Bob wrote: As a result, the throbbing and the cacophony is nothing like it was in '96 to '98.
My first year was '98, we were camped somewhere around 3:30, about 3 streets in (not sure, I was sober but wildly disoriented the entire time). My sound complaints did not arise from any electronica - there was a radio station kitty corner from us that played nothing but the kind of 70's redneck rock that makes me go fetal.
The cacophony, to a newbie, was both disconcerting and engaging. I have a cd that is the sounds of Burning Man 99', and the ambient noise is so distinctive, it brings me right back to the playa. I have to admit that part of me misses the rainbow of low-level noise, because that is one of the unique aspects that marked my first Burn.
Bitch about the electronica camps all you want, but I still hear a lot of different genres out there. Over the years I have heard cabaret jazz, opera, tejana, bluegrass, showtunes, 80's new wave, death metal, Waits-ish accordian ballads, Christmas carolers, marching bands, kazoo ensembles - all performing live, all without microphones & speakers.
While the
unconscionable volume of some electronica camps makes it easy to give everyone a bad name, it might behoove us all to not shoot at the easy target, but to make the slightly larger effort of paying attention to the great variety that already exists.
In other words, why not focus your experience and your memories on what you enjoy, instead of what makes you feel righteously indignant?
Bob wrote: Acoustic music? To me, that means drum circles at best, and off-key gut-bucket hillbilly singer-songwriter parodies at worst.
"Acoustic" just means played live and non-amplified. It can be anything. See above.