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Why selling out has become normalised
Mint Kolkata
|November 22, 2025
The indie scene was once built on a siege mentality. But when film music has overtaken everything, does holding out for principles hold any meaning?
Independent rock music, back in the mid-2000s, had a lot of enemies. And precious few friends.
You had to follow a list of arbitrary rules to be let into this super exclusive club led by embittered kids in their late teens or early-to-mid 20s (with some 1990s uncles still hovering). Embracing modern technology, for instance, and bringing a laptop on stage to play cool dhik-chik beats? Jailable offence. “Hey!” some scruffy fellow from the crowd would shout at the early mover bands, an Orange Street or a Pentagram (where Vishal Dadlani cut his teeth before making half a name for himself as a fine Bollywood composer). The band would look up expectantly. And then he'd pelt them with a water bottle. “You're a sellout.”
Selling out was a huge deal at the time, leading to major scandals on the niche messaging boards online where all these conversations played out. But what exactly it meant was never made clear. I played in a band in Delhi in those days, and spent plenty of energy accusing other, more popular (but less handsome) musicians of this unforgivable sin. But even today, I can’t pinpoint exactly what that meant.
It had something to do with integrity, artistic morals, authenticity, success, intention, money—an impressive-sounding word soup that was entirely conceptual. To throw around such grave accusations without an explicit definition of the crime seems, now, a bit unfair. It was more of a mood, really. We were making it up as we went along, with feelings of envy and betrayal in lockstep with more righteous emotions of honour.
This story is from the November 22, 2025 edition of Mint Kolkata.
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