Dubstep: What the 99% Call Music

The other day I decided to be a little venturesome in my late night booze crawl. Instead of making my usual rounds at the bar scene across from campus, I was lured downtown by a friend of mine based on promises of scantily clad women and some “Drink Free Until Midnight Special.” Normally I’d brush the proposal off and stick to my guns of all you can drink wells, but for some reason I decided to take the leap of faith and stroll over to the other side of night life. For those of you who don’t know, Gainesville’s downtown is a clusterfuck of establishments which call themselves “clubs.” Now, when I think of clubs, the first thing that comes to mind is something a little more sophisticated than the first place I walked into. Instead of your run-of-the-mill loud house music and people sporting black in hopes of looking edgy, I was bombarded with lasers, glowsticks, and something that sounded like a fax machine was dry humping my bottomed out jet-ski. This assortment of ear-raping screeches and womps is apparently a new fad in music called dubstep,

On first listen, I thought that the sound system might have been to blame, as the place seemed more concerned with the 30×30 wall of pulsating lights and lasers than the actual noises coming out of the speakers from overhead. Sadly, I was wrong. Apparently what sounded to me like my computer taking a shit is what the kids are listening to now. By the way, the kids who are really into this stuff are the absolute worst. Ever consider throwing on a pair of ray bans without the lenses, sewing together whatever neon clothing you can find at goodwill and wearing skinny jeans before you go out? Didn’t think so. But the dubstep fanatics seem to think it’s the fucking innest and coolest. I actually looked into one of the “artists” who creates the stuff and goes by the stage name Skrillex. Never before have I seen a person who looked like the spawn of some demented hippy-goth-robot-three-way, until I googled Skrillex.

As I looked on in sheer confusion at what was going on in front of me, I could not help but think of my father’s stories of disco polluting the club scene when he was in college. However, those were just people who liked to dance and do coke. On the slide scale of awful, that doesn’t even touch the things I saw and heard that night.

“I’m rolling my face off bro!!!!”

“Did you hear that bass drop man?”

Instead of some light hearted dance music and a little blow, these kids are getting their thrills from guttural howls and whatever drugs hipsters do these days. To me it seems where disco died and decomposed, some parasitic demon crawled out of its remains and claimed to be music. That claim is fraudulent. In dubstep, there is no meaning, and there certainly is no soul.

I get that clubs need to play music you can dance to, however tweaking out on amphetamines and grind-fucking on the floor isn’t dancing at all. Even the mindless dance pop of the 90s was better than this crap clubs keep peddling. Furthermore, what happened to the great American rockbands that have simply disappeared? Who took the place of CCR and Skynyrd? I guess this generation decided that learning to play an instrument was too archaic and a computer program would suffice. If the direction of our youth is reflected in their musical choices, this country’s downward spiral just got a whole lot faster. Until there is a substantial switch, I’m sticking to the bars where people get drunk to have a good time under normal lighting and “FREEEEEEBIRRRDDDD!” is the only thing requested.

  1. Rageasaurus_KS

    fuck you. more comments than nice moves.. apparently blow is the only party drug? learn how to mix. obviously you dont know how to rage. try again you fuck. every school has at least 3 or more chapters that throw dubstep/house parties within the first few weeks. this includes some of the frattiest schools ive visited.

    13 years ago at 2:00 am
    1. ShooterMcGavin

      What is your argument here? Every school also has their share of shitty chapters, coincidentally they are probably the same ones that throw dub step house parties

      13 years ago at 10:57 am
  2. flounderOX

    I like the article and respect your point of view, yet I have to disagree. The sheer fact that you are arguing that Skynyrd (not Skynard, dipshit) and Creedence are all-American and wholesome and what everyone should listen to is preposterous. Don’t you know that rock n’ roll was criticized just as hard, and frankly much worse, than you just criticized dubstep? Sure, listening to dubstep while sober on your own sounds about as good as nails on a chalkboard. But I have found that dubstep escalates parties to a whole other level of fucked up. Its also great to listen to while wrecking shit.

    13 years ago at 2:14 am
  3. MM Sweetland

    I can’t believe some of the comments I am reading. I agree that to each their own, especially in the case of music, but fraternity men do not sway to this garbage. The “womp” and other dubstep bullshit I hear will never be considered part of the fraternity music genre. Fraternity life, as all of you know it, has refused to sway so I see no reason this bullshit “music genre” should change these rules.

    Y’all need to grow up. It is understandable to have a few good weekends listening to this trash while being high as all fuck, but a true fraternity man will not enlist this genre into his life. The music that makes our fraternity lifestyle, at this point, is not up for debate.

    Dubstep is not the next Beatles in terms of revolutionizing music. The only people I have heard that think otherwise, besides GDIs, are from fucking new members and pledges. Appreciate the fraternity lifestyle that is set before you, and ask your paternal fathers if they give a shit about this dumb fucking music. This shit is nothing and will be forever nothing in the eyes of real fraternity men. ITB.

    13 years ago at 2:34 am
    1. Swim in FRATatoriums

      And you’re a pretentious asshole. Someone said it earlier, but music is the least defining factor in the fraternal lifestyle. Get the giant stick out of your ass.

      13 years ago at 8:40 am
    2. Fratkha HMR

      ^It was “when defining a person.” but good try. The point is, that although dubstep is great for getting parties going, it will never replace CCR, OCMS, and the other classics as the “token” fraternity soundtrack. As long as the saying of my letters brings about images of good times fueled by beer and a mixture of classic rock and country, I see no problem with allowing dubstep to blast at ragers once in a while. ITB.

      13 years ago at 9:23 am
    3. That’s true, this guy^ but when I go to a club I don’t want to hear CCR or DMB. I love these bands but they aren’t raging music. There is a time and place for all types of genres

      13 years ago at 10:14 am
    4. Wings1240

      See now you say that we members said Fraternities have always cut our own path. If this is true, they why do so many people say that the only good music to listen to is popular music of the past. The point is no matter what you try to do, you will always follow someone else’s fad which makes all arguments of being one of our own invalid. If anything, you are making a new system to follow by stating you are a system on your own, that other Fraternal members should follow. It’s just a bit hypocritical is all I’m trying to say really.

      13 years ago at 12:32 pm
    5. Dukie5440

      @MM Sweetland. You’re living inside of a box man and your so called “fraternity man” thinking is completely ass backwards. The genre of fraternity music ranges from hip hop, to r&b, to rock, rap, country, etc… Just as many fraternity men of past generations wouldn’t give a shit about the type of music you enjoy today. Putting down a genre of music because your does not mesh with your personal preferences is ignorant. I sincerely hope your future occupation gets outsourced.

      13 years ago at 1:07 pm
  4. Frattery

    It’s not my cup of tea, but who gives a shit? It all sounds the same if you’re good and hammered

    13 years ago at 4:52 am
  5. Frocket Scientist

    It’s like weed. Never a problem to light up on occasion. But the damned 420, giggly, white-kids-worshipping-Bob-Marley sideshow ruins it.
    Same thing with dubstep. I never listen to it in my own time, but if it comes over the speakers, I won’t complain. And then someone in a neon scarf asks me if I like “that wobble, man” and I remember why my parents only listened to rock and roll.

    13 years ago at 5:12 am