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Anti-folk has gone from an obscure New York City sub-genre to a vibrant, internationally recognized movement that has crossed into the mainstream through recording artists including Beck and Ani DiFranco, and popular films like Juno.
What is anti-folk?
While anti-folk may still be hard to define due to its constantly evolving nature, its roots are grounded in the socially conscious folk music of the 1960s and continue to revolve around singer-songwriters and predominately acoustic or experimental instrumentation.
Part punk, part folk, and part child-like wonder, anti-folk "officially" began in the mid 1980s when New York City singer-songwriter Lach was denied a show at Folk City when the owner decided his sound was "too punk" for the traditionally minded New York City folk scene.
Lach decided that there was an audience out there for his brand of music and began organizing shows later dubbed "anti-folk" at other East Village venues including the Fort and later the Sidewalk Café near Tompkins Square Park.
Over the two decades that followed, new artists would take his lead and create a style of music filled with irony, sarcasm, raw punk bravado and the art-school-confidence of post-punk, paired down and mixed together from a lo-fi perspective.
Basically, anti-folk encompasses the passionate songwriting and politically charged attitudes of early folk music with the raw aggression of punk, and often with a healthy dose of humor.
Where is the anti-folk scene now?
In the past decade anti-folk pioneers including Beck, Billy Bragg, and Ani DiFranco have found mainstream appeal that has transcended any anti-folk labels they were associated with earlier in their careers. The Sidewalk Café shows still exist and regularly host a number of established and emerging artists eager to explore what forms anti-folk will take next.
After so many years as a relatively small New York City scene, bands like the Moldy Peaches brought anti-folk into the mainstream media for the first time in years and reached millions of new listeners after several of their songs were featured on the Juno movie soundtrack, which reached #1 on the Billboard 200 Chart in 2008.
This huge level of exposure created a lot of buzz around the Moldy Peaches, who have been on hiatus since 2004, but other than cluing the world in on yet another New York City scene filled with passionate songwriters, art school students, and experimental performers - Top 40 commercial success has still eluded most anti-folk musicians.
Over the past few years, anti-folk has traveled outside of the East Village, spawning similar movements across the US and in UK as well as several independent record labels dedicated to the scene.
Other popular anti-folk artists include:
Jeffrey Lewis
Dufus
Regina Spektor
Langhorne Slim
Joie/Dead Blonde Girlfriend
Hamell On Trial
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