four-track reel-to-reel, and accompanied by a different backing band than the one that would fill out the legendary lineup heard on NMH's second release.}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |last1=Shook Jr |first1=Lee M. |title=Interstellar Pop Underground: A History of the Elephant 6 Collective |url=https://www.pastemagazine.com/music/interstellar-pop-underground-a-history-of-the-elep |website=[[Paste (magazine)|Paste]] |access-date=18 June 2023}}</ref>
In [[Chicago]], the 1990s DIY scene has been described as a cross-pollination of indie-rock, post-punk and jazz.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://pitchfork.com/features/yearbook/9851-yearbook-beyond-rockthe-heyday-of-chicagos-90s-diy-scene/|title=Yearbook: Beyond Rock—The Heyday of Chicago's '90s DIY Scene|publisher=Pitchfork.com|access-date=November 17, 2021}}</ref>

While this style of music gained traction early on, by the end of the decade interest from both the industry and the public had waned. Critics have pointed to changing music tastes, as seen in the dominance of other pop and rock genres, as a key factor leading to the decline of this scene.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.vox.com/culture/2017/10/25/16070928/peak-indie-rock-1997|title=The life and death of the indie-rock heyday|first=Scott|last=Timberg|date=October 25, 2017|website=Vox.com}}</ref>

{{anchor|Indietronica}}
====Indie electronic====
{{redirect|Indietronica|a more comprehensive overview of electronic/rock fusion styles|Electronic rock}}
{{Infobox music genre
| name = Indie electronic
| other_names = Indietronica
| stylistic_origins = *[[Rock music|Rock]]<ref name=AMGO/>
*[[electronic music|electronic]]<ref name=AMGO/>
*[[krautrock]]<ref name=AMGO/>
*[[synth-pop]]<ref name=AMGO/>
*[[dance music|dance]]<ref name=AMGO/>
| cultural_origins = Early 1990s
}}

Indie electronic or indietronica<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.wearetheguard.com/music/indie-electronic|title=Indie Electronic|website=WeAreTheGuard.com}}</ref> covers rock-based artists who share an affinity for electronic music, using samplers, synthesizers, drum machines, and computer programs.<ref name=AMGO>{{cite web|url=https://www.allmusic.com/style/indie-electronic-ma0000012275|title=Indie Electronic – Significant Albums, Artists and Songs|work=AllMusic}}</ref> Less a style and more a categorization, it describes an early 1990s trend of acts who followed in the traditions of early electronic music (composers of the [[BBC Radiophonic Workshop]]), [[krautrock]] and [[synth-pop]].<ref name=AMGO/> Progenitors of the genre were English bands [[Disco Inferno (band)|Disco Inferno]], [[Stereolab]], and [[Space (UK band)|Space]].<ref name=AMGO/> Most musicians in the genre can be found on independent labels like [[Warp (record label)|Warp]], [[Morr Music]], [[Sub Pop]] or [[Ghostly International]].<ref name=AMGO/> Examples include [[Broadcast (band)|Broadcast]], [[MGMT]], [[LCD Soundsystem]] and [[Animal Collective]].

====Diversification====
By the end of the 1990s, indie rock developed a number of subgenres and related styles. Following [[indie pop]], these included lo-fi, noise pop, sadcore, post-rock, space rock and math rock.<ref name=AllMusicIndie/> The work of [[Talk Talk (band)|Talk Talk]] and [[Slint]] helped inspire [[post-rock]] (an experimental style influenced by [[jazz]] and [[electronic music]], pioneered by [[Bark Psychosis]] and taken up by acts such as [[Tortoise (band)|Tortoise]], [[Stereolab]], and [[Laika (band)|Laika]]),<ref name="S. Taylor, 2006 pp. 154-5">S. Taylor, ''A to X of Alternative Music'' (London: Continuum, 2006), {{ISBN|0-8264-8217-1}}, pp. 154–5.</ref><ref name=AMpostrock>{{Citation|title=Post rock |journal=Allmusic |url={{AllMusic|class=explore|id=style/d2682|pure_url=yes}} |archive-url=https://www.webcitation.org/5wUOZlt8K?url=http://www.allmusic.com/explore/style/d2682 |archive-date=February 14, 2011 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all }}.</ref> as well as leading to more dense and complex, guitar-based [[math rock]], developed by acts like [[Polvo]] and [[Chavez (band)|Chavez]].<ref>{{Citation|title=Math rock |journal=Allmusic |url={{AllMusic|class=explore|id=style/d4560|pure_url=yes}} |archive-url=https://www.webcitation.org/5wUOlnegC?url=http://www.allmusic.com/explore/style/d4560 |archive-date=February 14, 2011 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all }}.</ref> Built to Spill's 1999 album [[Keep It Like a Secret]] helped to shape the indie-rock sound of the early 2000s.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://riotfest.org/2017/08/built-spill-accidentally-changed-indie-rock-landscape-keep-like-secret/|title=How Built To Spill Accidentally Changed the Indie Rock Landscape With 'Keep It Like a Secret'|date=August 14, 2017}}</ref>


Indie electronic or indietronica<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.wearetheguard.com/music/indie-electronic|title=Indie Electronic|website=WeAreTheGuard.com}}</ref> covers rock-based artists who share an affinity for electronic music, using samplers, synthesizers, drum machines, and computer programs.<ref name=AMGO>{{cite web|url=https://www.allmusic.com/style/indie-electronic-ma0000012275|title=Indie Electronic – Significant Albums, Artists and Songs|work=AllMusic}}</ref> Less a style and more a categorization, it describes an early 1990s trend of acts who followed in the traditions of early electronic music (composers of the [[BBC Radiophonic Workshop]]), [[krautrock]] and [[synth-pop]].<ref name=AMGO/> Progenitors of the genre were English bands [[Disco Inferno (band)|Disco Inferno]], [[Stereolab]], and [[Space (UK band)|Space]].<ref name=AMGO/> Most musicians in the genre can be found on independent labels like [[Warp (record label)|Warp]], [[Morr Music]], [[Sub Pop]] or [[Ghostly International]].<ref name=AMGO/>
[[Space rock]] looked back to progressive roots, with drone-heavy and minimalist acts like [[Spacemen 3]] in the 1980s, [[Spectrum (band)|Spectrum]] and [[Spiritualized]], and later groups including [[Flying Saucer Attack]], [[Godspeed You! Black Emperor]] and [[Quickspace]].<ref>{{Citation|title=Space rock |journal=Allmusic |url=https://www.allmusic.com/explore/style/space-rock-d2784 |archive-url=https://www.webcitation.org/5wUOtn84J?url=http://www.allmusic.com/explore/style/d2784 |archive-date=February 14, 2011 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all }}.</ref> In contrast, [[sadcore]] emphasized pain and suffering through melodic use of acoustic and electronic instrumentation in the music of bands like [[American Music Club]] and [[Red House Painters]].<ref>{{Citation|title=Sadcore |journal=Allmusic |url={{AllMusic|class=explore|id=style/d4588|pure_url=yes}} |archive-url=https://www.webcitation.org/5wUP1oqYG?url=http://www.allmusic.com/explore/style/d4588 |archive-date=February 14, 2011 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all }}.</ref>


[[Space rock]] took the [[psychedelic rock]], [[ambient music]] influence of [[Pink Floyd]] and [[Hawkwind]] and incorporated them into an indie rock context. The style began with [[Spacemen 3]] in the 1980s, with later groups including [[Spiritualized]], [[Flying Saucer Attack]], [[Godspeed You! Black Emperor]] and [[Quickspace]].<ref>{{Citation|title=Space rock |journal=Allmusic |url=https://www.allmusic.com/explore/style/space-rock-d2784 |archive-url=https://www.webcitation.org/5wUOtn84J?url=http://www.allmusic.com/explore/style/d2784 |archive-date=February 14, 2011 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all }}.</ref>
The revival of [[Baroque pop]] reacted against lo-fi and experimental music by placing an emphasis on melody and classical instrumentation, with artists like [[Arcade Fire]], [[Belle and Sebastian]], [[Rufus Wainwright]], [[Beirut (band)|Beirut]] and [[The Decemberists]].


