I. Definition/Form
The mosh pit is a form of
dance/accompaniment attached to a variety of musical genres, including various
incarnations of punk and metal music. It is also a ritual, which can be
compared to certain religious experiences, due to its spontaneity and formal
procedure, which come together to create something similar to speaking in
tongues. The act of moshing involves a group of people gathered in a tight
crowd bumping and ramming into each other; the tightness is an important
element, as this will somewhat force the individuals into the act, as they
navigate through the flesh. Moshing can also incorporate other acts based in
these subgenres, including stage diving, pogo and hardcore dancing, but these
are occasionally restricted based on elements like the venue or the performer.
The mosh pit, beyond being a cultural aspect of these genres, also serves as a
form of mini-society within the vaster society of these mentioned
countercultures. It works as a society, which in turn creates roles for its
individuals, as well as working as a spiritual experience. Before going
further, it is important to mention that my experience with mosh pits comes
exclusively from punk shows. These experiences may differ within a metal
environment, but this treatise is specifically aimed at the mosh pit as a part
of the punk show.
II. The Pit as Society
To the outsider, the mosh pit
seems like a war zone, a state of total disarray with no rules or boundaries.
The truth is the opposite. These pits have their own unspoken rules which
dictate how the group operates. Essentially, a mosh pit is social anarchy on a
much smaller scale, wherein the participants take care of each other with no
overseeing authority. Added to this is a state of controlled chaos, creating
non-violent frenzy with the knowledge that the individual's life is not in
danger (people have died in pits, but these are often cases where a performer
or internal individual decided to take the role of overseeing authority and
rile up the crowd to be unsafe or more violent). Despite the lack of order, a
mosh pit is a gathering of individuals who, unusually, take the form of cogs in
a machine; the individuals must be able to bounce off of each other in order
for the pit to work.
The most important thing to
remember about a mosh pit is that a pit is always an agreement. This is
something important that some individuals seem to forget, so, to repeat for
emphasis: a pit is always an
agreement. A lot of shows, usually shows with a more poppy sound or indie
appeal, tend to have one guy who insists on starting a pit; this person,
referred to as he, because it is invariably a man (for several reasons to be
discussed later), will forcibly and insistently bump into the people around him
and ruin the atmosphere, because some shows were not meant to have mosh pits!
This is a disagreement towards the possibility of a mosh pit. An agreement is
always visible; agreement is innate; the moment that agreement is reached, movement
begins and things immediately get going. How does the society of the pit handle
disagreement? There is a succession of steps: after the individuals around the
offender show their disdain and it becomes clear that he will not stop, members
of the pit will forcibly remove him from his position, often by pushing him
away from his position or even physically dragging him away; certain shows will
even see the offender beaten, but that is not a frequent sight. This may seem
to conform to western cultural standards, but it differs in one important way:
the individual's removal is collectively agreed upon and it is not committed by
an individual who has been given the job (similar to a bouncer or a police
officer), but rather by the "faceless individual" closest to the
offender. This self-policing also comes in other varieties, including, among
others, removing the shoes of people who forcibly attempt to crowdsurf or
removing those whose expressions are not appreciated by the crowd, such as
removing a hardcore dancer, one who throws fists and elbows and kicks at the
other moshers, in a show where such dancing is not appreciated.
Another important rule of the pit
involves watching out for all individuals. A pit is ultimately an example of a
mutual, benevolent violence, a social group whose purpose is to release energy,
not to harm others. As such, the most important rule is that you always cease
all movement when one member of this group falls and make sure that the fallen
individual is standing and safe. With a good mosh pit, it is often impossible
for anyone to fall anyway, due to the large number of people gathered in a
small space, but, in the unlikely case, it is always important to gather and
raise the fallen; again, in a good pit, this will happen almost immediately:
depending on the crowd, this may run the spectrum from offering a helping hand
to grabbing the person in any way possible and dragging them up (the easiest
way to do this is to grab the person under the armpits and drag them up!) This
rule is one that often surprises the opponents of the mosh pit, who see the
activity as a form of ultraviolence; who often imagine that a fallen individual
just becomes a better target; picking up a fallen member is absolutely the most
important aspect of the mosh pit!
Finally, the boundaries of the
pit are an important aspect to remember. The mosh pit is a small subculture of
the concertgoer. As such, mosh pits have to be concentrated. The area set aside
for the pit is often an area directly in front of the stage, which has come to
be known as the pit area (or perhaps was called a pit, where the name mosh pit
comes from; chicken or the egg, essentially). The venue, in these cases, is
laid out like so: the immediate vicinity in front of the stage is the pit, in
the form of a circle. In this area, anything goes! The participants can dance,
bounce off each other and ask each other for assistance for whatever reason.
Immediately around the pit, there is a chain of people who serve an
underappreciated importance. These people do not want to partake in the
moshing, but they still take on the task of making sure that the pit is
contained, in order to "protect" the people outside the pit, the
third and least interesting layer. This chain of people are usually
"respected" by the pit, which is to say, they are usually recognized
and not involved against their wills. On the other hand, the people of the
chain are also given extra power, pushing the moshers away when it looks like
they are about to leave the boundaries of the pit. To reiterate, the mosh pit
is essentially a perfectly-governed anarchic society. Of course, there is also
a personal importance attributed to one's involvement within a mosh pit.
