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Scrunk happens

We're not fans, but the kids seem to like it
By LEOR GALIL  |  July 14, 2009

090710_brokencyde-mian
LCD SOUNDSYSTEM? brokeNCYDE's mixture of lowest common denominator screamo with misappropriated gangsterisms and garish emo fashion have drawn ire from the punk world.

You're traveling to another dimension, a dimension where the most detested trends in pop music combine to make a sound that teenagers cannot resist. Sure, the Warped Tour (which comes to the Comcast Center on Tuesday) isn't The Twilight Zone, but Rod Serling's taste for the absurd certainly fits well with this year's lineup. The tour's 15th year sees a large number of acts that have embraced a combination of minimalist Southern hip-hop, Auto-Tune croons, techno breakdowns, barked vocals, and party-til-you-puke poetics.

It's called scrunk, a bastardized combination of crunk and screamo, and it's the hottest thing since sliced bread joined Twitter. Chief among all the scrunk acts performing as part of the punk carnival is Albuquerque, New Mexico's brokeNCYDE, who have drawn considerable ire from the punk community and have ridden their infamy to #87 on the Billboard 200 with their debut album, I'm Not a Fan, But the Kids Like It! (Breaksilence). To the punk community, a genre like screamo had already hit rock bottom a few years ago, so the idea that a handful of kids would remix lowest-common-denominator screamo with crunk beats, misappropriated gangsterisms, and the extreme garishness of emo fashion was sure to incite hate-filled diatribes.

Musicians from Steve Albini to Thursday's Geoff Rickly trash them (there's even an awareness group named Mothers Against Brokencyde drumming up outrage), but the members of brokeNCYDE couldn't care less. "We don't care what people say," says vocalist Mikl on the phone from Utah. "All these critics are trying to bring us down, and yet we're selling a lot of copies of our music and that's because of our dedicated fans."

Carefree as Mikl may try to sound, he takes a defensive turn when it comes to how the band members are perceived as people. "We get this in interviews and other places all the time; that we're suburban kids, we're rich, we had it easy, our parents pay for everything, and it's the total opposite. We were raised the best that our parents could raise us, but there was times that we didn't have food, water, lights."

Yet, despite the various hardships the members of brokeNCYDE claim to have endured, it is by no leap of the imagination that people assume they're rich suburban kids with hot software. We need look no farther than their lyrics, which revel in the accoutrements of suburban comfort. Mikl states that the band writes about "everyday life." However, many of their rhymes come across as almost painfully juvenile attempts at plasticine gangsta rap, completely detached from the real: Put your hands down in my pocket/And make my pee-pee hard ("Sex Toyz"). Now drop it girl go shake that ass/I wanna see you make it clap/Like clap clap clap/clap clap clap ("Booty Call"). Kickin' it baby/Get crunk, get crazy/All fucked up/Make me wanna punch babies ("40 oz.").

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Related: Review: Mayhem Fest 2009, Photos: Mayhem Fest 2009, Photos: Weezer at Comcast Center, More more >
  Topics: Music Features , Entertainment, Pete Wentz, Vans Warped Tour,  More more >
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Comments
Re: Scrunk happens
Maybe I missed out on the purist revolution in punk music -- the whole notion suggests that these people have completely missed the point of their own genre -- but it seems really ironic that self-proclaimed punk rockers are railing against another form of music for being "awful" and "everything people should not be". Take a look in the mirror, or at least the mirror of 20+ years ago. (The more things change, etc.)Scrunk is the coagulation of the state of popular music today. If scrunk taken as a whole is distasteful, it's much more the fault of the paths that rap, pop, and yes, even punk rock have been traveling on for the past decade or so than the fault of young adults whose only crime is tying those paths together.
PS: RIP punk rock. The contrarians have become the authorities. All hail the new ugly threat to the puritan establishment.
By romulusnr on 11/16/2009 at 2:12:55

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