As Britpop waned towards the end of the decade, [[post-Britpop]] took hold within the UK's indie rock scene.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Moore |first1=Allan F |last2=Martin |first2=Remy |title=Rock: The Primary Text Developing a Musicology of Rock |date=28 September 2018 |publisher=[[Taylor & Francis]] |quote=The styles performed by post-Britpop bands are often condensed down to the single label 'indie rock', which contains a myriad of young British artists with varying influences from punk, grunge, folk and electronic dance music. Critics are keen to characterise its key players as taking part in a post-punk revival, but the constellation of stylistic influences which span this musical world are diverse indeed. The fresh face of this music, which began to appear around the turn of the millennium, remains a fairly significant commercial force (Harris 2003). It was likely the best known face of}}</ref>
During the 1990s a number of groups, such as [[Sunny Day Real Estate]] and [[Weezer]], diversified the emo genre from its [[hardcore punk]] roots. A number of [[Midwestern emo]] groups started to form during the mid-1990s including [[the Promise Ring]], [[the Get Up Kids]], and [[American Football (band)|American Football]]. Weezer's ''[[Pinkerton (album)|Pinkerton]]'' (1996) introduced the emo genre to a wider and more mainstream audience.<ref>{{Citation |last=S. T. Erlewine |title=Weezer: Pinkerton |url=https://www.allmusic.com/album/pinkerton-r241030/review |journal=Allmusic |df=mdy-all |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110612151356/http://www.allmusic.com/album/pinkerton-r241030/review |archive-date=June 12, 2011 |url-status=dead}}.</ref> Emo also broke into mainstream culture in the early 2000s, with the platinum-selling success of [[Jimmy Eat World]]'s ''[[Bleed American]]'' (2001) and [[Dashboard Confessional]]'s ''[[The Places You Have Come to Fear the Most]]'' (2001).<ref name="DeRogatis2003" /> The new emo had a more refined sound than in the 1990s and a far greater appeal amongst adolescents than its earlier incarnations.<ref name="DeRogatis2003" /> At the same time, use of the term "emo" expanded beyond the musical genre, becoming associated with fashion, a hairstyle and any music that expressed emotion.<ref>{{Citation |last=H. A. S. Popkin |title=What exactly is 'emo,' anyway? |date=March 26, 2006 |url=https://www.today.com/popculture/what-exactly-emo-anyway-wbna11720603 |website=MSNBC.com |df=mdy-all}}.</ref> During the {{nowrap|mid-to-late}} 2000s, emo was played by multi-platinum acts such as [[Fall Out Boy]],<ref name="chartblog">{{Citation |last=F. McAlpine |title=Paramore: Misery Business |date=June 14, 2007 |url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/chartblog/2007/06/paramore_misery_business.shtml |website=MSNBC.com |df=mdy-all |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110209092430/http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/chartblog/2007/06/paramore_misery_business.shtml |archive-date=February 9, 2011 |url-status=dead}}.</ref> [[My Chemical Romance]],<ref>{{Citation |last=J. Hoard |title=My Chemical Romance |url=https://www.rollingstone.com/music/artists/my-chemical-romance/biography |magazine=Rolling Stone |df=mdy-all |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110321175802/http://www.rollingstone.com/music/artists/my-chemical-romance/biography |archive-date=March 21, 2011 |url-status=dead}}.</ref> [[Paramore (band)|Paramore]],<ref name="chartblog" /> and [[Panic! at the Disco]].<ref>{{Citation |last=F. McAlpine |title=Paramore "Misery Business" |date=December 18, 2006 |url=https://www.nme.com/news/nme/24758 |journal=NME |df=mdy-all |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101228145612/http://www.nme.com/news/nme/24758 |archive-date=December 28, 2010 |url-status=dead}}</ref>
From about 1997, as dissatisfaction grew with the concept of [[Cool Britannia]] and Britpop as a movement began to dissolve, emerging bands began to avoid the Britpop label while still producing music derived from it.<ref name=Harris2004>J. Harris, ''Britpop!: Cool Britannia and the Spectacular Demise of English Rock'' (Da Capo Press, 2004), {{ISBN|0-306-81367-X}}, pp. 369–70.</ref><ref name=Borhwick&Moy2004>S. Borthwick and R. Moy, ''Popular Music Genres: an Introduction'' (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2004), {{ISBN|0-7486-1745-0}}, p. 188.</ref><ref name=Borhwick&Moy2004>S. Borthwick and R. Moy, ''Popular Music Genres: an Introduction'' (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press, 2004), {{ISBN|0-7486-1745-0}}, p. 188.</ref> After the decline of Britpop they began to gain more critical and popular attention.<ref name=Harris2004/> [[The Verve]]'s album ''[[Urban Hymns]]'' (1997) was a worldwide hit and their commercial peak before they broke up in 1999, while [[Radiohead]]{{spaced ndash}} although having achieved moderate recognition with ''[[The Bends (album)|The Bends]]'' in 1995{{spaced ndash}} achieved near-universal critical acclaim with their experimental third album ''[[OK Computer]]'' (1997), and its follow-ups ''[[Kid A]]'' (2000) and ''[[Amnesiac (album)|Amnesiac]]'' (2001).<ref name=Bogdanov2002Radiohead&Verve>V. Bogdanov, C. Woodstra and S. T. Erlewine, ''All Music Guide to Rock: the Definitive Guide to Rock, Pop, and Soul'' (Milwaukee, WI: Backbeat Books, 3rd edn., 2002), {{ISBN|0-87930-653-X}}, pp. 911 and 1192.</ref> [[Stereophonics]], used elements of a post-grunge and hardcore on their breakthrough albums ''[[Word Gets Around]]'' (1997) and ''[[Performance and Cocktails]]'' (1999), before moving into more melodic territory with ''[[Just Enough Education to Perform]]'' (2001) and subsequent albums.<ref name=Bogdanov2002Stereophonics>V. Bogdanov, C. Woodstra and S. T. Erlewine, ''All Music Guide to Rock: the Definitive Guide to Rock, Pop, and Soul'' (Backbeat Books, 3rd edn., 2002), {{ISBN|0-87930-653-X}}, p. 1076.</ref><ref name=AllMusicStereophonics>[{{AllMusic|class=artist|id=p225008|pure_url=yes}} "Stereophonics"], ''Allmusic'', retrieved 3 January 2010.</ref> [[Feeder (band)|Feeder]], who were initially more influenced by American post-grunge, producing a hard rock sound that led to their breakthrough single "[[Buck Rogers (song)|Buck Rogers]]" and the album ''[[Echo Park (album)|Echo Park]]'' (2001).<ref>[{{AllMusic|class=artist|id=p224868|pure_url=yes}} "Feeder"], ''Allmusic'', retrieved 3 December 2010.</ref> After the death of their drummer [[Jon Lee (drummer)|Jon Lee]], they moved to a more reflective and introspective mode on ''[[Comfort in Sound]]'' (2002), their most commercially successful album to that point, which spawned a series of hit singles.<ref>[{{AllMusic|class=album|id=r640675|pure_url=yes}} "Feeder: Comfort in Sound"], ''Allmusic'', retrieved 3 December 2010.</ref> The most commercially successful band in the millennium were [[Coldplay]], whose first two albums ''[[Parachutes (Coldplay album)|Parachutes]]'' (2000) and ''[[A Rush of Blood to the Head]]'' (2002) went [[Music recording sales certification|multi-platinum]], establishing them as one of the most popular acts in the world by the time of their third album ''[[X&Y]]'' (2005).<ref name=AllMusicColdplay>[{{AllMusic|class=artist|id=coldplay-p435023|pure_url=yes}} "Coldplay"], ''Allmusic'', retrieved 3 December 2010.</ref><ref>{{Citation |author=Stephen M. Deusner |date=1 June 2009 |title=Coldplay LeftRightLeftRightLeft |journal=Pitchfork |url=http://pitchfork.com/reviews/albums/13074-leftrightleftrightleft/ |access-date=25 July 2011 }}.</ref> Snow Patrol's "[[Chasing Cars]]" (from their 2006 album ''[[Eyes Open]]'') is the most widely played song of the 21st century on UK radio.<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/entertainment-arts-49008689|title=And the most-played song on UK radio is... Chasing Cars by Snow Patrol |work=[[BBC News]]|date=17 July 2019|access-date=17 July 2019}}</ref>


===Mainstream success: 2000s–present===
===Mainstream success: 2000s–present===
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[[File:The Libertines (40466665072).jpg|thumb|[[The Libertines]] were described by ''[[AllMusic]]'' as "one of the U.K.'s most influential 21st century acts"]]
[[File:The Libertines (40466665072).jpg|thumb|[[The Libertines]] were described by ''[[AllMusic]]'' as "one of the U.K.'s most influential 21st century acts"]]
The success of the Strokes also revitalised the then-dying [[post-Britpop]] scene in the United Kingdom with groups who took the band's influence and experimented with their sound. This first wave of UK acts included [[Franz Ferdinand (band)|Franz Ferdinand]], [[Kasabian]], [[Maxïmo Park]], [[the Cribs]], [[Bloc Party]], [[Kaiser Chiefs]] and [[the Others (band)|the Others]].<ref name="Beaumont 2020" /> However, [[the Libertines]], who formed in 1997, stood as the UK's counterpoint to the Strokes, being described by ''[[AllMusic]]'' as "one of the U.K.'s most influential 21st century acts"<ref name="Phares, AllMusic">{{cite web |last1=Phares |first1=Heather |title=Biography: the Libertines |url=https://www.allmusic.com/artist/the-libertines-mn0000080649/biography |website=[[AllMusic]] |access-date=16 June 2023}}</ref> and ''[[the Independent]]'' stating that "the Libertines wanted to be an important band, but they could not have predicted the impact they would have".<ref name=independent0703>{{cite news|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/music/features/after-the-libertines-what-todays-bands-owe-carl-and-pete-439391.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080608030141/http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/music/features/after-the-libertines-what-todays-bands-owe-carl-and-pete-439391.html|url-status=dead|archive-date=8 June 2008|title=After The Libertines: What today's bands owe Carl and Pete|access-date=27 February 2008|author=Thornton, Anthony |author-link=Anthony Thornton (writer)|date=9 March 2007|work=[[The Independent]] | location=London}}</ref> Influenced by [[the Clash]], [[the Kinks]], [[the Smiths]] and [[the Jam]],<ref name="Phares, AllMusic" /> the band's style of tinny, high register, sometimes acoustic, guitar parts topped by lyrics of British [[Parochialism|parochial]] pleasures in the vocalists' authentic English accents became widely imitated.<ref name=independent0703 /> [[The Fratellis]], [[the Kooks]], and [[the View (band)|the View]] were three such acts to gain significant commercial success, although the most prominent post-Libertines band was Sheffield's [[Arctic Monkeys]].<ref name=independent0703 /> One of the earliest groups to owe their initial commercial success to the use of [[Internet social network]]ing,<ref>A. Goetchius, ''Career Building Through Social Networking'' (Rosen, 2007), {{ISBN|1-4042-1943-9}}, pp. 21–2.</ref> the Arctic Monkeys had two No. 1 singles, and their album ''[[Whatever People Say I Am, That's What I'm Not]]'' (2006) became the fastest-selling debut album in British chart history.<ref>{{citation |last=A. Kumi |url=https://www.theguardian.com/arts/news/story/0,,1698025,00.html |work=The Guardian |title=Arctic Monkeys make chart history |date=January 30, 2006 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110823024750/http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2006/jan/30/arts.artsnews |archive-date=August 23, 2011 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all }}</ref>
The success of the Strokes revitalised the then-dying underground post-Britpop scene in the United Kingdom with groups who took the band's influence and experimented with their sound. This first wave of UK acts included [[Franz Ferdinand (band)|Franz Ferdinand]], [[Kasabian]], [[Maxïmo Park]], [[the Cribs]], [[Bloc Party]], [[Kaiser Chiefs]] and [[the Others (band)|the Others]].<ref name="Beaumont 2020" /> However, [[the Libertines]], who formed in 1997, stood as the UK's counterpoint to the Strokes, being described by ''[[AllMusic]]'' as "one of the U.K.'s most influential 21st century acts"<ref name="Phares, AllMusic">{{cite web |last1=Phares |first1=Heather |title=Biography: the Libertines |url=https://www.allmusic.com/artist/the-libertines-mn0000080649/biography |website=[[AllMusic]] |access-date=16 June 2023}}</ref> and ''[[the Independent]]'' stating that "the Libertines wanted to be an important band, but they could not have predicted the impact they would have".<ref name=independent0703>{{cite news|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/music/features/after-the-libertines-what-todays-bands-owe-carl-and-pete-439391.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080608030141/http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/music/features/after-the-libertines-what-todays-bands-owe-carl-and-pete-439391.html|url-status=dead|archive-date=8 June 2008|title=After The Libertines: What today's bands owe Carl and Pete|access-date=27 February 2008|author=Thornton, Anthony |author-link=Anthony Thornton (writer)|date=9 March 2007|work=[[The Independent]] | location=London}}</ref> Influenced by [[the Clash]], [[the Kinks]], [[the Smiths]] and [[the Jam]],<ref name="Phares, AllMusic" /> the band's style of tinny, high register, sometimes acoustic, guitar parts topped by lyrics of British [[Parochialism|parochial]] pleasures in the vocalists' authentic English accents became widely imitated.<ref name=independent0703 /> [[The Fratellis]], [[the Kooks]], and [[the View (band)|the View]] were three such acts to gain significant commercial success, although the most prominent post-Libertines band was Sheffield's [[Arctic Monkeys]].<ref name=independent0703 /> One of the earliest groups to owe their initial commercial success to the use of [[Internet social network]]ing,<ref>A. Goetchius, ''Career Building Through Social Networking'' (Rosen, 2007), {{ISBN|1-4042-1943-9}}, pp. 21–2.</ref> the Arctic Monkeys had two No. 1 singles, and their album ''[[Whatever People Say I Am, That's What I'm Not]]'' (2006) became the fastest-selling debut album in British chart history.<ref>{{citation |last=A. Kumi |url=https://www.theguardian.com/arts/news/story/0,,1698025,00.html |work=The Guardian |title=Arctic Monkeys make chart history |date=January 30, 2006 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110823024750/http://www.guardian.co.uk/uk/2006/jan/30/arts.artsnews |archive-date=August 23, 2011 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all }}</ref>


