| Noise
from Underground:
Pop Criticism and Cred in the Era of MP3s, Zines, and Blogs
March 29, 2005; 6:30 pm
Columbia University
Graduate School of Journalism Lecture Hall, Third Floor
116th Street and Broadway
Admission free
Streaming audio and MP3s are transforming pop music,
from indie-rock to hip hop. But what about those newly minted Web
zines, blogs, and alt glossies poking into every nook and cranny
of the music world? While the mainstream seems content to leaf through
Rolling Stone and channel surf from MTV to VH1, these do-it-yourself
publishing channels are busy creating a bewildering amount of chatter
about music and contemporary culture.
These days, every aspiring pop critic can create
his or her own soapbox. The resulting atmosphere is as fragmented
as it is high-speed: A blogger shows up at a club, orders a beer,
and reviews a show in real time. New trends break at a faster clip
than ever before. How can anyone keep up? And which critical voice
do you trust?
For the independent publisher, the zinester, the
online gawker, the vintage vinyl collector, or the unknown turntablist,
credibility remains the coin of the realm. Cred, after all, is what
makes the underground so underground. But do these new voices ever
permeate the mainstream? Are they gunning to take over? Are they
speaking a new language of pop criticism? Or merely talking among
themselves?
Bringing together writers, editors, and musicians,
“Noise from Underground” is a welcome conversation about
the present-day pop criticism whirlwind -- and whether cred is even
cool anymore.
Moderator: Sasha Frere Jones, pop
music critic, The New Yorker
Panelists: Watch for details on panel makeup, which
will include critics, ‘zine editors, bloggers, musicians and
observers both underground and mainstream.
For further information, see www.najp.org, or contact
the National Arts Journalism Program at 212-854-2549 or alc60@columbia.edu.
NAJP
: Panel
Discussions : Noise
from Underground |