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bpavuk | 7 days ago
on both music fests, I was in flow. I've been dancing - it's a usual thing all humans naturally do when they hear rhythm that resonates with them unless they consciously resist dancing for one reason or another. though, this time, no one joined me. people just made space around me and pointed their cameras at me, which created a ton of unease and I eventually stopped. it was enough to get viral in local Telegrams, but I had no joy in that. in the moment, I wanted to shout, "duh, why aren't you all dancing? put down your goddamn cameras, you can always scroll later!"
phones, primarily due to their current addictive implementation, are such a killjoy. I hope that one day, devices like Clicks Communicator will change this.
brabel|7 days ago
microtonal|7 days ago
I also don't really understand what the point of constantly filming is. Some groups regularly put high-quality concerts on Youtube [1], so if you want to re-experience a similar concert afterwards you can.
I guess it's more about documenting your life's story on socials. But what's the point of documenting the life that you don't really live?
Some artists (e.g. John Zorn) forbid filming, which is IMO the best way to go. It's all about experiencing it in the moment.
[1] Bands like King Gizzard and the Lizard Wizard even put pretty much every concert online now in full 4K, professionally filmed glory.
surgical_fire|7 days ago
When I went to concerts it was heavy metal.
No one was dancing. Unless you consider banging heads a form of dancing. People did sing along though.
Last concerts I went to (respectively 2019 and 2024, I don't go to many concerts nowadays) people mostly behaved as they did in the past. Only a few were filming the concert with their cellphones, but this was definitely the minority.
I don't live in the US. Maybe this is a bit of cultural differences in terms of geography and in terms of demographic for the genre?
wolvoleo|7 days ago
I certainly would. It's just the style of dancing with heavy metal.
bpavuk|7 days ago
> No one was dancing. Unless you consider banging heads a form of dancing. People did sing along though.
my point is that people were engaging and interacting with and within music, not observing and recording it for the sake of internet points. so, yeah, in this context...
> banging heads
...is definitely a form of "dancing" :D
I mostly went to EDM, raves, and pop concerts. there, dancing is a lot more appropriate and welcome :)
> I don't live in the US. Maybe this is a bit of cultural differences in terms of geography and in terms of demographic for the genre?
me neither, but I observed this in Ukraine and (through friends and acquaintances) Poland, US, and Russia. something definitely shifted
hahn-kev|7 days ago
But man that sucks, there should be a phone free zone in the concert.
wink|7 days ago