In this success, legacy indie bands soon entered the mainstream,<ref name=Spitz2010>M. Spitz, [https://books.google.com/books?id=yqmlNOuYQdEC&pg=PA95 "The 'New Rock Revolution' fizzles"], May 2010, ''Spin'', vol. 26, no. 4, ISSN 0886-3032, p. 95.</ref> including [[Modest Mouse]] (whose 2004 album ''[[Good News for People Who Love Bad News]]'' reached the US top 40 and was nominated for a [[Grammy]] Award), [[Bright Eyes (band)|Bright Eyes]] (who in 2004 had two singles at the top of the Billboard magazine [[Hot 100 Single Sales]])<ref>{{Citation|last=J. Arndt |title=Bright Eyes Sees Double |journal=Soul Shine Magazine |date=November 23, 2004 |url=http://www.soulshine.ca/news/newsarticle.php?nid=1293 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110514021037/http://www.soulshine.ca/news/newsarticle.php?nid=1293 |archive-date=May 14, 2011 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all }}.</ref> and [[Death Cab for Cutie]] (whose 2005 album ''[[Plans (album)|Plans]]'' debuted at number four in the US, remaining on the Billboard charts for nearly one year and achieving platinum status and a Grammy nomination).<ref>{{Citation|last=A. Leahey |title=Death Cab for Cutie: Biography |journal=Allmusic |url=https://www.allmusic.com/artist/death-cab-for-cutie-p365455/biography |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110424203425/http://www.allmusic.com/artist/death-cab-for-cutie-p365455/biography |archive-date=April 24, 2011 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all }}.</ref> This new commercial breakthrough and the widespread use of the term indie to other forms of popular culture, led a number of commentators to suggest that indie rock had ceased to be a meaningful term.<ref>{{Citation|last=K. Korducki |title=Is indie rock dead? |journal=The Varsity |date=July 17, 2007 |url=http://thevarsity.ca/articles/99 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110916134124/http://thevarsity.ca/articles/99 |archive-date=September 16, 2011 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all }}.</ref><ref>{{Citation|last=R. Maddux |title=Is Indie Dead? |journal=Paste Magazine.com |date=January 26, 2010 |url=https://www.pastemagazine.com/articles/2010/01/is-indie-dead.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110403102612/http://www.pastemagazine.com/articles/2010/01/is-indie-dead.html |archive-date=April 3, 2011 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all }}.</ref>
In this success, legacy indie bands soon entered the mainstream,<ref name=Spitz2010>M. Spitz, [https://books.google.com/books?id=yqmlNOuYQdEC&pg=PA95 "The 'New Rock Revolution' fizzles"], May 2010, ''Spin'', vol. 26, no. 4, ISSN 0886-3032, p. 95.</ref> including Modest Mouse (whose 2004 album ''[[Good News for People Who Love Bad News]]'' reached the US top 40 and was nominated for a [[Grammy]] Award), [[Bright Eyes (band)|Bright Eyes]] (who in 2004 had two singles at the top of the Billboard magazine [[Hot 100 Single Sales]])<ref>{{Citation|last=J. Arndt |title=Bright Eyes Sees Double |journal=Soul Shine Magazine |date=November 23, 2004 |url=http://www.soulshine.ca/news/newsarticle.php?nid=1293 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110514021037/http://www.soulshine.ca/news/newsarticle.php?nid=1293 |archive-date=May 14, 2011 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all }}.</ref> and Death Cab for Cutie (whose 2005 album ''[[Plans (album)|Plans]]'' debuted at number four in the US, remaining on the Billboard charts for nearly one year and achieving platinum status and a Grammy nomination).<ref>{{Citation|last=A. Leahey |title=Death Cab for Cutie: Biography |journal=Allmusic |url=https://www.allmusic.com/artist/death-cab-for-cutie-p365455/biography |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110424203425/http://www.allmusic.com/artist/death-cab-for-cutie-p365455/biography |archive-date=April 24, 2011 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all }}.</ref> This new commercial breakthrough and the widespread use of the term indie to other forms of popular culture, led a number of commentators to suggest that indie rock had ceased to be a meaningful term.<ref>{{Citation|last=K. Korducki |title=Is indie rock dead? |journal=The Varsity |date=July 17, 2007 |url=http://thevarsity.ca/articles/99 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110916134124/http://thevarsity.ca/articles/99 |archive-date=September 16, 2011 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all }}.</ref><ref>{{Citation|last=R. Maddux |title=Is Indie Dead? |journal=Paste Magazine.com |date=January 26, 2010 |url=https://www.pastemagazine.com/articles/2010/01/is-indie-dead.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110403102612/http://www.pastemagazine.com/articles/2010/01/is-indie-dead.html |archive-date=April 3, 2011 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all }}.</ref>


