The trend wasn't the vintage clothes or the funkot beats. The trend was the curation. It was the refusal to pick one identity.
But the biggest trend tonight wasn't visible. It was inside their phones. A secret Telegram channel had just leaked a new single from a masked indie band called Ruang Senyap (Silent Room). They never showed their faces. Their lyrics were soft poetry about overpriced rent, the anxiety of having 10,000 Instagram followers but no real friends, and the weird nostalgia for a pre-internet childhood they barely remembered. This was the sound of Gen Z Indonesia: loud opinions, soft voices.
Farah found Kenanga at the DJ booth, scrolling through a spreadsheet of tracks. "No Guruh Liar ?" Kenanga asked, looking defeated. Farah grinned and pulled the vinyl from her tote bag. "Traded my limited edition Nike Air Max for it." Kenanga laughed. "Materialistic to spiritual in one trade. Peak Jakarta behavior."
Tonight’s mission was sacred. It was the "Ngabuburit Vinyl & Vintage Fair" at a repurposed textile factory in Bandung, but this month, it had moved to a rooftop in South Jakarta. The theme was Pulang Kampung (Homecoming). Farah had promised her online mutual, a DJ from Yogyakarta named Kenanga, that she’d score the last remaining copy of a re-pressed 1970s psychedelic folk album by a obscure Sumatran band called Guruh Liar .
As she climbed the rusty stairs, the soundscape changed. The honk of traffic melted into the distorted bass of a funkot (Indonesian funk dangdut) remix of a British drill song. The rooftop was a collage of identities.
As she stepped back into the traffic-choked street, she pulled out her phone. She typed a status on her private Twitter: "Found the old sound. Made a new noise. Jakarta is weird. I love it."
Farah was running late, her beat-up sneakers splashing through the puddles of a sudden Jakarta downpour. In one hand, she clutched a cotton tote bag screen-printed with a crude, ironic drawing of a Becak driver riding a UFO. In the other, her phone buzzed non-stop with notifications from three different group chats: the "Sastra Liar" Discord server, her band's WhatsApp group, and a TikTok DM from a brand offering her a free smoothie for a "candid aesthetic video."
The trend wasn't the vintage clothes or the funkot beats. The trend was the curation. It was the refusal to pick one identity.
But the biggest trend tonight wasn't visible. It was inside their phones. A secret Telegram channel had just leaked a new single from a masked indie band called Ruang Senyap (Silent Room). They never showed their faces. Their lyrics were soft poetry about overpriced rent, the anxiety of having 10,000 Instagram followers but no real friends, and the weird nostalgia for a pre-internet childhood they barely remembered. This was the sound of Gen Z Indonesia: loud opinions, soft voices.
Farah found Kenanga at the DJ booth, scrolling through a spreadsheet of tracks. "No Guruh Liar ?" Kenanga asked, looking defeated. Farah grinned and pulled the vinyl from her tote bag. "Traded my limited edition Nike Air Max for it." Kenanga laughed. "Materialistic to spiritual in one trade. Peak Jakarta behavior."
Tonight’s mission was sacred. It was the "Ngabuburit Vinyl & Vintage Fair" at a repurposed textile factory in Bandung, but this month, it had moved to a rooftop in South Jakarta. The theme was Pulang Kampung (Homecoming). Farah had promised her online mutual, a DJ from Yogyakarta named Kenanga, that she’d score the last remaining copy of a re-pressed 1970s psychedelic folk album by a obscure Sumatran band called Guruh Liar .
As she climbed the rusty stairs, the soundscape changed. The honk of traffic melted into the distorted bass of a funkot (Indonesian funk dangdut) remix of a British drill song. The rooftop was a collage of identities.
As she stepped back into the traffic-choked street, she pulled out her phone. She typed a status on her private Twitter: "Found the old sound. Made a new noise. Jakarta is weird. I love it."
Farah was running late, her beat-up sneakers splashing through the puddles of a sudden Jakarta downpour. In one hand, she clutched a cotton tote bag screen-printed with a crude, ironic drawing of a Becak driver riding a UFO. In the other, her phone buzzed non-stop with notifications from three different group chats: the "Sastra Liar" Discord server, her band's WhatsApp group, and a TikTok DM from a brand offering her a free smoothie for a "candid aesthetic video."