Theme probably discussed somewhere, at some point, but nevertheless.. I was listening to recent Primitive Isolation Tactics interview on Disaster Sources (CKUT). The original link for the interview is not working as we speak, so better to check S&W forum topic for updated download links (
http://screamandwrithe.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=743&sid=29d4f0bed7657ede168f6f576fba53e9 )
Interview is c 40 mins including longer noise tracks thrown between segments. So if you don't know what P.I.T. is, you'll get pretty good overview of sound here too. Tayler Geddes of course should be no new name to anyone at this point!
Lots of pointers there what could be interesting to discuss. I find it curious that radio hosts describes that in general, when labels put out albums of artists, they promote it for like year, making sure it gets noticed and reaches people who could be interested. Harsh noise as opposite, may be that label drops 5 new full length tapes and says here they are, and... all gone and moving to next batch. Asking why is so? You can listen Taylor and him discuss about it. I find this quite interesting question that raises more detailed questions.
Such as, is there much advantage of "promoting noise"? Anyone with concrete experiences that noise that is "well promoted" would have significantly bigger reach or sales? Assuming that just posting once on social media and dropping mass email barely is the promotion that counts as pushing release for a year.
Does it give noise disposable quality, if there is impression it wouldn't really matter do you take THIS tape, or the NEXT tape, or one that came before these? Like with music albums, it tends to matter quite a lot do you take "...And Justice for All"... or album before that or album after that, hah.. But the question may be is disposable quality that bad?
Still, releases that have this longevity, often become cornerstones of genre. Reference points and milestones. Like watching recent news and Genocide Leichenhalle LP repress available for wholesale again. Merzbow Pulse demon CD reissued. These barely need to be "promoted" anymore, since they enjoy the cult status as is. Many other releases have some sort of permanent presence in genre. Most notable may have been RRR/Pure series. Generation after generation of noise fans would probably know certain artist solely through these discs, not by their output in general.
I was just listening WORTH "Hamper" CD, thinking damn this would benefit from... "long promotion" and long availability. It is just gut feeling, and it may be perfectly enough that there is one time pressing, sold instantly and next releases to come soon after.. but nevertheless, feeling is that what if this quality noise album would get attention of "music album". Pushing it for year or more?
One angle being, that noise can be such a dynamic motion, that artists output is not just "album", but the motion where progress and evolution is visible, and for example some guys like Crumer appears to be almost irritated that whatever is being done, people will still start talking about him with.. "Ottoman.....". Suddenly the milestone album may be almost counterproductive for the forward going motion. So releases that disappear, may have perfect functionality for such.
Certainly most things co-exist, but leaning towards dynamic motion forward, or preservation of history, at some point it seemed that parts of noise would heavily lean on latter. But now I think dynamic motion forward has caught up and perhaps even dominates?
Any thoughts? Other peoples work - your own works? Would you rather be known for body of work than single "landmarks" that stand out? Do you rather observe other people progression or trusted masterpieces from their output?