Additionally, a second wave of bands emerged in the United States that managed to gain international recognition as a result of the movement included [[the Black Keys]], [[Kings of Leon]], [[Modest Mouse]], [[the Shins]], [[the Bravery]], [[Spoon (band)|Spoon]], [[the Hold Steady]], and [[the National (band)|the National]].<ref name=DeRogatis2003p373-4>J. DeRogatis, ''Turn on your Mind: Four Decades of Great Psychedelic Rock'' (Milwaukee, WI: Hal Leonard Corporation, 2003), {{ISBN|0-634-05548-8}}, p. 373.</ref> The most commercially successful band of this wave was Las Vegas' [[the Killers]]. Formed in 2001, after hearing ''Is This It'', the band scrapped the maojority of their prior material to rewrite it under the Strokes' influence.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.nme.com/news/music/the-strokes-talk-the-killers-rivalry-2072222|title=The Strokes talk about their rivalry with The Killers|first=Luke Morgan|last=Britton|date=May 15, 2017|work=[[NME]]|access-date=June 25, 2019}}</ref> The band's debut single "[[Mr. Brightside]]" spent 260 non-consecutive weeks, or five years, on the [[UK Singles Chart]] as of April 2021, the most out of any song,<ref name="copsey">{{cite web|url=https://www.officialcharts.com/chart-news/the-killers-mr-brightside-claims-record-breaking-260th-week-exactly-five-years-on-the-official-singles-chart-top-100__32800/|title=The Killers' Mr Brightside claims record-breaking 260th week – exactly five years – on the Official Singles Chart Top 100|last=Copsey|first=Rob|publisher=Official Charts Company|date=April 1, 2021|access-date=April 2, 2021}}</ref><ref name="moore">{{cite web|url=https://www.nme.com/news/music/the-killers-set-new-uk-chart-record-with-mr-brightside-2912306|title=The Killers set new UK chart record with 'Mr. Brightside'|last=Moore|first=Sam|website=NME|date=April 1, 2021|access-date=April 2, 2021}}</ref> and {{As of|2017}}, it had charted on the UK Singles Chart in 11 of the last 13 years,<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.npr.org/2017/06/04/530079710/mr-brightside-will-never-die-and-heres-why |title='Mr. Brightside' Will Never Die, And Here's Why |first=Stephen |last=Thompson |date=June 4, 2017 |work=NPR Music}}</ref> including a 35-week run peaking at number 49 in 2016–2017.<ref name="MetChart">{{cite web |last1=Westbrook |first1=Caroline |title=Mr Brightside by The Killers has been in the UK charts every year since 2004 |url=http://metro.co.uk/2017/05/20/mr-brightside-by-the-killers-has-been-in-the-uk-charts-every-year-since-2004-6650448/ |work=Metro |date=May 20, 2017 |access-date=May 31, 2017}}</ref> Furthermore, it was the UK's most streamed pre-2010 song, until it was surpassed in late 2018,<ref>{{citation |title=(What's The Story) Morning Glory? [Remastered] |date=October 2, 1995 |url=https://open.spotify.com/album/1VW1MFNstaJuygaoTPkdCk |language=en |access-date=November 16, 2018}}</ref> and continued to be purchased for download hundreds of times a week by 2017.<ref name="200weeks"/> In March 2018, the song reached the milestone of staying in the Top 100 of the UK Singles Chart for 200 weeks.<ref name="200weeks">{{cite web |url=http://www.officialcharts.com/chart-news/why-the-killers-mr-brightside-refuses-to-leave-the-official-singles-chart-top-100__19190/ |title=Why The Killers' Mr Brightside refuses to leave the Official Singles Chart Top 100 |date=March 16, 2018 |first=Rob|last=Copsey |work=Official Charts Company}}</ref>
Additionally, a second wave of bands emerged in the United States that managed to gain international recognition as a result of the movement included [[the Black Keys]], [[Kings of Leon]], [[the Shins]], [[the Bravery]], [[Spoon (band)|Spoon]], [[the Hold Steady]], and [[the National (band)|the National]].<ref name=DeRogatis2003p373-4>J. DeRogatis, ''Turn on your Mind: Four Decades of Great Psychedelic Rock'' (Milwaukee, WI: Hal Leonard Corporation, 2003), {{ISBN|0-634-05548-8}}, p. 373.</ref> The most commercially successful band of this wave was Las Vegas' [[the Killers]]. Formed in 2001, after hearing ''Is This It'', the band scrapped the maojority of their prior material to rewrite it under the Strokes' influence.<ref>{{cite web|url=https://www.nme.com/news/music/the-strokes-talk-the-killers-rivalry-2072222|title=The Strokes talk about their rivalry with The Killers|first=Luke Morgan|last=Britton|date=May 15, 2017|work=[[NME]]|access-date=June 25, 2019}}</ref> The band's debut single "[[Mr. Brightside]]" spent 260 non-consecutive weeks, or five years, on the [[UK Singles Chart]] as of April 2021, the most out of any song,<ref name="copsey">{{cite web|url=https://www.officialcharts.com/chart-news/the-killers-mr-brightside-claims-record-breaking-260th-week-exactly-five-years-on-the-official-singles-chart-top-100__32800/|title=The Killers' Mr Brightside claims record-breaking 260th week – exactly five years – on the Official Singles Chart Top 100|last=Copsey|first=Rob|publisher=Official Charts Company|date=April 1, 2021|access-date=April 2, 2021}}</ref><ref name="moore">{{cite web|url=https://www.nme.com/news/music/the-killers-set-new-uk-chart-record-with-mr-brightside-2912306|title=The Killers set new UK chart record with 'Mr. Brightside'|last=Moore|first=Sam|website=NME|date=April 1, 2021|access-date=April 2, 2021}}</ref> and {{As of|2017}}, it had charted on the UK Singles Chart in 11 of the last 13 years,<ref>{{cite news |url=https://www.npr.org/2017/06/04/530079710/mr-brightside-will-never-die-and-heres-why |title='Mr. Brightside' Will Never Die, And Here's Why |first=Stephen |last=Thompson |date=June 4, 2017 |work=NPR Music}}</ref> including a 35-week run peaking at number 49 in 2016–2017.<ref name="MetChart">{{cite web |last1=Westbrook |first1=Caroline |title=Mr Brightside by The Killers has been in the UK charts every year since 2004 |url=http://metro.co.uk/2017/05/20/mr-brightside-by-the-killers-has-been-in-the-uk-charts-every-year-since-2004-6650448/ |work=Metro |date=May 20, 2017 |access-date=May 31, 2017}}</ref> Furthermore, it was the UK's most streamed pre-2010 song, until it was surpassed in late 2018,<ref>{{citation |title=(What's The Story) Morning Glory? [Remastered] |date=October 2, 1995 |url=https://open.spotify.com/album/1VW1MFNstaJuygaoTPkdCk |language=en |access-date=November 16, 2018}}</ref> and continued to be purchased for download hundreds of times a week by 2017.<ref name="200weeks"/> In March 2018, the song reached the milestone of staying in the Top 100 of the UK Singles Chart for 200 weeks.<ref name="200weeks">{{cite web |url=http://www.officialcharts.com/chart-news/why-the-killers-mr-brightside-refuses-to-leave-the-official-singles-chart-top-100__19190/ |title=Why The Killers' Mr Brightside refuses to leave the Official Singles Chart Top 100 |date=March 16, 2018 |first=Rob|last=Copsey |work=Official Charts Company}}</ref>


====Proliferation====
====Proliferation====
[[File:Alex Turner and Nick O'Malley Roskilde 2014.jpg|thumb|150px |[[The Arctic Monkeys]] are one of the most commercially successful indie rock bands]]
[[File:Alex Turner and Nick O'Malley Roskilde 2014.jpg|thumb|150px |[[The Arctic Monkeys]] are one of the most commercially successful indie rock bands]]
The impact of the Strokes, the Libertines and Bloc Party led to significant major label interest in indie rock artists, which was then exacerbated by the success of the Arctic Monkeys. In the years following ''[[Whatever People Say I Am, That's What I'm Not]]'' there was a proliferation of bands such as [[the Rifles (band)|the Rifles]], [[the Pigeon Detectives]] and [[Milburn (band)|Milburn]], who created a more formulaic derivative of the earlier acts.<ref name="vice.com"/><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.nme.com/features/landfill-indie-snobbery-2741199|title=The term 'landfill indie' is nothing but musical snobbery|website=Nme.com|date=September 1, 2020}}</ref> By the end of the decade, critics had taken to referring to this wave of acts as "landfill indie",<ref>{{Cite web|last=Power|first=Ed|date=28 July 2019|title=How landfill indie swallowed guitar music in the mid-Noughties|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/music/features/landfill-indie-kaiser-chiefs-album-razorlight-kooks-ricky-wilson-a9022051.html|access-date=2020-08-29|website=Independent.co.uk|language=en}}</ref><ref name="Beaumont 2020">{{Cite web|last=Beaumont|first=Mark|date=2020-05-04|title=From Britpop to 'landfill indie', lockdown forces us to face our musical pasts|url=https://www.nme.com/blogs/britpop-landfill-indie-razorlight-nostalgia-2658671|access-date=2020-08-29|website=Nme.com|language=en-GB}}</ref><ref name="T. Walker"/> a description coined by [[Andrew Harrison (journalist)|Andrew Harrison]] of ''[[The Word (magazine)|the Word]]'' magazine.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=S. Reynolds |title=Clearing up the indie landfill |journal=Guardian.co.uk |date=January 4, 2010 |url=https://www.theguardian.com/music/musicblog/2010/jan/04/clearing-up-indie-landfill |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111117025019/http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/musicblog/2010/jan/04/clearing-up-indie-landfill |archive-date=November 17, 2011 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all }}</ref> A 2020 ''[[Vice Media|Vice]]'' article cited [[Johnny Borrell]], vocalist of [[Razorlight]], as the "one man who defined, embodied and lived Landfill Indie" due his forming of a "spectacularly middle-of-the-road" band despite his close proximity to the Libertines' "desperate kinetic energy, mythologised love-hate dynamic and vision of a dilapidated Britain animated by romance and narcotics".<ref name="vice.com"/> In a 2009 article for ''[[the Guardian]]'', journalist [[Peter Robinson (journalist)|Peter Robinson]] cited the landfill indie movement as dead, blaming [[the Wombats]], [[Scouting For Girls]], and [[Joe Lean & the Jing Jang Jong]] by stating "If landfill indie had been a game of ''[[Buckaroo!|Buckaroo]]'', those three sent the whole donkey's arse of radio-friendly mainstream guitar band monotony flying high into the air, legs flailing."<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.theguardian.com/music/2009/jan/17/florence-and-the-machine-indie|title=Peter Robinson on the death of landfill indie music|date=January 17, 2009|website=The Guardian}}</ref>
The impact of the Strokes, the Libertines and Bloc Party led to significant major label interest in indie rock artists, which was then exacerbated by the success of the Arctic Monkeys. In the years following ''[[Whatever People Say I Am, That's What I'm Not]]'' there was a proliferation of bands such as [[the Rifles (band)|the Rifles]], [[the Pigeon Detectives]] and [[Milburn (band)|Milburn]], who created a more formulaic derivative of the earlier acts.<ref name="vice.com">{{Cite web |last1=Akinfenwa |first1=Jumi |last2=Joshi |first2=Tara |last3=Garland |first3=Emma |date=August 27, 2020 |title=The Top 50 Greatest Landfill Indie Songs of All Time |url=https://www.vice.com/en/article/bv8a8w/the-top-50-greatest-landfill-indie-songs-of-all-time |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221111203505/https://www.vice.com/en/article/bv8a8w/the-top-50-greatest-landfill-indie-songs-of-all-time |archive-date=Nov 11, 2022 |website=Vice}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.nme.com/features/landfill-indie-snobbery-2741199|title=The term 'landfill indie' is nothing but musical snobbery|website=Nme.com|date=September 1, 2020}}</ref> By the end of the decade, critics had taken to referring to this wave of acts as "landfill indie",<ref>{{Cite web|last=Power|first=Ed|date=28 July 2019|title=How landfill indie swallowed guitar music in the mid-Noughties|url=https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/music/features/landfill-indie-kaiser-chiefs-album-razorlight-kooks-ricky-wilson-a9022051.html|access-date=2020-08-29|website=Independent.co.uk|language=en}}</ref><ref name="Beaumont 2020">{{Cite web|last=Beaumont|first=Mark|date=2020-05-04|title=From Britpop to 'landfill indie', lockdown forces us to face our musical pasts|url=https://www.nme.com/blogs/britpop-landfill-indie-razorlight-nostalgia-2658671|access-date=2020-08-29|website=Nme.com|language=en-GB}}</ref><ref name="T. Walker">{{Citation |last=T. |first=Walker |title=Does the world need another indie band? |date=January 21, 2010 |url=https://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/music/features/does-the-world-need-another-indie-band-870520.html |journal=Independent |df=mdy-all |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20100304122059/http://www.independent.co.uk/arts-entertainment/music/features/does-the-world-need-another-indie-band-870520.html |archive-date=March 4, 2010 |url-status=dead}}.</ref> a description coined by [[Andrew Harrison (journalist)|Andrew Harrison]] of ''[[The Word (magazine)|the Word]]'' magazine.<ref>{{Cite journal|last=S. Reynolds |title=Clearing up the indie landfill |journal=Guardian.co.uk |date=January 4, 2010 |url=https://www.theguardian.com/music/musicblog/2010/jan/04/clearing-up-indie-landfill |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20111117025019/http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/musicblog/2010/jan/04/clearing-up-indie-landfill |archive-date=November 17, 2011 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all }}</ref> A 2020 ''[[Vice Media|Vice]]'' article cited [[Johnny Borrell]], vocalist of [[Razorlight]], as the "one man who defined, embodied and lived Landfill Indie" due his forming of a "spectacularly middle-of-the-road" band despite his close proximity to the Libertines' "desperate kinetic energy, mythologised love-hate dynamic and vision of a dilapidated Britain animated by romance and narcotics".<ref name="vice.com"/> In a 2009 article for ''[[the Guardian]]'', journalist [[Peter Robinson (journalist)|Peter Robinson]] cited the landfill indie movement as dead, blaming [[the Wombats]], [[Scouting For Girls]], and [[Joe Lean & the Jing Jang Jong]] by stating "If landfill indie had been a game of ''[[Buckaroo!|Buckaroo]]'', those three sent the whole donkey's arse of radio-friendly mainstream guitar band monotony flying high into the air, legs flailing."<ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.theguardian.com/music/2009/jan/17/florence-and-the-machine-indie|title=Peter Robinson on the death of landfill indie music|date=January 17, 2009|website=The Guardian}}</ref>