III. The Individual in the Mosh
Pit
As has been mentioned in the
previous segment, all the individuals within a pit serve their own purposes,
whether it is as part of the chain or as instigators or protectors. It is
important to remember that a pit is, at its core, a cooperation of individuals,
like atoms within a molecule. Unlike regular society, a mosh pit does not have
singular roles for each individual; instead, each individual carries the
possibility of all roles, whenever they may become useful (one clear
differentiation, again, is a member of the chain immediately outside the pit,
who, as long as they are part of the chain, only serve one specific role). The
most obvious individual role is the mosher (intentionally named as blatantly as
possible) which refers to the very act that makes a pit a pit: this role
consists of constantly moving and attempting to make contact with those around
you. Another role is, again, picking up the fallen, which falls on those
nearest to the fallen individual. Yet another role is the launcher, an
individual who helps those who wish to crowdsurf from within the crowd; another
related role is the surfee or the water, if you will allow for the metaphor:
these are the people who work to keep the surfer up; after all, a fall from
that high could be dangerous. These people are tasked with two related
objectives: hold the surfer up and keep them from falling down, even if it is
by holding on to their foot while someone else has their arm. One final role,
often one which is non-consensually trust upon the person, is the barrier: the
group of people "tasked" with keeping the moshers from running into
the stage, by placing themselves at the edge of the stage: these people have
the best view, but are also constantly battered during the performance. These
people differ from the chain outside the pit, because most of these individuals
will leave their position at some point and be replaced, unlike the frequent
steadiness of the chain.
One issue that comes from the
individual in the pit is unfortunate sexism that tends to be prevalent in the
pits. A common complaint among women who attend punk shows is that mosh pits
are unwelcoming to women. As a result, the pits tend to include very few women,
although the pits at concerts including more political bands, female musicians
or more pop-based sounds tend to include more women. Women tend to face two
issues in these pits. They are usually heavily avoided, not necessarily out of
malevolence, but out of the belief that they must be protected. In the worst
case, there are cases of people going out of their way to grope women who mosh
or stagedive. This is ultimately the one thing that keeps mosh pits from being a
perfectly egalitarian social environment. Thankfully, though, there are more
and more feminist and queer-friendly scenes popping up all the time, so this
issue may soon become an issue of the past.
IV. The Mosh Pit as a Spiritual
Experience
Perhaps the most beneficial
aspect of the mosh pit is its ability to mimic religious spectacle and result
in its own form of spiritual awakening. Similar to concepts like the sweat
lodge, the mosh pit accomplishes this experience by draining the individual of
all hydration (it is, of course, also important for the individual to cooperate
with this step), resulting in a new state of exhaustion. There are a variety of
steps that need to be taken to insure a proper spiritual experience in a mosh
pit. First, the pit must be inescapable. This result can be attained by placing
one's self in the centre of the pit, allowing crowds to gather to the back of
the immediate area, making "escape" impossible. Once the pit begins
to come to life, a few physiological results occur: you begin to sweat, both
from movement and proximity, and you begin to ache, both from movement and
contact. This contact also fits a religious context, similar to the
self-flagellation that is an important part of certain Abrahamic religions,
except this "self-flagellation" comes as a part of teamwork, with
each individual aiding everyone else. This contact also reaches another level
of spirituality with more modern concepts of sharing energy. While this may be
an unpopular opinion, a pit can be as small as two people; the point is to play
off of each other, search and destroy in a way; two or three or a hundred
people target each other and bounce off of each other, to exchange this energy
through bodily contact, while depleting one's own energy.
Where does this all lead? The
dehydration and depletion of energy will eventually lead you to a point where
you feel like death is imminent and this is where the experience reaches its
zenith; it is when you are near death, even as a state of mind, that everything
suddenly falls into place. This is the point of the mosh pit; once you reach
this point of dying, suddenly you will lose your ability to feel pain, your
ability to feel fear and your needs for rehydration; suddenly, you become a
part of this group who are all dying and you no longer care! That is the beauty
of the mosh pit: the transcendence of death. Punk has always been a lifestyle
that has been constantly "dying"; every famous punk declared its
death at one point or another, with the belief being that it was at their
moment that punk survived. As a result, punk is constantly in a state of dying,
making it the most ephemeral form of art or expression. Similar to punk's
constant teetering between life and death, this deathly experience in the pit
is also an ephemeral one, lasting only as long as a show. This is another part
of the appeal of the pit: unlike life, you die and then it's over; the show's
end brings you back to life. There is another parallel to death that comes with
crowdsurfing. Often, the surfer will find their way to the front where they
will be forced to find their way back to the pit, which is to say that the
surfers will essentially fly their way out of death and out of the experience,
again leading to some major spiritual paradox. Once you leave the venue, you
can go back to your regular life, until the next show where you can die again,
if only to remind yourself that, like punk, you are in a constant struggle
between life and death!
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