
I'm sure many indie rockers would argue that Pitchfork's line-up was far superior to last month's Intonation Fest, thus the sell-out crowd that seemed almost twice as large. However, I'd attribute the crowd surge to the vast reach of the trendsetting hype machine that is Pitchforkmedia.com. Intonation '06 probably retained the core local base of fans, while Pitchfork Music Fest '06 took that Chicago base and raised it with their legions of dedicated indie rockers from across the country. Sure, this year Intonation had Vice Magazine, which is hugely influential in its homebase of New York, as well as much of Europe. However, outside of Chicago, I'm guessing Vice's Midwest reach is pretty thin, while every 12-24 year-old music junkie from Keokuk to Kalamazoo is just a click away from reading about the next big 'Fork-sanctioned indie smash. If it wasn't obvious already, there's no doubt now that Pitchfork is no longer just a cult phenomenon. Pitchfork has now officially hit the mainstream. "Indie" is truly the new "alternative," and just as the likes of Lollapalooza, KROQ and MTV's Kennedy ushered in the flannel shirt era, Pitchfork has become the torch bearer of this generation's movement.
Not a big fan of the tent stuff, but to each his/her own. The stages kicked ass at Pfork, I couldn't have picked the artists much better. Found myself enjoying just about every act. It was a great weekend. I had fun at Intonation, the lineup was very mediocre compared to this weekend.
Posted by: Bill V | 07/31/2006 at 10:38 AM
Personally I think the more alternative music festivals in Chicago the better. I went to Intonation last year and loved it. Couldn't make either Vice's or Pitchfork's this year as I am back home in the UK. I hope you all enjoyed yourselves.
Posted by: Duncan | 07/31/2006 at 08:39 AM
Diplo what - funny he mixes all the shit that is on b96 and everyone loves it! Listen to b96!
Posted by: avantchicago | 07/31/2006 at 12:21 AM