I was simply referring to bass lines that actually have notes and melodies and hit under 60 hz... and not just bass kicks and mid range bass lines.
To me (being the key phrase at play) the requirements for a real bass line are notes/melodies and an under 60 hz rating
And like Fleck said... yes, dnb and bass music get play in other clubs and with other promoters... but you can bet it'll be opening or close... certainly not an 11:00 or 12:00 slot.
And that's a general statement, before the rants start. Sometimes dnb/jungle/dubstep/bass gets a more optimal time slot... but for the most part... you can count on an opening slot.
well to address your "real bass" point, you don't listen to enough techno to make generalizations. There are techno producers writing serious bass lines(I live with one) they just aren't the focus of the tune like we're used to. I'm sure there are decent trance producers and djs I'll never know of due to my distaste for the genre overall

directly reflects on DnB's fans. They're a stand around lot. DnB doesn't get people on a dancefloor going crazy in Indy unless Dieselboy is playing it. It sucks, but it's true. The longer people sit at the bar or stand arms crossed staring at the dj instead of dancing, the longer dnb will be open or close or in some back room. Clubs and promoters book djs to get people A) on the floor and B) DANCING. As long as dnb djs play chin(or ego) stroking music you're fucked. I've played plenty of headlining slots at raves or clubs as a dnb dj and it worked. Those weren't in Indy. Indianapolis is a house and techno city, it's why people go off over the neuro funk techno influenced dnb and the housier liquid and will stand like deer in headlights when Burger or Jimmy gets up there and throws drums at em. If you don't like it, move to Chicago, New York, LA, or San Fran where there's still a dnb scene. Truth be told, DNB is getting stale.