Quote from: Andrew McIntosh on September 10, 2013, 02:31:13 AM
Obvious questions that occurred to me are, isn't the individual restriction missing out on potentially enjoyable sounds from outside the chosen restrictions?
It is possible, but it happens anyways. There is simply such amount of music in general, that no matter how much you try, no matter how open-minded you try to be, soon you realize that there's millions of records you can't give "equal chance".
I think it is good to have selective taste, so you are not compulsive hoarder of everything. But what I mean in the starting quote is that to consider rational choice isn't that big. If it's about personal enjoyment, sparking personal interest in hearing or getting material, it needs only to be something what caught your attention. It can be that something was said to be innovative, extremely well done, best release of year, groundbreaking angle to noise, landmark album of specific artist, something that changed history of music, etc.
Those appear more rational choices - willing to hear the best stuff out there. But sometimes it simply ain't enough. There might be thousand landmark albums by celebrated cult artists, yet the choice is "new female artists" or "blatantly misogynist sex noise", because it stood out. It woke some curiosity and enthusiasm.
I'm firm believer that noise is most often much more than just the sound of noise. Packaging, era, situation, connections, gender, race, equipment, etc.. I have no problem with that. I'm glad it has more to do with human culture than pure mathematics or the reasoning what tries to deconstruct into meaningless fragments that lose the relation to experience.
Of course this doesn't remove option to discuss the choice, taste, preference or alternatives.