There continued to be commercial successes like Kasabian's ''[[Velociraptor!]]'' (2011) and Arctic Monkeys's ''[[Suck It and See]]'' (2011), which reached number one in the UK,<ref>{{Citation|last=G. Cochrane |title=2009: 'The year British indie guitar music died' |journal=BBC Radio 1 Newsbeat |date=January 21, 2010 |url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/newsbeat/10004881 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101125173050/http://www.bbc.co.uk/newsbeat/10004881 |archive-date=November 25, 2010 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all }}.</ref> and [[Arcade Fire]]'s ''[[The Suburbs (Arcade Fire album)|The Suburbs]]'' (2010), the Black Keys's ''[[Turn Blue (album)|Turn Blue]]'' (2014), Kings of Leon's ''[[Walls (Kings of Leon album)|Walls]]'' (2016), the Killers's ''[[Wonderful Wonderful (The Killers album)|Wonderful Wonderful]]'' (2017), which reached number one on the Billboard charts in the United States and the official chart in the United Kingdom, with Arcade Fire's album winning a Grammy for Album of The Year in 2011.<ref>{{Citation|title=53 Annual Grammy Awards: Awards and Nominees 2010 (Official Webpage) |website=Grammy.com |date=November 23, 2004 |url=http://www.grammy.com/NOMINEES |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110501020009/http://www.grammy.com/nominees |archive-date=May 1, 2011 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all }}.</ref>
There continued to be commercial successes like Kasabian's ''[[Velociraptor!]]'' (2011) and Arctic Monkeys's ''[[Suck It and See]]'' (2011), which reached number one in the UK,<ref>{{Citation|last=G. Cochrane |title=2009: 'The year British indie guitar music died' |journal=BBC Radio 1 Newsbeat |date=January 21, 2010 |url=http://www.bbc.co.uk/newsbeat/10004881 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101125173050/http://www.bbc.co.uk/newsbeat/10004881 |archive-date=November 25, 2010 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all }}.</ref> and [[Arcade Fire]]'s ''[[The Suburbs (Arcade Fire album)|The Suburbs]]'' (2010), the Black Keys's ''[[Turn Blue (album)|Turn Blue]]'' (2014), Kings of Leon's ''[[Walls (Kings of Leon album)|Walls]]'' (2016), the Killers's ''[[Wonderful Wonderful (The Killers album)|Wonderful Wonderful]]'' (2017), which reached number one on the Billboard charts in the United States and the official chart in the United Kingdom, with Arcade Fire's album winning a Grammy for Album of The Year in 2011.<ref>{{Citation|title=53 Annual Grammy Awards: Awards and Nominees 2010 (Official Webpage) |website=Grammy.com |date=November 23, 2004 |url=http://www.grammy.com/NOMINEES |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110501020009/http://www.grammy.com/nominees |archive-date=May 1, 2011 |url-status=dead |df=mdy-all }}.</ref>

Revision as of 09:21, 19 June 2023

Indie rock is a subgenre of rock music that originated in the United States, United Kingdom and New Zealand in the early to mid–1980s. Originally used to describe rock music released through independent record labels, by the 1990s, the term became more widely associated with the music the bands produced.

The sound of indie rock has its origins in the New Zealand Dunedin sound and early 1980s college rock radio stations who would frequently play jangle pop bands like the Smiths and R.E.M.. The genre solidified itself during the mid–1980s with NME's C86 cassette in the United Kingdom and the underground success of Sonic Youth, Dinosaur Jr. and Unrest in the United States. By this time, "indie" had become used to refer to bands whose music was released on independent record labels, in addition to the record labels themselves. As the decade progressed many individual local scenes developed their own distinct takes on the genre: baggy in Manchester; grebo in Stourbridge and Leicester; and shoegaze in London and the Thames Valley.

During the 1990s, the mainstream success of grunge and Britpop, two movements influenced by indie rock, brought increased attention to the genre and saw record labels use their independent status as a marketing tactic. This led to a split within indie rock: one side conforming to mainstream radio; the other becoming increasingly experimental. By this point "indie rock" referred to the musical style rather than ties to the independent music scene. During the decade, indie rock bands like Sonic Youth, the Pixies and Radiohead all released album on major labels and subgenres like slowcore, Midwest emo, slacker rock and space rock began. In the 2000s, indie rock reentered the mainstream through the garage rock and post-punk revival and the influence of the Strokes and the Libertines. This success was exacerbated in the middle of the decade by Bloc Party, the Arctic Monkeys and the Killers and indie rock proliferated into the landfill indie movement.

Characteristics

The term indie rock, which comes from "independent", describes the small and relatively low-budget labels on which it is released and the do-it-yourself attitude of the bands and artists involved. Although distribution deals are often struck with major corporate companies, these labels and the bands they host have attempted to retain their autonomy, leaving them free to explore sounds, emotions and subjects of limited appeal to large, mainstream audiences.[1] The influences and styles of the artists have been extremely diverse, including punk, psychedelia, post-punk and country.[2]

Allmusic identifies indie rock as including a number of "varying musical approaches [not] compatible with mainstream tastes".[3] Linked by an ethos more than a musical approach, the indie rock movement encompassed a wide range of styles, from hard-edged, grunge-influenced bands, through do-it-yourself experimental bands like Pavement, to punk-folk singers such as Ani DiFranco.[4] In his book DIY Style: Fashion, Music and Global Digital Cultures, Dr Brent Luvaas described the genre as rooted in nostalgia, citing the influence of garage rock and psychedelic rock of the 1960s in progenitors the Stone Roses and the Smiths, in addition to a lyrical preoccupation with literature.[5] In this same vein, Dr Matthew Bannister defined indie rock as "small groups of white men playing guitars, influenced by punks and 1960s white pop/rock, within a broader discourse and practice of (degrees of) independence from mainstream musical values."[6] According to anthropologist Wendy Fonarow, a key element of indie is the dichotomy between a "puritan ethos" and a "romantic one", with the former using austere ethics, and the latter being eccentric. This is best seen in the contrast between the indie music of United States and the United Kingdom in the 1990s, with British acts being flamboyant performers, while American acts used their lack of virtuosity as a mark of authenticity.[7]

Indie rock is noted for having a relatively high proportion of female artists compared with preceding rock genres, a tendency exemplified by the development of the feminist-informed riot grrrl music of acts like Bikini Kill, Bratmobile, 7 Year Bitch, Team Dresch and Huggy Bear.[8] However, Cortney Harding pointed out that this sense of equality is not reflected in the number of women running indie labels.[9]

History

Origins

The Jesus and Mary Chain performing in California in 2007

The BBC documentary Music for Misfits: The Story of Indie pinpoints the coining of the term "indie" to the 1977 self-publication of the Spiral Scratch EP by Manchester punk rock band the Buzzcocks, on their Independent record label New Hormones.[10][11] By the 1980s, the term had begun to be used to describe the bands who produced music on independent record labels, rather than simply the record labels themselves. This made it the only genre at the time which was defined by the methods by which the music was distributed rather than the sound of said music.[2]

