Quote from: WCN on May 27, 2024, 07:06:20 PMOUT NOW - Thomas D'Angelo on WCN Podcast
https://youtu.be/URoHLGlJf2A
Thomas D'Angelo, sometimes known as T.D., is a Philadelphia based artist whose sensuous yet critical approach to experimental music has earned him appreciation from hardcore noise heads and Avant Garde aficionados alike. He is a frequent collaborator with Stewart Skinner, with whom he runs the label "We Are One." Thomas also writes about music, and conducts interviews with other artists. His most recent CD "Voiceprints and Aircuts: Sound Poetry By Other Means" is now available from Adhuman. Full 2 hour episode and an exclusive T.D. track at https://www.patreon.com/whitecentipedenoise
Good episode, assumption is that public episode being less than half, it does get deeper in patreon version. It could be interesting to know how much would language effect on what is being called "noise". In English, one could assume many would see noise or harsh noise, perhaps as "genre names", but as soon as you'd use alternative expression for it... Not sure how it is now, but many times back in the day, I didn't know almost anyone would would use terms like power electronics, harsh noise, cut-up noise etc etc, but many would just casually talk about "melu", which is just simple word for noise in Finnish. When someone is asking like "onko mitään hyvää uutta melua tullut?", even if translation would be "any good new noise arrived?", it doesn't really implicate that it needs to be red-zone all harsh head crunch, but basically you could reply "yes", and name drop Gerogerigege, Con-Dom, Merzbow or Putrefier and all good.
Now, that there has been almost analytic, deconstructive language involved for so long time, it certainly changes the ways we talk or perhaps even remember the past. Whatever noise was, if current expression of NOISE means something else, perhaps 90's noise revisionism that happened is simply result that current definition of harsh noise changes perception of past?
At least according to Hopkins' book about Hijokaidan and early stages of Japanese noise, over there terms was noizu. Word referred to stuff that was not industrial music nor musique concrete type of thing, but chaotic improvised old school noizu. There was expressed Merzbow was more like in tradition of art music, musique concrete, tape music, while Hijokaidan, it was the noise for sake of noise real noizu. It would be curious to think that perhaps already in 90's there were older harsh head guys thinking "this is not NOISE!" when expecting Hijokaidan/Incapacitants type of pure noise and getting sound collage or moderately distorted ambient hissing?