EDIT- Added links so that my argument seems more reasonable/So I can be a douche with my supposed knowledgeBefore I started listening to
brony music, I couldn't stand mainstream-y electronic music, especially dubstep, so I am new to the whole scene. I still don't really like
Brostep but I have gained an appreciation for the earlier, more ambient-y dubstep, especially
Skream, so I feel like I know enough to add to the conversation.
The reason I think so many people like dubstep (especially brostep) is because of the "noise" (I use the word with a heavy heart because brostep isn't really that noisy and noise is musical too [see my signature]) and aggression. People, especially young people, are always looking for aggressive sounds in their music, relative to the popular music of the time. Hence why
rock&roll became more popular than whatever Frank Sinatra
did (and regular blues for that matter [maybe not in that case, I really don't know]); why Jazz genres like
bebop overtook were more popular in young audiences than
Big band/swing in popularity; why
hard rock and blues/
heavy metal became more popular than old
psychedelia and
rock&roll; why
alternative rock (specifically
grunge) became more popular than
hair metal; and so on (note: I know these aren't the best examples but bear with me). Music seems to oscillate between aggressive and non-aggressive and when a genre starts to fall on the non-aggressive side people begin to look for something more aggressive. Dubstep is the natural continuation of this cycle.
As far as the whole avant garde case, I have to disagree. While it is interesting the similarities, I doubt many of the early 2-step/grime producers knew about these when dubstep was developing. I am sure the futurists would have loved it though. And as far as popular music coming out of/taking influence from avant garde music, there is nothing special about that and it definitely does not mean said music is also avant garde.
Punk took aspects of the avant garde from bands like
Velvet Underground (
Best band of the '60) but would never be considered avant garde music (this excludes
post-punk and
art punk which are more experimental).
Grunge was influence by the noise rock of bands like
Sonic Youth and
Butthole Surfers, and isn't avant garde (Well neither is noise rock, but noise rock is more avant garde than punk or grunge and Sonic Youth were originally a
no-wave (which is avant garde) band). All those
early electronic experiments were avant garde but
Kraftwerk isn't (well it was for a
while but that isn't what its known for. [When they split after being less experimental the resulting band,
Neu! was avant garde]).
Industrial is avant garde (the futurists would have loved it even more than they would dubstep) but
industrial metal and
ebm are not. Unlike these other genres, dubstep didn't really even draw from a contemporary/slightly older avant garde tradition, so it has even less claim to the title, Avant Garde Musical Genius. (Avant garde music is one of my great loves so I get a little touchy on this issue.)
tl;dr- People like dubstep because it is aggressive and there was a dearth of agressive music during the time it became popular. Dubstep is not avant garde.
p.s- I am no music expert so everything I said has the potential of being wrong.
p.p.s- I have no idea if my links are going to illustrate my point or not.
- Matt Metronome Clipclop