Musical collective
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Musical collective is a phrase used in reference to a leaderless entity that is predisposed to performing music that may be considered experimental. The sound becomes the focus, as opposed to having the outfit become a stepping stone for potential cynosures. Such entities have transitioned from the traditional hierarchical configuration that features either a frontman (e.g. The Cure's Robert Smith, or Trent Reznor of Nine Inch Nails), or a plurality of band members in tension for dominance (e.g. Louise Post & Nina Gordon of Veruca Salt, or The Beatles' John Lennon & Paul McCartney.) Collectives are seen as an alternative to more ego-driven, combative paradigms of group music-making.
Musical collectives allow for flexibility in their rosters. As such, most of the members are free to rotate in and out of the line-up.
[edit] List of Notable collectives
- Acappella
- Ambiances Magnétiques
- Animal Collective
- Bandits of the Acoustic Revolution
- Bomb The Music Industry
- Broken Social Scene
- Bugz in the Attic
- Chicago Afrobeat Project (CAbP)
- Diggin' in the Crates Crew
- Dufay Collective
- Early Day Miners
- Fence Collective
- F-IRE Collective
- The Elephant Six Collective
- Godspeed You! Black Emperor
- Ghetto Inmates
- Hieroglyphics
- In Support of Living
- Lansing-Dreiden
- Living Legends
- Ozomatli
- Piano Magic
- Silk Road Project
- Soulquarians
- Spitkicker
- Streetlight Manifesto
- The Desert Sessions
- The Mountain Goats
- The New Pornographers
- Reindeer Section
- Tanakh
- Arcade Fire
- The Cake Sale
- Trummerflora
- Willard Grant Conspiracy
- Wu-Tang Clan
[edit] See also
- Collective
- Leaderless resistance — Collectives often share the anarchic streak associated with such entities — without their malevolent tendencies.
[edit] External links
- All Inclusive CBC.ca examination of the proliferation of musical collectives
- Collective Souls This Magazine article on musical collectives