Quote from: Fistfuck Masonanie on June 17, 2023, 05:49:00 PM
In the Love interview, one thing that really resonated with me and I think about often, is going back and spending more time with older releases. Love says, "We all could reverse a bit, we should talk about stuff that's a few years old too. It's an artifact that you can use and listen to for quite some time."
I've been more consciously trying to listen to all new releases at least a few times before it goes on the shelf and spend time revisiting releases from even the year prior. The flow of new material is just so overwhelming, it feels like new releases are so quickly pushed to the wayside and never discussed again, even just a couple of months after release. One of the negatives of this currently flourishing productivity of the last few years. There is so much material, a lot of quality material, and it's extremely difficult to keep up with it all, actually spend time and absorb the material, and enjoy it over a length of time.
I think recently in the reviews thread, there have been quite a few posts about older releases which is refreshing. Would love to see more of this! What have we all put back on the shelf from the last few years too quickly and without discussing or spending enough time with?
I think there used to be some complaints formerly, why people always talking about OLD STUFF. Almost like it would be routine to ignore everybody new, all new interesting things, just talk about MB and Merzbow and then 10 years later everybody would talk how underrated that one noise artists was. Yeah, because everybody too busy talking of things we know, instead of things happening right now.
Still now, I think it is likely that problem is not lack of focus and talk about classics, but lack of discussion, critical evaluation and writing about noise in general. I know that I could do more. I only write about fraction of stuff I listen to. Generally noticing that I got half meter pile of noise CD's and tapes that is ready to be carried home and put into collection/shelves. Only couple % of stuff gets commented. Usually more time to comment things when sitting home, pulling out some old releases from shelves and just listening and appreciating them.
I think, at least for me, many good noise releases have a story behind them. Of course appreciate the sound itself, packaging, but there is also vastly bigger experience around some releases. This is big contrast compared to "just another good noise tape", which can be very good, but may not be irreplaceable part of personal noise history.
What Ochu says about the current flood of noise, and what people tend to say about the peak of
covid noise, is a bit odd for me. Covid had barely impact on anything in my life. And flood of noise has been massive in many moments of history. Like thinking something like mid 90's. You check 93, 94, 96, 97... and so on and it feels like damn! Seems like Bloodlust, RRR/Pure, Slaughter, GROSS, Deadline, and so on, put out more stuff than labels do now. Thinking stuff like Pain Jerk as one example. 93-99 and he'd put out... about 80 Pain Jerk releases. I don't really know how many relevant noise artists these days churn out releases like that? It feels that now that someone makes 3 releases a year, people start to criticize that it's too many.
I suppose there is also changing nature of releases. When the way how stuff is released, marketed and sold, is kind of "Get it! now or never!", it is not like situation with hundred Whitehouse live action tapes you can either buy, buy later, or not buy at all, and Susan Lawly would never be like "MANDATORY MUST HAVE TAPE LIMITED TO".. A lot of stuff would be like that. RRR tapes, Open Wound, Zero Cabal, Nihilistic, Con-Dom, Sound of Pig, ... etc. It wouldn't matter if they have huge amount of things, when atmosphere around the publishing it, doesn't have atmosphere of production line of manufacturing disposable items?
My own experience when specific "flood of stuff" end, however, is barely ever been "great finally its over!". Instead, almost always I find myself missing that feeling. And thinking how great would be dozen more PURE/RRR cd's? How great to receive letter with handful of biz-card cdr's from Pac Rec? How great when F&V regurgitated out bunch of vile new tapes? etc etc.. Just like my feeling with Pain Jerk is not that he did way too much stuff and I don't have time for it.
I think former WCN podcast VOMIR interview had that good moment where he was being asked why this amount of limited tapes of pretty much same sound. He mentioned that it was never intended that some guy buys them all. Most tapes were tiny edition, and circulated to handful of guys in that part of scene. Next tape circulating to other part of scene/world. From standpoint of conventional music, emphasis is on making one good album and selling the same thing everywhere. With noise, it doesn't have to be like that. You can approach it like painting or collage art. Like how ridiculous would be demand for painter that stop painting these landscapes, I have seen that already and these others look pretty much the same and I can't buy all the same looking paintings of yours. Artists may ask why you'd be buying all my paintings? You can take a look if you want, but it's not for you to buy it all and own it all. This type of realization may suddenly set you free from the music album mentality. You got guys who just want the album, then there's the maniacs who'll collect every live bootleg, every rehearsal tape, every new special bonus track edition they can hunt down. Both approaches may be fine. Perhaps the latter ones can tell to the public which items are the very best of the best. Rest are for
maniacs only.