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Lo-Fi Hip-Hop
Browse through some random list of recommended lo-fi hip-hop albums. You'll notice a few things. You're likely to see a picture of some cute anime character focusing on something, most likely homework. You'll also see a list of titles from producers that you'd likely love but have just as likely never heard of.
Lo-fi hip-hop might be the most listened-to genre that no one actually listens to. It's the stuff of playlists, made to soundtrack all of life's demands. It's music for relaxing, for studying, for coding, for creating spreadsheets.
How you feel about lo-fi hip-hop will likely depend on how much content and context you like your music to have. At its core, lo-fi hip-hop is the ambient music of the 2010s, Music For Airports for bored, stressed college students and overworked office drones. If you're someone who responds to a strong narrative in your music, who looks for the human interest in the pop songs you sing along to, the punk anthems you pump your fist to, odds are very good you'll hate lo-fi.
Lo-fi hip-hop is also unusual in that it doesn't really have superstars. Some credit MF Doom's iconic Madvillainy. The real superstar of blurry, fuzzy hip-beats sans vocals, it would be YouTube user ChilledCow, who brought the genre to prominence when the streaming service began offering their live streaming option.
So here we have a genre created by curators just as much as creators, that sounds nice but is weirdly vacuous when you really boil down to it. Is lo-fi hip-hop the ultimate ambient music? Or is it empty musical calories? How you listen to music and what you use it for will be the judge of that.
Chillwave
Probably the most established of the various chill genres, chillwave's also probably the most popular, so it's one of the first to spring to mind when people hear the term. Perhaps fittingly, for a genre that got its start on the Internet, the term chillwave started out as a joke. It started with an anonymous blogger, writing under the name Carles for the blog Hipster Runoff, started throwing around silly genre names.
Chillwave ended up catching on in 2010, in earnest, when major publications like The Wall Street Journal and The New York Times wrote pieces mentioning the genre. It became shorthand for a particularly strange, hard-to-pin-down blend of shoegaze-y, dreamy indie pop melded with various styles of underground dance music.
Some chillwave artists, such as Neon Indian, doesn't sound that dissimilar to indie rock in the 2010s. In many ways, chillwave is the independent rock of the second decade of the 21st Century. Independent music has always taken sounds from the reigning sonic zeitgeist of the moment. As a generation of independent musicians came of age, having cut their teeth of classic rock, artful '80s synthpop and plastic funk, and the somber earnestness of '90s and early '00s indie, the birth of chilllwave was perhaps inevitable.
Some popular chillwave artists, like Washed Out, Toro Y Moi, or Memory Tapes, are essentially ambassadors for other underground genres, like Alt R&B, neo-psychedelia, or even experimental, theoretical genres like hauntology or vaporwave. Chillwave is the sound of deep listening, of hard drives packed to the last byte with music from throughout time and all over the Earth. Decades of access to basically every sound ever laid to acetate was bound to have some sort of effect. We just didn't predict how weird, wild, and woozy it would sound.
The Case For And Against Chill
We've already mentioned some of the arguments that folks have made for and against various mellow musical genres, particularly chillwave and lo-fi hip-hop. The most famous analysis would be the New Yorker article " Against Chill: Apathetic Music To Make Spreadsheets To. " Author and musicologist Amanda Petrutisch, with her lifelong obsession over the value of musical artifacts, is no doubt appalled at lo-fi hip-hop's lack of caloric content. While listening to some lo-fi playlists during one of her classes, Petrusich wrote down some of her associations, listening to the genre. "Koi pond, medical grade Marijuana, boutique hotel, hot-stone massage, European airplane, cool dentist."
She goes on to discuss the word 'chill' itself, as we did at the top of this article, trying to find the heart and soul of indie chill. There isn't much of one, according to Petrusich. "These days, to describe someone as “chill” is to propose that they’re slightly apathetic, but in a delightfully easygoing way. The rise of chill as an aspirational state suggests that perhaps the best thing to feel is not much at all."
Anyone who's spent any time on online dating apps has no doubt come across these modern Bodhisattvas, those describing themselves, as well as potential partners, as "looking for someone chill." That's a nice way of hinting that they won't catch feelings, that they're down for whatever, no matter what.
If you've ever dated anybody, you most likely recognize how challenging it would be to legitimately pull that off. You might even wonder if that's a good thing to aspire to at all? Yet we can't help but think of the phrase, "Don't hate the player, hate the game."
Can we really blame folks for feeling burned out, tired, stressed, possibly pessimistic, certainly guarded? When even true love is replaceable at the push of a button, when we're working 60 - 70 hours a week just to pay rent and, hopefully, get a little food?
On one hand, indie chill is the sound of late-stage capitalism, triumphant. It's the sound of people working themselves tirelessly to the bone, trying to pull themselves up by the bootstraps while the ground's disappearing beneath their feet.
It's not up to us to decide if a genre's inspirations or motivations are valid. People are gonna do what they're gonna do. At We Are: The Guard, it's our job to find what people are listening to, perhaps speculating a bit here and there as far as why. Mostly, it's our job to sift through what's out there, the playlists and music videos, new album releases and social media feeds, sifting through the detritus and bringing you the best indie chill songs we can find.