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Underground music in 2017

Does the underground still exist in a world where everything is visible online? We go in search

  • From bush doof to clowncore: your favourite underground music scenes

    From bush doof to clowncore: your favourite underground music scenes

    In the final instalment of our underground music series, readers share the scenes that inspire them – whether it’s radical brass bands, queer punk or doom-metal Mormons in Salt Lake City
  • Joanne at an algorave in Sheffield

    Run the code: is algorave the future of dance music?

  • Run the code: is algorave the future of dance music? – video

  • The Black Madonna, Holly Herndon, Dani Filth, Mist and Thurston Moore

    'People are taking safer choices': six alternative artists on today's musical underground

    Thurston Moore, The Black Madonna and other underground musicians discuss how the scene continues to mutate – and why quantum physics is where today’s avant garde truly resides
  • Composite: Underground music and technology. Clockwise from top left - Mat Dryhurst,  Bugzy Malone, Danielle Cohn, Ryan Leslie and  Chance The Rapper

    'We could build something revolutionary': how tech set underground music free

    YouTube, social media and even Bitcoin are allowing musicians to reject major labels and go it alone – but the industry is fighting back. Can artists use technology to stay truly independent?
  • Free improvisation: still the ultimate in underground music?

  • Saxophonist and jazz musician Evan Parker in 2007.

    Free improvisation: still the ultimate in underground music?

  • ‘Worth checking out if you don’t get enough Aussie hardcore techno/gabber in your diet’ ... some of the esoteric albums Guardian readers suggested.

    'Only 17th-century industrial bluegrass will do': your favourite weird records

    Italian prog, psychedelic doom from Coventry, one-second punk songs... we asked for your most obscure records, and you didn’t disappoint
  • Basement Torture Killings new

    Pornogrind and flying intestines: my journey into the labyrinth of underground metal

    They have names like Live Burial and Thus Defiled and go to extreme lengths not to get big – or even heard. Our writer enters a place where everyone knows the difference between ‘depressive black metal’ and ‘depressive suicidal black metal’
  • Visible Cloaks performing at Semibreve 2017.

    Unsound and Semibreve: the festivals that dream a better world in sound

    Two festivals in Poland and Portugal suggest utopian futures by exploring the boundaries of music and noise – even as they freak out small children
  • Chiedu Oraka in north Hull.

    'There are a lot of weird people around here': how the north stayed underground

    From turbo-charged Eurodance in Newcastle to Pennine psychedelia and grime in Hull, the north of England keeps underground scenes thriving outside the glare of the mainstream. Welcome to five of the strangest
  • Underground artists composite: The Omlits, Rah Digga and Peter Brotzmann

    From Arsedestroyer to Zoogz Rift: 50 underground albums you've never heard of

    Sexed-up Canadian synthpop, Japanese junglism, ritualistic Finnish bear-hunting music … our writers pick treasures from the darkest corners of their record collections
  • Giggs Timberland

    No alternative: how brands bought out underground music

    Timberland hosts rap gigs. Princess Nokia makes films for Maybelline. And Red Bull is the new school of rock. Have brand partnerships destroyed counterculture? Or are they all that’s keeping it alive?
  • underground mobile bigger

    Where is the musical underground in 2017?

    In the coming weeks, the Guardian is embarking on a survey of the underground in music – asking if it still exists in a world where everything is visible online, and if so, where
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