Existing scholarship considering the relationship between “DIY” music and popular music has tended to focus on how and why the former differs from the latter. This paper generates new insights into the specific character of DIY music by inverting that focus, asking instead, why is DIY quite so similar to popular music? I stress the under-acknowledged similarities between the “core units” of popular music culture and DIY music in order to theorise their relationship as fundamentally ambivalent. I then apply this theoretical framework across three historical case studies – UK post-punk, US post-hardcore indie, and riot grrrl
Purpose – The aim of this paper is to examine the impact of the digital culture on the music industr...
There is a growing awareness around the world of the pressing need to archive the material remnants ...
Punk has come a long way from its prematurely declared death in the early-1980s to being not-so-dead...
DIY (“do-it-yourself”) music is a cultural form which, following in the footsteps of punk, has histo...
This article presents some notes towards identifying what we have come to call 'DIY institutions': p...
The purpose of this research paper is to discover the motivations behind do-it-yourself (DIY) artist...
Charges of “selling out” and debates about the boundaries of cultural autonomy have played a pivotal...
This article examines the do-it-yourself (DIY) punk movement from 1974-1984 through the context of ’...
Background: Within the body of literature on do-it-yourself (DIY) music scenes, researchers have rou...
The overall aim of this paper is to aid the DIY artist to move towards self-sufficiency through the ...
In this article I explore the ‘unofficial’ (and technically illegal) compiling of marginally known ...
This qualitative study examines the production of cultural memory within current or recently active...
Adorno & Horkheimer (1998) argue that the Culture Industry generates cultural artefacts that fail to...
"This article examines the relationship between the practices of do-it-yourself (DIY) micro-independ...
A fast expanding network of DIY music communities in the UK see digital technologies transforming wa...
Purpose – The aim of this paper is to examine the impact of the digital culture on the music industr...
There is a growing awareness around the world of the pressing need to archive the material remnants ...
Punk has come a long way from its prematurely declared death in the early-1980s to being not-so-dead...
DIY (“do-it-yourself”) music is a cultural form which, following in the footsteps of punk, has histo...
This article presents some notes towards identifying what we have come to call 'DIY institutions': p...
The purpose of this research paper is to discover the motivations behind do-it-yourself (DIY) artist...
Charges of “selling out” and debates about the boundaries of cultural autonomy have played a pivotal...
This article examines the do-it-yourself (DIY) punk movement from 1974-1984 through the context of ’...
Background: Within the body of literature on do-it-yourself (DIY) music scenes, researchers have rou...
The overall aim of this paper is to aid the DIY artist to move towards self-sufficiency through the ...
In this article I explore the ‘unofficial’ (and technically illegal) compiling of marginally known ...
This qualitative study examines the production of cultural memory within current or recently active...
Adorno & Horkheimer (1998) argue that the Culture Industry generates cultural artefacts that fail to...
"This article examines the relationship between the practices of do-it-yourself (DIY) micro-independ...
A fast expanding network of DIY music communities in the UK see digital technologies transforming wa...
Purpose – The aim of this paper is to examine the impact of the digital culture on the music industr...
There is a growing awareness around the world of the pressing need to archive the material remnants ...
Punk has come a long way from its prematurely declared death in the early-1980s to being not-so-dead...