Uncharted Music - North Carolina
In episode two of Uncharted Tracks, Chris and Dan head South to explore the sprawling musical geography of North Carolina, a state with scenes stretching from the college rock epicenter of the Chapel Hill to the overlooked creative pockets of Charlotte, Greensboro, Asheville, and Winston-Salem. What begins as a conversation about local indie bands quickly turns into something larger: an exploration of regional identity, forgotten music history, and why so much great music disappears before anyone hears it.
The episode moves across decades and genres, tracing the lineage of what Dan jokingly calls “Triangle Rock," the jangly, melodic, emotionally charged indie sound that has quietly persisted in the Research Triangle since the 1980s. Along the way, we spotlight overlooked artists from across the state, including Truth Club, Annuals, The White Octave, Seam, Boulevards, and a long list of nearly forgotten bands whose records now feel like lost artifacts from parallel timelines.
The discussion drifts through blog-rock nostalgia, emo basements, slowcore, jazz, funk compilations, Merge Records mythology, and the changing economics of independent music.
Dan and Chris wrestle with a central question that sits underneath the entire series: why does incredible music so often vanish into obscurity?