Why Electronic Dance Music Sucks Donkey Ass

Why Electronic Dance Music Sucks Donkey Ass

Ladies and gentlemen of the Greek community, we are in the midst of a horrific plague. No, I’m not talking about a repeat of the ‘09 herpes scare that left your house in nervous and itchy shambles (for future reference: sometimes it’s only a swarm of bed bugs getting a little too friendly). And for once, believe it or not, I’m not even speaking of about the endless scourge of vocal young liberals who plan to regurgitate their agendas until every privately owned weapon in the country is replaced with a sticky grape flavored blunt.

No my friends, this fast-spreading epidemic has nothing to do with genitalia or politics. This column is about a genre of music that is sweeping the ecstasy craving youth of America into a laser lit tornado. Today, we’re going to examine a few reasons this sweeping new craze of Electronic Dance Music is ruining the state of modern music one grueling fax machine squeal at a time.

Idiotic DJ Names

While this may not be the case for all of our readers, here in Florida it seems a new popular EDM “artist” springs up damn near every day. What do all of these goofy mismatches of humanity have in common? Besides the basic understanding of a computer program, these guys all seem to be have names that sound straight out of your neighborhood porn shop’s buttplug aisle.

You might think I’m just exaggerating this fact, but since you guys know I love lists, I’d like to show you just how right I am. Here are a few “artists” with names that sound more like sex toys, and trust me when I say there are more where these came from: Afrojack, Breach, Max Enforcer, Excision, Dirtyphonics, Mr. Skeleton, Gigamesh, Delta Heavy.

Okay, fine. You can’t judge an entire genre just because of a few DJ’s whose names sound like particularly menacing dildos. Luckily, I’m just getting started.

Drugs Are The Only Reason It’s Popular

We’ve finally arrived at the core of the laughably pathetic EDM scene. While so many fans are in denial about this universal fact, all we need to do is look at the reality of the situation. If most fans can’t attend a concert without snorting, popping, and smoking as many drugs as their self-loathing bodies will allow, maybe the genre isn’t all that good to begin with?

Of course the music sounds good when the rims of your nostrils are lined with pure, crystallized MDMA. I could play “Gangnam Style” in a room full of Mollied up EDM fans, and by the second verse I guarantee each and every one of them would be having the time of their lives. By the end of the song I could probably convince them the song was actually a symbolic anthem regarding the struggle of a divided Korea. Do all the drugs you want, they can be a hell of a time, but don’t let those substances convince you that this music is any better than listening to a glorified Mrs. Pac Man soundtrack.

The Only Instrument Is A “Play” Button

Have you ever seen what an EDM performer actually looks like during a concert? Typically he’s out there having a hell of a time: clapping his hands, popping champagne, sometimes even grabbing a little boobage during an impromptu crowd surf. You know what all of these things have in common? Someone who was actually performing music for you couldn’t fucking do them.

While the degree of activity varies by which DJ you’re talking about, every single one has a full mix kit in front of him with turntables and all sorts of other technology lacking any real purpose. Even the guys who seem most into it probably just have their MacBook stored away in the cupboard below. There is no such thing as “live” EDM music; there are only psychedelic laser dance parties.

It’s Almost All The Same

This final and most important point is also the one that will surely rustle the most jimmies of the pro-EDM community. I can hear them already.

“No way man, you can’t compare someone like DJ Blue Waffle to DJ Calisthenics. That’s like comparing apples and oranges soaked in LSD!”

Easy there, champ. Your dopamine receptors might be fried from your biweekly snorting sprees, but let’s take an honest look at the music here. Every single song follows the exact same format. From the generic (typically) female vocal sample in each song’s beginning, to the inevitable drum-snare-highhat buildup just before the drop, it’s safe to say that the first 60 seconds of every EDM song are just about identical. By the time the drop hits (and the entire crowd’s drugs come kicking in) the only thing that matters is giving the audience a fat bass-line combined with sounds that makes it seem like the entire room is connecting to AOL Dial Up for the first time.

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  1. GoldCupFrat

    EDM is the tits, drugs are the tits, raging is the tits. Dear lord sir you failed miserably at this column. Go listen to your Pitbull and One Direction you fuckin queer.

    11 years ago at 5:53 pm
    1. DarthBro

      Do the drugs, champ. Don’t let the drugs do you. Also not sure how not liking EDM somehow means you like One Direction.

      11 years ago at 6:08 pm
    2. Okefenokee Joe

      Because if you don’t listen to hippy/heady anti-American EDM you automatically listen to Pitbull and One Direction?

      11 years ago at 6:20 pm
    3. GoldCupFrat

      I’m allowed to make ridiculous, misguided assumptions if the author of this column is allowed to make ridiculous, misguided assumptions. Feels like I’m reading a damn NY Times article.

      11 years ago at 7:22 pm
    4. Chest_Rockwell

      ^^ Just so you know, you sound like a douche when you say things like that

      11 years ago at 1:32 pm
    1. JohnFratYatesSommers

      You’re right, I haven’t done MDMA. I get blackout drunk to classic rock and country like a real person.

      11 years ago at 9:00 pm
    2. BigPurp10

      If you’ve never even tired it then how are you going to talk shit about it. You “real people” who get blackout drunk, be it at concerts or anywhere, cause a thousand times more problems than anyone who is on MDMA. And I’m wiling to bet my left nut that if you were open to the idea and not living in your “real person” bubble you actually might have some fun.

      11 years ago at 10:09 pm
    1. IFWT

      ^Agreed. It’s gotten so lazy since then. No talent or skill required to produce the music or write the lyrics.

      11 years ago at 5:18 pm
    2. Bourbon and Beer

      actually, there’s some really good rappers out there right now, they’re just not as well known as phaggots like lil wayne (ie Logic).

      11 years ago at 5:31 pm
    3. JMRSleep

      You’re clearly retarded if you think rap is headed in the negative direction. Rap was phenomenal in the 80’s and 90’s took a huge sh*t in the early 2000’s and is now on a recovery. Kendrick, Logic, Mac Miller, Big Sean, all these guys are light years away from guys like 50 cent or Mike Jones. Don’t talk out of your ass about a genre you know nothing about.

      11 years ago at 7:14 pm
    4. Beowolf

      ^ Mac Miller? You’re joking, right? That kid is fucking terrible. 50 cent is leagues ahead of that kid and always will be. Get Rich or Die Trying was an insanely good hip-hop album.

      11 years ago at 1:40 am
  2. JohnnieRobs

    WARNING: LONG WINDED, OPINIONATED COMMENT AGAINST A LONG WINDED OPINIONATED COLUMN AHEAD!!!
    As an avid “EDM” fan I can’t help to say that most of this is true…just like all other mainstream forms of any genre “sucks donkey ass” and can relate to all of the points. Rock and roll wouldn’t be what it was with out acid/coke/heroine/etc, rap without crack or weed, and country without tobacco, beer, and even weed. Obviously uninformed especially considering you contradict yourself by mentioning Dirtyphonics yet saying that there is no such thing as live EDM. There are many groups who perform with live instruments and full bands. Check out Zedd on Jimmy Fallon and Pretty Lights on Conan just to mention a few.

    11 years ago at 6:03 pm
    1. UNT_brotha2017

      not to mention the bloody beetroots doing their live sets, A -Trac keeping alive the old school style of vinyl mixing, and if you have ever heard of a launchpad, its a mixing machine that alot of artists use to do a bit more live stuff

      11 years ago at 2:15 pm