Quote from: Balor/SS1535 on May 08, 2020, 06:51:53 PM
Quote from: collapsedhole on May 08, 2020, 02:14:00 PM
power electronics on the other hand easily nails down a concept and directly addresses it.... CON-DOM comes to mind first. taint. nicole 12. alfarmania. grey wolves. whitehouse. deathpile. irm. xenophobic ejaculation.
Honestly, I do not think that I have even encountered any power electronics that did not have a strong concept or theme.
That's because those concepts are usually the excuse to put out the sub-par music that goes along with them. One could also argue that by using strong, or exploitative themes that are supposed to be over the top in order to stay underground, it helps selling stuff better (look at death metal, hah...)
For one Bizarre Uproar (which I can respect as an artist for his dedication to it although I don't really care about his music in general) or one Con-Dom, there are too many bland ripoffs.
I'd say that most of the newcomers (well, ok, actually the older guys as well) got into it out of an interest for the weird and freaky and violent and shocking, etc, more than the music in the first place (we're posting on a forum called "Special InterestS" with sections dedicated to stuff that's not music as well after all) and that's what attracts us to it first in general. Because before the Internet you'd see a record cover before you heard it. That's where the concept and theme first show. Nobody puts out tapes like the Recycled series for instance. Unless the artist is well-known or there's a strong word of mouth thing going on (easier with the Internet), a blank cover means your release is dead before it even comes out.
I could even argue that there's been a constant increase in capitalisation over the weird and violent and taboo by society in the last 40 years or so. Look at how shows like CSI or Mindhunter exploit this and how successful they are, the ever increasing presence of programs affiliated with gay culture on Netflix, etc...
So I find that concepts are interesting to witness in the noise scene when they're dealt with like say Am Not does. Serial killers though? Will anyone beat "Very Friendly" or Sutcliffe Jugend or bring a new light on them within the noise scene in 2020? I don't know.
Also I realise I might not bring clear answers here. But yeah, no strong themes means no or less consideration within the noise scene nowadays.