and the last post for now...
as this one deals more with theory/practice.
Quote from: FreakAnimalFinland on October 21, 2010, 08:00:57 PM
Majority of recordings of wall of noise which I hear, is indeed something close to line-in recordings. Focusing on rumbles / crackles / hiss / fuzz in ways that its pretty much the "super close-up" of the sound. More of hearing the sound of pedal rather than sound of amps in room for example. Listening the details of crackles and distortion fuzz, rather than loud amplifier damage.
i don't see a real difference between the sound of a pedal and amplifier damage. Both are distorted clipping sounds, but never mind that, look at it this way.
when you record at home is it the same EXACT process you do to play live?
or do you pull out a few extra bells and whistles for the recording?
live HNW is more about "amplifier damage", recording is for bringing out greater detail that you could never hear in a live setting.
Quote from: Andrew McIntosh on October 22, 2010, 01:09:09 AM
Get "Total Slitting Of Throats" then forget about the genre as a whole. You'll have the whole "militant harsh noise wall" thing right there in one handy album.
As for projects that actually identify as HNW, The Rita, The Cherry Point, maybe the odd bit of Vomir, and that's it.
As for the rest, don't even piss on them. It has become too fucking easy for people to toss off "HNW". Find a tone you like, record it for an hour, stick it on a tape, there's your release. I've noticed nearly every second Noise release these days is classified as "HNW" and it's shitting me. It's too easy to do, that's why there's so much of it. There is PLENTY of Noise that is so built up and layered it could be passed off as "HNW" and that's usually the more interesting material.
But my advice is, anything labelled as HNW these days is best ignored. The world does not need another fucking box set of variations on a bit of static crackle.
What we need is a discussion on minimalism. That would cover a lot more ground.
replace HNW with power electronics
replace The Rita with Whitehouse
replace Cherry Point with Sutcliffe Jugend...
and you can do that with just about any genre.
bottom line is it's either a sound you like or you don't.
HNW has a lot to do with minimalism, i don't think most of the HNW guys would argue that.
i personally think it also has a lot to do with exploring audio texture as well.
is it easy to make, yeah, i guess it could be.
but there's really no money in HNW, anyone doing it (and making multiple releases over several years) is doing it simply because they want to.
Quote from: RG on October 22, 2010, 06:00:24 AM
The whole concept-driven thing is kind of funny to me...this release is about creepy urban landscapes at night = 30 minutes of crunching static. Or this release is about rape and dominance = 30 minutes of crunching static. Or this release is about mass graves and genocide = 30 minutes of crunching static.
well i'm not gonna speak for anyone else, but the subject matter i may use for a release is usually what inspired me to make the wall in the first place.
it's usually WHY i created the static in the first place.
Quote from: RG on October 22, 2010, 06:00:24 AM
Quote from: ADR on October 21, 2010, 07:59:46 PM
GRIZ+ZLOR is a project that should be known. Track on the ADR comp
yes that track is very nice. is all their material in the same vein?
not all my stuff is EXACTLY like that, but it all focuses mostly on different textures.
feel free to poke around:
http://caveofthegrizzlor.bandcamp.com/