The New Zealand city of Dunedin produced the independent record label Flying Nun Records, whose artists defined the Dunedin sound, which would be particularly influential on the development of indie rock's sound.[12] The scene saw bands take influence from punk rock, but strip away its aggression for a reverb heavy, pop–influenced sound. Marked on the 1982 Dunedin Double EP featuring the Chills, Sneaky Feelings, the Verlaines and the Stones, its guitars were often jangly and droning and vocals indistinct.[13]

The decade then saw the growing popularity of college radio stations, primarily in the United States, who would play independent artists of various genres, including alternative rock, new wave, post-hardcore and post-punk. The bands broadcast on these station became dubbed "college rock" by fans, another term which lacked any stylistic implication. The most prominent college rock bands were jangle pop groups R.E.M., from the US, and the Smiths, from the UK, who Dr Matthew Bannister states were the earliest indie rock groups.[14] These bands' influence was showcased quickly seen in the formation of Let's Active, the Housemartins and the La's.[15] Journalist Steve Taylor also cited the bands involved in the Paisley Underground scene as early indie groups.[16] However, this jangly style became increasingly mainstream as the decade progressed leading subsequent indie rock bands to abandon this style. Instead, in the following years the Jesus and Mary Chain and Flying Nun Records bands like the Jean-Paul Sartre Experience morphed the genre into a slower, darker and more hypnotic style.[14] The number of college radio stations in the US decreased significantly following NPR's lobbying against noncommercial station during the 1980s. In turn, the name "college rock" fell into disfavour, soon being replaced by "indie".[17]

Development

My Bloody Valentine pioneered the indie rock subgenre shoegaze

In the United Kingdom, NME released the C86 compilation cassette, which consisted of tracks by groups including Primal Scream, the Pastels and the Wedding Present. Intended to showcase the UK's current independent music scene, the album was made up of groups combining elements of jangle pop, post-punk and Phil Spector indebted Walls of Sound. In 2006, Bob Stanley called it "the beginning of indie music".[18] C86 became a descriptor in its own right, describing not only the bands on the tape but also bands who it influenced, often used alongside terms like "anorak pop" and "shambling". [19] Some C86 bands found significant commercial success: the Soup Dragons went on to sell out Madison Square Garden; Primal Scream were critically acclaimed, receiving the first ever Mercury Prize in 1992; the Wedding Present charted eighteen times in the Top 40; however many bands in its twenty-two track runtime also fell into obscurity.[20]

In the United States, the popularity R.E.M. allowed those disliking of hardcore punk's aggression to become a part of the underground music scene. This empowered an array of musicians, particularly those in what would become the post-hardcore scene. Furthermore, major labels began to pursue underground bands, with both Hüsker Dü and the Replacements releasing albums on majors in the middle of the decade. While these albums did not see the same success as R.E.M., and major labels soon lost interest in the scene, they did have a large impact on younger bands. In the following years, Sonic Youth, Dinosaur Jr. and Unrest began to release music on independent labels indebted to these bands, and soon too picked up the categorisation of indie rock.[21] As the 1980s closed, both Sonic Youth and the Pixies signed to major labels.[22]

In the late 1980s, the indie rock subgenre shoegaze emerged, as a continuation of the wall of sound production being used by groups like the Jesus and Mary Chain. The genre merged this with influences from Dinosaur Jr. and the Cocteau Twins, to create a dark and droning style so cacophonous that instruments were often indistinguishable. The genre was pioneered by My Bloody Valentine on their early EPs and debut album Isn't Anything.[23] The band's style influenced a wave of bands in London and the Thames Valley area including Chapterhouse, Moose and Lush. This scene was collectively termed "the Scene That Celebrates Itself" by Melody Maker's Steve Sutherland in 1990.[24]

The Stone Roses' 1990 Spike Island concert was the highest attendance performance by an independent artist of its time

Madchester was another style and scene that originated in the late 1980s. Defined by its merger of C86 indie rock, dance music and Hedonist rave culture, particularly its emphasis on the use of psychedelic drugs, the scene was centred in Manchester.[25][26] The scene was based around the Haçienda nightclub, which opened in May 1982 as an initiative of Factory Records. For the first few years of its life, the club played predominantly club-oriented pop music and hosted performances by artists including New Order, Cabaret Voltaire, Culture Club, Thompson Twins and the Smiths.[27] The Madchester movement burgeoned by 1989, with the success of the Happy Mondays second album Bummed and the Stone Roses' self-titled debut, which became the most influential work in the scene. In the following years, addition high profile acts included the Charlatans, 808 State and the Inspiral Carpets.[28] The Madchester scene's distinct combination of indie rock and dance music became termed indie dance by critics, or more specifically the subgenre baggy.[29] Madchester and baggy's most infamous moment was the 27 May 1990 Spike Island concert headlined by the Stone Roses. With an attendance of around 28,000 and lasting twelve hours, it was the first event of its size and kind to be hosted by an independant act.[30]

In Stourbridge, a scene of indie bands who took influence from electronic, punk, folk and hip-hop music emerged, dubbed grebo by critics. Fronted by Pop Will Eat Itself, the Wonder Stuff and Ned's Atomic Dustbin, "grebo" was broadly defined, and was used more as a name for the Stourbridge scene than as a genre label. However, the bands quickly gained attention: Pop Will Eat Itself's 1989 singles "Wise Up! Sucker" and "Can U Dig It?" both entered the UK Top 40 and Stourbridge briefly became a tourist attraction for young indie rock fans. The seminal albums from the scene were released between 1989 and 1993: the Wonder Stuff's Hup and Never Loved Elvis; Ned's Atomic Dustbin's God Fodder and Are You Normal?; and Pop Will Eat Itself's This Is the Day...This Is the Hour...This Is This! and The Looks or the Lifestyle?. In this period, the scene's bands became fixtures, sometimes headliners, at Reading Festival, sold millions of albums and were frequently featured on the covers of magazines like NME and Melody Maker.[31] Grebo bands were distinct from prior indie rock groups not only because of their broad influences, but also their subversion of the twee or unhappy moods of most other bands in the genre and their pursuing of a heavier sound and aesthetic. The scene also came to include the stylistically similar bands of nearby Leicester: the Bomb Party, Gaye Bykers on Acid, Crazyhead, the Hunters Club and Scum Pups.[32]

Mainstream–underground split: 1990s

The success of grunge allowed Sonic Youth to breakthrough into the mainstream[33]

In the early 1990s, the Seattle grunge scene, and its most visible acts, Nirvana, Pearl Jam, Soundgarden and Alice in Chains, broke into the mainstream.[34] The monumental success of these bands, particularly Nirvana, brought increased attention to the indie rock scene, which initiated a shift in which the indie rock descriptor became displaced by the term alternative rock.[33] As a result, the term "alternative" lost its original counter-cultural meaning and began to refer to the new, commercially lighter form of music that was now achieving mainstream success. New York magazine writer Carl Swanson argued that even the term "sellout" lost its meaning as grunge made it possible for a niche movement, no matter how radical, to be co-opted by the mainstream, cementing the formation of an individualist, fragmented culture.[35] In his book Popular Music: The Key Concepts, media academic Roy Shuker states that "Grunge represented the mainstreaming of the North American indie rock ethic and style of the 1980s", going on to explain that a band's status as independent became "As much a marketing device as [indie rock and alternative rock were an] identifiable 'sound'".[36] In the wake of this increased attention, indie rock experienced a split: accessible bands who catered to the now-popular alternative rock radio; and bands who continued to experiment, advancing in the underground.[15] According to AllMusic, it was during this split that "indie rock" solidified itself as a term for the style of music played by these underground artists, while the mainstream indie rock-influenced bands became termed alternative rock.[1]

Slowcore developed in the United States as a direct counterpoint to the rapid growth of grunge.[37] Although loosely defined, slowcore generally includes slow tempos, minimalist instrumentals and sad lyrics.[38] Galaxie 500, particularly their second album On Fire (1989), were heavy influences on the genre,[39][40] with Bandcamp Daily writer Robert Rubsam, calling them the "fountainhead for all that would come".[41] The first wave of bands in the genre included Red House Painters, Codeine, Bedhead, Ida and Low. The genre originated from around the United States, with no geographic focus, and very little interaction between its artists.[41]

A younger subset of grebo bands emerged around 1991, who were in turn labelled "fraggle" bands.[42] During this movement, the dominant sound was a style of indie rock that was heavily indebted to punk and Nirvana's album Bleach album, while also occasionally making use of drum machines.[43] Gigwise writer Steven Kline described the style as "filthy guitars, filthier hair and t-shirts only a mother would wash". Prominent fraggle acts included Senseless Things, Mega City Four and Carter the Unstoppable Sex Machine.[43]

Pavement singer/guitarist Stephen Malkmus

Spin writer Charles Aaron described Pavement and Guided by Voices as "the two bands that came to exemplify indie rock in this period, and still define the term in many people's minds". Both bands made use of a Lo-fi production style which romanticised their D.I.Y. ethos.[44] Pavement's 1992 album Slanted and Enchanted, was one of the defining slacker rock albums of the slacker rock subgenre.[45] Rolling Stone called the album "the quintessential indie rock album", placing it on the magazine's list of the 500 greatest albums of all time.[46]

In the North Carolina Research Triangle, an indie rock scene was being spearheaded by groups enfranched Merge Records like Superchunk, Archers of Loaf and Polvo. describing a growing scene of indie-rock bands who were influenced by hardcore punk and post-punk.[47] At the time, publications such as Entertainment Weekly took to calling the college town of Chapel Hill the "next Seattle".[48][49] Superchunk's single "Slack Motherfucker" has also been credited by Columbia magazine with popularizing the "slacker" stereotype, and as a defining anthem of 90s indie rock.[50]

