'I want you to support local metal'

A theory of metal scene formation

Authors

  • Jeremy Wallach Bowling Green State University Author
  • Alexandra Levine Bowling Green State University Author

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/pomh.v6i1.116

Keywords:

heavy metal, musical performance, scene formation

Abstract

Much existing literature in metal studies contains an implicit theory of scene formation; the following article aims to articulate an explicit one. This theory is based primarily on ethnographic research on metal scenes in Jakarta, Indonesia, and Toledo, USA. These two field sites are quite dissimilar culturally, demographically, and geographically, yet their respective metal scenes share similar sets of concerns and values and even have contact with one another. Through the positing of four core functions of and six generalizations about metal scenes, the following essay considers artifactual circulation, institutional support, musical amateurism, boundary maintenance, generational succession, and specific stages of maturation as their essential features, whether they emerge in bustling, rapidly-industrializing Asian megalopolises; deindustrialized, depopulated cities in the Midwestern United States; or anywhere else on the planet. We end with a few provocative claims concerning metal’s uniqueness and an exhortation to a new generation of ethnographers to discover if these claims have empirical foundation.

Author Biographies

  • Jeremy Wallach, Bowling Green State University

    Jeremy Wallach is a cultural anthropologist, ethnomusicologist, and associate professor in the Department of Popular Culture at Bowling Green State University in Ohio, USA. He is the author of Modern Noise, Fluid Genres: Popular Music in Indonesia, 1997-2001 (2008) and co-editor of Metal Rules the Globe: Heavy Metal around the World (2011). He has written on an array of topics, including music and technology, music in Southeast Asia, world beat, punk, and metal and is currently at work on an edited collection of popular culture research.

  • Alexandra Levine, Bowling Green State University

    Alexandra Levine is a graduate of Bowling Green State University. She majored in Popular Culture with a minor in Theatre.

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Published

2012-05-14

Issue

Section

Countercultures

How to Cite

Wallach, J., & Levine, A. (2012). ’I want you to support local metal’: A theory of metal scene formation. Popular Music History, 6(1-2), 116-134. https://doi.org/10.1558/pomh.v6i1.116