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submitted 1 year ago by mrcleansocks@beehaw.org to c/chat@beehaw.org

I'm curious if anyone has good resources for building local real world communities outside of the context for business purposes. I've been a musician for the past 15 years and have participated in my fair share of playing and attending shows all over Southern California.

One thing I always have found interesting is the multitude of communities that partake in doing live events and how those subcultures manifest. They are always in a constant state of flux and there the pockets of people are constantly evolving.

More recently, I've been thinking a lot about organizing events for my own sort of community, but I'm not really 100% sure where to start. I used to book lots of bands in the past but the landscape has changed radically, and now I'd like to do community building with a bit more purpose.

I'm looking for any sort of online research or book recommendations/lectures with people have vast experience building communities that are not primarily focused building community for monetary purposes. I only say this because it seems like a fair amount of businesses have co-opted the phrase community for their own gain, and I'd really like to try to learn about strategies people have developed for building community for the sake of community and nothing else.

That being said, if there is anyone who does music stuff in Southern California that's a bit more interested in chatting about this, I would love to chat.

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Video seems relevant for our current situation.

[-] mrcleansocks@beehaw.org 2 points 1 year ago

I usually got down voted for opinions that I held on topics like cryptocurrency. There seems to be hivemind mentality about certain topics and going against the grain on reddit is not allowed. There has obviously been a lot of bullshit around that topic specifically, but I never took the downvotes personally, I just assumed people were being to dense to try and have a reasonable discussion.

[-] mrcleansocks@beehaw.org 1 points 1 year ago

Same experience here. Definitely feels high priority based on my experience so far.

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submitted 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago) by mrcleansocks@beehaw.org to c/music@beehaw.org

I'm a musician and have been a musician for over 10 years. Only recently in the past 4 or 5 years have I really gotten into recording myself on a DAW and if I'm being honest, I've gotten to a point where I can really make some stuff I enjoy. It's not always easy, but I can get some pretty banging tracks going.

this sub-lemmy is the only music related community I've seen so far, but I'm curious how many Lemmy users are also music makers? I produce in Ableton and Bitwig, and do everything from Alternative rock to ambiance, film scores, electronic synth stuff. Not going to share any links though because I don't want this to come off as a self promotional post

Really just curious if maybe theres enough of us to warrant some sort of sub-community for music creation chat.

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submitted 1 year ago by mrcleansocks@beehaw.org to c/chat@beehaw.org

I just saw this post over on r/modcoord which is basically a massive list of subreddits participating in the blackout protest. If I'm being honest I haven't seen this much anger and coordinated frustration since the era right before the digg exodus.

Assuming more and more subreddits join in, it's going to send a pretty massive message to the users who interact with a blacked out subreddit. Then I'm trying to imagine what happens if after a massive coordinated blackout, Reddit continue on the current trajectory. Is Lemmy even prepared to handle the amount of potential incoming traffic that API closure could lead to? It's absolutely bonkers to me that the Reddit team might just stay the course....

mrcleansocks

joined 1 year ago