With the rise of Britpop, many of Britain's earlier indie rock bands fell into obscurity.[51] Fronted by Blur, Oasis, Pulp and Suede,[52] the bands in the movement were advertised as being underground artists, as a means to compete commercially with the United States' grunge scene.[53] While Britpop was stylistically indebted to indie rock and began as an offshoot of it, Britpop bands abandoned the genre's earlier anti-establishment politics and instead brought it into the mainstream, with bands like Blur and Pulp even signing to major labels. In her essay Labouring the Point? The Politics of Britain in "New Britain", politician and academic Rupa Huq states that Britpop "began as an offshoot of the independent British music scene but arguably ended up killing it, as a convergence took place between indie and mainstream, removing the distinctive 'protest' element of British-based independent music"[6] Music journalist John Harris has suggested that Britpop began when Blur's fourth single "Popscene" and Suede's debut "The Drowners" were released around the same time in the spring of 1992. He stated, "[I]f Britpop started anywhere, it was the deluge of acclaim that greeted Suede's first records: all of them audacious, successful and very, very British."[54] Suede were the first of the new crop of guitar-orientated bands to be embraced by the UK music media as Britain's answer to Seattle's grunge sound. Their debut album Suede for the fastest-selling debut album in the UK.[55]

Diversification

On Sunny Day Real Estate's debut album Diary (1994), began a new wave of the emo genre, by incorporating elements of it into their indie rock sound.[56] Sunny Day Real Estate and other second wave emo bands, including Piebald, the Promise Ring and Cap'n Jazz distanced emo from its hardcore roots and allowed the genre to develop a much more realised scene than its first wave.[57] This style of emo broke into mainstream culture in the early 2000s, with the platinum-selling success of Jimmy Eat World's Bleed American (2001) and Dashboard Confessional's The Places You Have Come to Fear the Most (2001).[58] One particularly notable scene during this wave was the Midwest emo bands of the latter half of the decade, who incorporated the jangly guitar tones of earlier indie rock and elements of math rock to create the distinctive style of groups like American Football.[57] The popularity of emo, also allowed a number of "not-quite-indie-not-quite-emo" bands like Death Cab For Cutie, Modest Mouse and Karate to gain significant attention.[59]

The loosely defined Elephant 6 collective – which included the Apples in Stereo, Beulah, Circulatory System, Elf Power, the Minders, Neutral Milk Hotel, of Montreal and the Olivia Tremor Control – merged indie rock with psychedelic pop. Gimme Indie Rock author Andrew Earles stated that the collective, namely Neutral Milk Hotel on On Avery Island (1996), "helped keep the genre artistically relevant while other bands defected and other underground styles rose to prominence".[60][61]

Indie electronic or indietronica[62] covers rock-based artists who share an affinity for electronic music, using samplers, synthesizers, drum machines, and computer programs.[63] Less a style and more a categorization, it describes an early 1990s trend of acts who followed in the traditions of early electronic music (composers of the BBC Radiophonic Workshop), krautrock and synth-pop.[63] Progenitors of the genre were English bands Disco Inferno, Stereolab, and Space.[63] Most musicians in the genre can be found on independent labels like Warp, Morr Music, Sub Pop or Ghostly International.[63]

Space rock took the psychedelic rock, ambient music influence of Pink Floyd and Hawkwind and incorporated them into an indie rock context. The style began with Spacemen 3 in the 1980s, with later groups including Spiritualized, Flying Saucer Attack, Godspeed You! Black Emperor and Quickspace.[64]

As Britpop waned towards the end of the decade, post-Britpop took hold within the UK's indie rock scene.[65] From about 1997, as dissatisfaction grew with the concept of Cool Britannia and Britpop as a movement began to dissolve, emerging bands began to avoid the Britpop label while still producing music derived from it.[66][67][67] After the decline of Britpop they began to gain more critical and popular attention.[66] The Verve's album Urban Hymns (1997) was a worldwide hit and their commercial peak before they broke up in 1999, while Radiohead – although having achieved moderate recognition with The Bends in 1995 – achieved near-universal critical acclaim with their experimental third album OK Computer (1997), and its follow-ups Kid A (2000) and Amnesiac (2001).[68] Stereophonics, used elements of a post-grunge and hardcore on their breakthrough albums Word Gets Around (1997) and Performance and Cocktails (1999), before moving into more melodic territory with Just Enough Education to Perform (2001) and subsequent albums.[69][70] Feeder, who were initially more influenced by American post-grunge, producing a hard rock sound that led to their breakthrough single "Buck Rogers" and the album Echo Park (2001).[71] After the death of their drummer Jon Lee, they moved to a more reflective and introspective mode on Comfort in Sound (2002), their most commercially successful album to that point, which spawned a series of hit singles.[72] The most commercially successful band in the millennium were Coldplay, whose first two albums Parachutes (2000) and A Rush of Blood to the Head (2002) went multi-platinum, establishing them as one of the most popular acts in the world by the time of their third album X&Y (2005).[73][74] Snow Patrol's "Chasing Cars" (from their 2006 album Eyes Open) is the most widely played song of the 21st century on UK radio.[75]

Mainstream success: 2000s–present

Post-punk and garage rock revival

The Strokes are one of the most influential bands to indie rock in the 2000s

The mainstream attention which indie rock garnered in the 2000s began with the Strokes and their 2001 debut album Is This It. Playing a style indebted to 1970s bands like the Velvet Underground and the Ramones, the band's intention musically was to sound like "a band from the past that took a time trip into the future to make their record."[76] The album peaked at number thirty-three in the United States, staying in the charts for two additional years and debuted at number two on the UK albums chart.[76][77] When the Strokes made their commercial debut, the public perception of "rock music" was based in post-grunge, nu metal and rap rock, putting their throwback style of garage rock as a stark contrast to the mainstream. The band's immediate influence allowed fellow classic rock influenced New York bands like the Yeah Yeah Yeahs, Interpol and TV on the Radio to gain mainstream attention.[78] The Strokes were accompanied in this commercial breakthrough by the White Stripes, the Vines, and the Hives. These groups were christened by parts of the media as the "The" bands, and dubbed "the saviours of rock 'n' roll",[79] prompting Rolling Stone magazine to declare on its September 2002 cover, "Rock is Back!"[80]

The Libertines were described by AllMusic as "one of the U.K.'s most influential 21st century acts"

The success of the Strokes revitalised the then-dying underground post-Britpop scene in the United Kingdom with groups who took the band's influence and experimented with their sound. This first wave of UK acts included Franz Ferdinand, Kasabian, Maxïmo Park, the Cribs, Bloc Party, Kaiser Chiefs and the Others.[81] However, the Libertines, who formed in 1997, stood as the UK's counterpoint to the Strokes, being described by AllMusic as "one of the U.K.'s most influential 21st century acts"[82] and the Independent stating that "the Libertines wanted to be an important band, but they could not have predicted the impact they would have".[83] Influenced by the Clash, the Kinks, the Smiths and the Jam,[82] the band's style of tinny, high register, sometimes acoustic, guitar parts topped by lyrics of British parochial pleasures in the vocalists' authentic English accents became widely imitated.[83] The Fratellis, the Kooks, and the View were three such acts to gain significant commercial success, although the most prominent post-Libertines band was Sheffield's Arctic Monkeys.[83] One of the earliest groups to owe their initial commercial success to the use of Internet social networking,[84] the Arctic Monkeys had two No. 1 singles, and their album Whatever People Say I Am, That's What I'm Not (2006) became the fastest-selling debut album in British chart history.[85]

In this success, legacy indie bands soon entered the mainstream,[86] including Modest Mouse (whose 2004 album Good News for People Who Love Bad News reached the US top 40 and was nominated for a Grammy Award), Bright Eyes (who in 2004 had two singles at the top of the Billboard magazine Hot 100 Single Sales)[87] and Death Cab for Cutie (whose 2005 album Plans debuted at number four in the US, remaining on the Billboard charts for nearly one year and achieving platinum status and a Grammy nomination).[88] This new commercial breakthrough and the widespread use of the term indie to other forms of popular culture, led a number of commentators to suggest that indie rock had ceased to be a meaningful term.[89][90]

Additionally, a second wave of bands emerged in the United States that managed to gain international recognition as a result of the movement included the Black Keys, Kings of Leon, the Shins, the Bravery, Spoon, the Hold Steady, and the National.[58] The most commercially successful band of this wave was Las Vegas' the Killers. Formed in 2001, after hearing Is This It, the band scrapped the maojority of their prior material to rewrite it under the Strokes' influence.[91] The band's debut single "Mr. Brightside" spent 260 non-consecutive weeks, or five years, on the UK Singles Chart as of April 2021, the most out of any song,[92][93] and As of 2017, it had charted on the UK Singles Chart in 11 of the last 13 years,[94] including a 35-week run peaking at number 49 in 2016–2017.[95] Furthermore, it was the UK's most streamed pre-2010 song, until it was surpassed in late 2018,[96] and continued to be purchased for download hundreds of times a week by 2017.[97] In March 2018, the song reached the milestone of staying in the Top 100 of the UK Singles Chart for 200 weeks.[97]

