So... Rock Is Dead?
New York magazine|May 15–28, 2017

No—it just moved to Canada. 

Frank Guan
So... Rock Is Dead?

WHERE ELSE can you go, if not New York? As the earlyaughts New York revival faded to static, the center of gravity in indie rock reverted to its default provincial location: somewhere in the countryside, but not too far away. Suburbs and campuses have always been the genre’s traditional spawning grounds: Even in the New York scene, schools provided a vital space for potential band members to coalesce. The Yeah Yeah Yeahs formed at Oberlin; an NYU philosophy course assisted in the creation of Interpol. The Strokes? Put in touch through a set of elite private high schools, plus NYU. Ultimately, though, the heart of indie music has traditionally resided outside New York. After the early-aughts rock boom went bust, that heart moved all the way out of America.

This story is from the May 15–28, 2017 edition of New York magazine.

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This story is from the May 15–28, 2017 edition of New York magazine.

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