I was listening the great Noisextra episode of
In Conversation with Scott Arford (Radiosonde).
https://www.noisextra.com/2020/08/19/in-conversation-with-scott-arford-radiosonde/QuoteWe had the absolute pleasure to talk with Scott Arford and to dive into his work as Radiosonde and under his own name, as well as his part in the public access show "Fuck TV" and the legendary 7hz venue, studio, and label. In addition we talk zombie movies, static, and the importance of one particular fortune cookie. Another noise history lesson is underway, and you better take notes because there may be a pop up quiz down the line.
Back in 1998, when I organized Radiosonde to play in Finland, it basically came as part of
Death Squad tour, who I was in touch with. These guys stayed week in Finland, and of course fairly vague recollections of what exactly was talked about, but Scott - as noise creator and overall unique artists was present already then. I did keep getting his stuff, but never was really in touch.
This podcast underlined well, that there are ways of doing noise/industrial, that is not restricted to.... well, like: producing tapes for the scene guys. That, I don't consider bad at all. That's what most of labels do anyways.
Podcast did evoke question of the
other ways of noise activities. Like Pain Factory, or Fuck TV, where it was not predominantly targeted to "scene", but happened out there in the wider world. That could of course mean that audience is actually even smaller, but it would be probably different? Collective organizing things, creating locally unusual culture, warehouse/location where not only live and create, but also have audience that may be not all "genre people", but cross over to all sorts of folks.
Sometimes it feels, not sure if it is accurate, but as if contemporary noise would happen mostly in interaction of listener and stereosystem, not as more... ehm..
holistic way.
Is there need for noise to be more. What remains if the sort of purification process progresses. Remove performance art, remove installation, remove body action, remove study and interaction of (fringe?) culture, remove personal communication, mail art, trade, etc etc... and finally you got picture of fuzz pedal on cover of tape you bought for 10usd. And what is...
that? Might be good, nevertheless. But it is like light years below the noise as life. Noise as holistic action.
One distorting thing is, that assumption that if it is not "reported online", it would not exist. Yet if someone routinely reports his actions online (mostly social media), then suddenly it seems no longer real in same way. It seems rather done as promotional act, than act of artistic creation. Yet if it goes totally "outside scene", we may well live in this void of feeling something ain't here, what should be?