Many good comments already.
In a way, I can see where this guy gets his ideas, and I'm quite sure he has some point, but is expressing it wrong ways. I think what he says is basically valid in some music styles. I don't see relation to noise that much.
In case of local 3rd rate Hammerfall, Bon Jovi or Discharge sound-a-like, I certainly agree that support in form of obligation to financially support artists isn't really wise. Obligation, such as there being assumption that artists are somehow entitled to sell & earn. Or to go see band that was always known to suck, but is local band what "needs support".
This hardly is valid within noise. Simply due facts there are so little to gain in first place. Bands are motivated often by other things than merch sales. They are very rarely in situations in live gigs that could be compared to bunch of youth house Red Hot Chilipeppers cover bands.
I don't see that much noise what people buy for sake of "support", but rather for sake of really wanting the stuff.
About "scene", one could observe this:
Quote from: harrath on April 27, 2014, 05:22:28 AM
I have a different philosophy: support the good bands, and ignore the bad. This idea is often called "natural selection." It means that if you want a strong scene, you only support the strong candidates, and let the weak ones die out.
Has there ever existed this thing called "strong scene" in sense as suggested? = Has scene ever been responsibility of merely the strong bands? If one would think that it is possible to just decide to create "strong scene", I'm sure they have quite bizarre idea of what it means.
Most of scenes were born very natural and organic ways. There are much more factors involved than just elite of creative bands. Alone, most often these groups remain meaningless. No matter how good release or how good live show they'd play, it can never compete with collective force, zeitgeist or such. Many times the support for band is merely to offer honest criticism. Reject bad materials so they hopefully will aim higher next.
It's childish to see "natural selection" as this battle between 2 things. 1 good and 1 bad, where you choose the good and scene becomes good. One could observe where does the good "scenes" exist? In places where honest communication and collective efforts for getting things happen does exist, or the places where there are number of isolated guys considering them be elite, above everybody else?
Certainly I think supporting scene isn't about buying and selling successful product. I think it's being part of creation of something. It's about making things flourish, instead of waiting the diamonds to fall into your lap.