Is there tracks or albums you use as reference to compare with your own productions ? And do you think that some albums have great production ?
Because of the nature of the sounds involved as well as the empiric and DIY approach of the recordings, it may be weird to speak of great production value in noise. Adding that it may be sometimes difficult to distinguish good production from sound beneficial to the music (early Burzum, Bathory), or, for example, when someone mentioned in another thread that if one wants something to sound loud or to capture the feeling of speakers reaching their limits, it should be recorded that way and not expect post-processing to reach that goal; an album from Incapacitants was taken as an example to point that even at low volume, it successfully delivers that feeling of loudness. But again, when listening to Incapacitants, great production isn't the word that would come to mind (IMO). So, could the usual production value be applied here and is it even possible to have good material ruined by messy production ? Are people concerned with loudness war even in the noise genre (it seems the overall output level of albums has dropped a bit in the recent years)
Also, only a few pure noise works may have been recorded in a studio with a professional workflow, and actually, how does it compared to the home recordings in term of overall sound quality ? (while renting some studio times may happened more frequently in P.E.) I used to think that more traditional workflow produced albums that sounded softer and "limited" (in term of what not to do) but it was youthful stupidity.
Names that come to mind are Hijokaidan ("made in studio"), Testicle Hazard ("python in the bowl"), Macronympha ("studio 95")...
I have difficulties sorting noise albums that come to me as being well produced... John Mannion "Slice Through Or/In Glassmetal" LP on Hanson Records ?