AskTheMagic8Ball wrote:
the thing about the "waves" to me is that each represents when a particular sub-genre within ska got somewhat popular.
I'd encourage you to develop this line of reasoning under the new thread on waves of ska. Anyone thats been around ska for more than a year has strong opinions about this stuff.
aka_twitch wrote:
I'm seriously burned out on the term "ska-rock". We need to come up with a better term, because it's so bloody vague.
No argument there.
But this is a longstanding problem not unique to ska. What does "indie" really mean? Does "emo" really explain anything anymore? How about "modern rock"? Th expression "new wave" was once a catch-all for music that just didn't fit categories (and that just didn't seem "punk").
When I first started promoting ska, we used "3rd wave" as a catch-all for anything that couldn't be described any other way. That's how all the new ska bands got the label. There really was never a "3rd wave sound". Likewise, when I got serious about promoting ska in 2000, we were using "ska-punk" as a generic label for bands that weren't trad. That's really about all it meant. At least now we're differentiating between bands that mix ska and rock (ska-rock) and ska and punk (ska-punk).
But I really dislike how I struggle to label a ska band's sound and then they decide whatever pathetic label I gave them must be the best fit. I'm not a musician, nor do I have any serious musical training. I'm arguably one of the least qualified people to be labelling bands.