Proliferation

The Arctic Monkeys are one of the most commercially successful indie rock bands

The impact of the Strokes, the Libertines and Bloc Party led to significant major label interest in indie rock artists, which was then exacerbated by the success of the Arctic Monkeys. In the years following Whatever People Say I Am, That's What I'm Not there was a proliferation of bands such as the Rifles, the Pigeon Detectives and Milburn, who created a more formulaic derivative of the earlier acts.[98][99] By the end of the decade, critics had taken to referring to this wave of acts as "landfill indie",[100][81][101] a description coined by Andrew Harrison of the Word magazine.[102] A 2020 Vice article cited Johnny Borrell, vocalist of Razorlight, as the "one man who defined, embodied and lived Landfill Indie" due his forming of a "spectacularly middle-of-the-road" band despite his close proximity to the Libertines' "desperate kinetic energy, mythologised love-hate dynamic and vision of a dilapidated Britain animated by romance and narcotics".[98] In a 2009 article for the Guardian, journalist Peter Robinson cited the landfill indie movement as dead, blaming the Wombats, Scouting For Girls, and Joe Lean & the Jing Jang Jong by stating "If landfill indie had been a game of Buckaroo, those three sent the whole donkey's arse of radio-friendly mainstream guitar band monotony flying high into the air, legs flailing."[103]

There continued to be commercial successes like Kasabian's Velociraptor! (2011) and Arctic Monkeys's Suck It and See (2011), which reached number one in the UK,[104] and Arcade Fire's The Suburbs (2010), the Black Keys's Turn Blue (2014), Kings of Leon's Walls (2016), the Killers's Wonderful Wonderful (2017), which reached number one on the Billboard charts in the United States and the official chart in the United Kingdom, with Arcade Fire's album winning a Grammy for Album of The Year in 2011.[105]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b "Indie rock", AllMusic, archived from the original on January 5, 2011.
  2. ^ a b S. Brown and U. Volgsten, Music and Manipulation: on the Social Uses and Social Control of Music (Berghahn Books, 2006), ISBN 1-84545-098-1, p. 194.
  3. ^ "Indie Rock – Significant Albums, Artists and Songs – AllMusic". AllMusic.
  4. ^ S. T. Erlewine, "American Alternative Rock / Post Punk", in V. Bogdanov, C. Woodstra and S. T. Erlewine, All Music Guide to Rock: the Definitive Guide to Rock, Pop, and Soul (Milwaukee, WI: Backbeat Books, 3rd edn., 2002), ISBN 0-87930-653-X, pp. 1344–6.
  5. ^ Luvaas, Brent (2012). DIY Style Fashion, Music and Global Digital Cultures. Bloomsbury Publishing.  In the UK, on the other hand, indie was used as a descriptive moniker from the mid- 1980s onwards, largely among industry insiders and journalists (Wendy Fonarow, personal communication, 2011). It referred, ostensibly, to the independent status of a band's record label, but also to something of its general sensibility, a preferencing of earlier aesthetics of pop rooted in the folksier, less improvisational genres of garage and psychedelic rock. As in the United States, it was a largely white, middle-class phenomenon, rooted in a nostalgia for an imagined, pre-corporate past (Hesmondhalgh 1999; Fonarow 2006), when there was still some aspect of everyday life as of yet outside the commodity system. In the UK, it could have been The Smiths or The Stone Roses who deserve to be called the first genuine indie rock bands, groups with a throwback 1960s sound and a fey, bookish disposition.
  6. ^ a b Huq, Rupa (April 15, 2016). Labouring the Point? The Politics of Britain in "New Britain". Taylor & Francis. p. 93. If we take the definition of indie proposed by Bannister of 'small groups of white men playing guitars, influenced by punks and 1960s white pop/rock, within a broader discourse and practice of (degrees of) independence from mainstream musical values', much of its content applies to Britpop... Early 1980s indie was not only, as Bannister notes, self-positioned away from mainstream music industry values, but often had an anti-government orientation... This oppositional element was largely missing from Britpop. Although some Britpop acts were on independent labels (for example, Oasis were signed to Creation), most were signed to mainstream labels, be they offshoots of majors (such as Blur on Food/EMI) or medium-sized companies (Pulp on Island). In some ways Britpop was indie's nemesis. It began as an offshoot of the independent British music scene but arguably ended up killing it, as a convergence took place between indie and mainstream, removing the distinctive 'protest' element of British-based independent music.
  7. ^ Barker, Nicola (October 20, 2020). Nicola Barker Critical Essays. As Wendy Fonarow argues, a tension between a puritan ethos (representing an austere aesthetics and ethics) and a romantic one (flamboyant and eccentric) has come to define indie music as a genre (Fonarow, 2006). This is mirrored in the genre's identity tug-of-war between a communal and individualist ethos. There is perhaps also a distinction to be made between an American brand of lo-fi indie bands for whom anti-virtuosity and non-style are badges of sincerity and authenticity, on the one hand, and the flamboyant performativity of Britpop indie bands like Pulp and Blur, on the other.
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  9. ^ Harding, Cortney (October 13, 2007). "UpFront: The Indies – Where the Girls Aren't: Why Aren't More Women Running Indie Labels". Billboard.
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  12. ^ Gordon, Alastair; Dines, Mike; Guerra, Paula; Bestley, Russ (February 15, 2021). Trans-Global Punk Scenes The Punk Reader Volume 2 · Volume 2. Dunedin, the second-largest city in the South Island after Christchurch, known for its geographical isolation, Scottish heritage and Gothic architecture, 'in a very good way' (Chapman 2016: 13), would become famous for the 'Dunedin Sound'. The term 'refers loosely to the output of a number of acts affiliated with the Flying Nun label during the 1980s, whose legacy is celebrated among indie rock circles internationally' (Wilson and Holland 2018: 69). The Dunedin Sound produced bands such as the Chills and the Clean and many others emerged due to 'much intermingling of artists, with group members often moving from one group to another or playing for several groups at one time' (McLeay 1994: 38). While the Dunedin Sound was predominately associated with indie rock, Aotearoa has since produced diverse bands, such as the Datsuns, Suburban Reptiles and Die! Die! Die! that encompass a mix of genres, such as rock, punk and post-punk respectively.
  13. ^ Bannister, Matthew. "Anything Could Happen - Flying Nun History 1980-1995". Under the Radar. Archived from the original on October 28, 2017. Retrieved February 13, 2021.
  14. ^ a b Matthew Bannister (2013). White Boys, White Noise: Masculinities and 1980s Indie Guitar Rock. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. p. 87. ISBN 978-1-4094-9374-7. If early indie's biggest bands were jangle pop groups like R.E.M. and The Smiths, then their relative success made them and similar groups no longer indie - in order to go on being different, the style had to go on remaining different from the mainstream. As the 1980s progressed, Flying Nun bands tended towards a slower, more hypnotic feel, increased use of the 'wall of guitars, more distortion, more aggression and a generally 'darker", gloomier, more 'rock' sound, contemporaneous with the increasing influence of groups like The Jesus and Mary Chain and Sonic Youth. The Jean-Paul Sartre Experience typify this progression, initially experimenting with pop and soul styles before settling into the classic indie mould.
  15. ^ a b "College rock", Allmusic, archived from the original on December 29, 2010.
  16. ^ Taylor, Steve (September 27, 2006). The A to X of Alternative Music. Bloomsbury Academic. p. 129. There was nothing going on in the British music scene in 1984. Even the new romantic scene was dying a slow and painful death. Howard Jones, Eurythmics and Nik Kershaw were the bright new pop things and as far as the indie scene was concerned, it started and ended with the Smiths. American bands led by REM and the Paisley Underground scene were clearing up on the gig circuit and in the music press.
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    By the mid-'80s, the raw sprawl of post-hardcore "underground rock" was coalescing, and after R.E.M.'s success, a number of bands started to think they could also buy in. Major-label reps were showing more interest... Still, in 1985, the most incorrigibly ill-behaved rock band in America, Minneapolis' the Replacements, signed to Sire and released their major-label debut, Tim, a perfectly ragged collection of anthemic pleas written by singer/guitarist Paul Westerberg... Former hardcore punks Hüsker Dü (Minneapolis natives like the Replacements) recorded their major-label debut, Candy Apple Grey, for Warner Bros., a ten-song stunner of punk-pop head trips, but it never earned a nod from commercial radio. The moment's hopeful ambition faded...
    As major labels moved on to hump the L.A. hair-metal ass party, underground rockers began to lose their craving for mainstream validation. The new role models became uncompromising label owners like Greg Ginn of Southern California's SST, and Ian MacKaye of Washington, D.C.'s Dischord. SST, which had started in the late '70s with Ginn's pioneering Black Flag, was a relentless force, signing up the most significant underground bands of the early to mid-'80s, including Minutemen, Hüsker Dü, Meat Puppets, Sonic Youth, Dinosaur Jr....
    As this shift took place in the underground scene, a new tag for the music began to crop up: "indie rock"... Unrest mixed winsome, strummy love songs with a brash, pop-culture irony that would later become a defining indie-rock trait
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  26. ^ Lashua, Brett; Spracklen, Karl; Yavuz, M. Selim; Wagg, Stephen (October 24, 2018). Sounds and the City Volume 2 · Volume 2. Springer Publishing. p. 305. The 'Madchester' scene was defined by what Redhead describes as 'hedonism in hard times' (1993). The emphasis was on partying in the post-industrial, 'no future' city. At the centre of this partying was the newly arrived drug, ecstasy (3,4-methylenedioxymethamphetamine or MDMA). The 'spectacular' drug taking of Happy Mondays and the ravers of Manchester's club culture were part of the fuel that sparked nationwide moral panics and the subsequent regulation of 'rave' lifestyles (culminating in the 1994 Criminal Justice Act). Sarah Champion, Manchester-based music journalist during the Madchester era, summarised Madchester in the following way, 'White scallies put down guitars, picked up the groove. Indie bands released 12 inchers; clubs spun rock tunes. Happy Mondays' "Hallelujah", The Stone Roses' "Fools Gold"....' (1992: 41), and acknowledges ecstasy, which induces euphoria, empathy and heightened sensations, as being a centrally important driving force behind the Madchester scene, and highlights the fusion of 'indie' rock music with dance music.
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