- Joined
- Oct 1, 2014
Totally agreed, these were the points I was trying to make by defining them as regressive but I poorly worded my argument, so apologies. If anything deafeners are a poignant example of how we live in a time almost absent of a revolutionary youth subcultures, which I think is due in part to how the internet has arguably made all music mainstream by removing the boundaries of exclusion such as cost and location. I do still believe however that the development of deafeners is partly down to a reluctance of embracing progression in music, which follows a historical trend of hostility towards forms of dance music. Admittedly discussing how British music tabloids created a culture of "indie vs hip hop" in the late 80s / early 90s would have been a better example to base my argument on compared to the Disco Sucks movement due to the flaws which you correctly pointed out earlier.
I'm trying to think of newer subcultures that have sprung up and I'm coming up with obscure shit like sea punk and pastel goth and... whatever it is you call people who listen to vaporwave.
The rebellious subculture music has turned softer and less aggressive as rock music fans age.