What I meant with the wideness of "this music", is that it's not all industrial, and then it's harder to see the peak.
There is connection to jazz, to classical, to visual art, to performance art, metal, punk,.. to.. well, a lot. It's hard to say about Finland, when things were popular. Certainly people used to talk more of "industrial" when Laibach, Test Dept and such were active and also performed in Finland. Certainly people talked more of Jap noise when it was all fresh and new. But much later than that, there was pretty steady row of japanese noise bands in Finland. This was not in peak of "fashion", but later on: Pain Jerk appearing in TV news, Merzbow doing soundtrack to Finnish movie, Government Alpha, K.Haino, KK.Null, Montage, and so on playing one or more shows in Finland. And now lately (=1-2 years),.. there is no talk, newspaper articles or live shows? But is there a setback? Some regression? I don't think so. Just regular waving which doesn't indicate much yet, other than media and people just have a lot of cover & talk, and can't remain focusing in one thing or few bands for decades.
One can point out many of "highlights": I recall Merzbow collaborated with some Norwegian bm guys? Pan Sonic did remix for Björk in one of her single "b-sides", Brighter Death Now appearing in movie soundtrack, and so on and on, but it doesn't mean much when you compare these "highlights" to normal route what experimental music has taken.
Due splintered nature, a lot of things happen. In local classical music concert hall, there has been some pretty abstract contemporary concerts. Never went. Just didn't hear about them in time. There used to be regular performance art clubs. Went only to one I playd live show myself, and I recall there was other noise too, but never really found out about them in time. It's hard to talk about current moment, when you can't get even focused look what is happening. Finnish national radio plays domestic electro-acoustic and modern music in Ääniversumi program. Sometimes plain classical, sometimes noisy/e. Some exhibitions have had live noise/experimental or soundtracks. Even very close a'la Bizarre Uproar playing for Jukka Siikala, but also there are CD releases like Teollisia Tilanteita from 90's as pretty good minimalist soundtrack of installation. Or the one 3" cd I reviewed while ago, which wasn't good enough to remember, but something nevertheless. Grey Park and related keep actively pushing their art/noise mix in Finland. LaLaLa guys mix comic/art activities and weirdo noise, even up to multi-day festival in Helsinki last year. Last year Grunt invaded into biggest Gothic festival. Bizarre Uproar have featured in number of black metal shows. Keränen just played some live shows in unusual places for harsh noise unit. What was it? That one big hipster festival and motorcycle event or what? It's early in morning here. My mind is still half sleep... Umpio played in punk shows. Upcoming live with Terveet Kädet! Also Umpio crossed over to some hip hop label too. Strange, but not that far from what he usually does. Aeoga and Halo Manash or these, was it last year they played 4 days in row in gallery in Helsinki? They have done lot of shows, good CD's distributed in relatively big numbers. All the time a lot happens, when you one doesn't narrow the view into original industrial. It covers hundreds if not thousands of people, which seems bigger impact than original industrial had directly over here?? Bands/artists are able to do thing what would have been unheard in times of supposed "peak" of popularity. Perhaps rise of this music enabled several artists to even gain (state-) grants. Even in Finland, I think bands like Borbetomagus and Consumer Electronics wasn't all funded from organizers pockets, but actually some institutions behind funding? Artists like Lasse Marhaug and Sudden Infant, I think they both get art council support to be able to play. Sudden Infant did experimental music for kids event in biggest finnish modern museum in middle of Helsinki! Was it "huge" in terms of success? Maybe not, but in terms of possibilities and aiming for new innovative things, big success.
In couple months, we're expecting perhaps biggest neo-folk event in Finland. Not that majority of artists would have much to do with "noise", but you'll find link. Venue is old church, now rock venue in middle of Helsinki. With capacity of perhaps 600+ people. We'll see how much Of The Wand And The Moon, Aurinkopyörä, Tevahäät and Halo Manash. Could this have happened in past? I don't think so. It is thanks to connection with metal organisers giving it a try.
If we dissect the thing all the way into raw basic power electronics or total wall of harsh noise, it's easy to get some overall picture. Now when "this music" has expanded into such a massive diversity, nobody has time and funds to be up-to-date. Now just popularity is splintered among huge amount of people doing it, instead of couple pioneers. I think it would need magazines & active participants to report about what has happened. If all you hear is the spam mailings of handful of labels, it is sadly quite poor experience of what it could be.
Fall of sales and fall of attention is not really downfall of noise itself, but change in the culture where role of music has changed and also due sheer volume of supply. I would guess noise now sells more than ever, but its not based on huge printruns of single items, but extremely huge availability of all kinds of material.