Quote from: Antti O. on March 09, 2011, 04:35:35 PM
When thinking about this beauty thing, I have to agree that of course there is beauty in noise. Like there is beauty in every other music style or any other thing that the beholder finds beautiful. It's a matter of fucking taste! Maybe I was trying to find some golden rule or definition of beauty for some kind. don't know and don't care anymore.
But still there is no beauty in sine wave and other crap noise.
Like in anything, beauty is matter of subjective tastes, BUT, there are still some general lines. You can see certain western beauty standards, what operate on rules of geometry for example. Symmetric forms and accurate proportions. Even grain textures of cement, plaster or such in structures. Hairs and whatever.. they may appeal rough & cheap or filthy or ugly, yet in their correct place, they attribute beauty or elegance of some sort of bigger concept.
In noise, you may consider few moments of random noise patterns as noisy, chaotic, disorganized, but in bigger image it may finds it place in logical sound sculpture with perfect proportions and forms. Accidentally, or planned.
Those who find the beauty in imperfection and who want to address the beauty in single moment that quickly passes by, it gets probably harder to "others" to experience the same.
I think even something as simple as usage of delay effect, could be subject to study it's beauty. Imperfection of actual tape-loop delay compared to digital delay with follows exact rotation. How speed of delay is vital. When you hear, as listener, that this is fucked up. It's either too loud, wrong length compared to other sounds. Or when it is perfect, just beautifully blends in, and seems like golden spiral! If someone doesn't know what is the golden spiral, maybe one known golden ration in general? If our perception on this matter is coded deep into human DNA, I would call it good enough "universal" beauty, heh... Even if noise of course appears often without form and without structure, it wouldn't change possibility to see that some noise is bigger than the random grainy moment you hear.