Quote from: BatteredStatesofEuphoria on June 09, 2024, 12:02:42 AMQuote from: Penon on June 08, 2024, 11:53:36 AMPE and harsher types of noises, as for as I can see, never had their MTV/arena moment
This is true mostly, especially as far as the sounds and instrumentation go, but can it really be said about the subject matter, at least the more sexually themed aspects?
For instance, here in the US, a few years back, there was a big controversy about the Cardi B song-W.A.P. aka, Wet American Pussy.
This song was not about cats.
There was quite a sustained debate about what it meant for society that such a vulgar song was released, available for children, etc.
Anyway, no need to listen to it. Its as annoying as you can imagine. But, as someone who listens to p.e., I got an entirely different angle out of the whole kerfuffle. Reading the lyrics, its basically not that far off from something you might have seen Whitehouse/SJ do in their early days. The difference, being, of course, that W.A.P. is all wrapped in a nice, saccharine sweet layer of pop syrup.
Of course, I seriously doubt that Cardi B was inspired by early Come Org records to make this song, but it does show that popular music is dancing up to more taboos that noise has never had an issue with.
Which is what I find pathetic about it. Its FALSE. There's nothing "poppy" about this kind of stuff. Its dirty and nasty. And that's exactly what the best p.e. is, in the entire presentation. It not sugar coating anything. Its forcing you to stare into the abyss in all its blackest and make of that what you will. You can criticize their lyrics and subject matter all you want, but Bennett and co were HONEST. There was no hypocrisy.
And that maybe brings up something which actually does relate to the question of this thread. Is pe/noise maybe suffering a bit because the degeneracy of the culture it critiques has caught up with it? What is shocking anymore in a world that seems more mad and stupid by the day?
I think this is a really interesting take, however something wild like WAP is hardly new for pop or mainstream audiences, and to be honest I didn't really get the controversy about it either. Didn't we already have Madonna doing this same kinda thing for the longest of time?
In the 60's and 70's quite a few disco records had frontal nudity on the sleeves that left little to the imagination. Girls on roller skates with bare breasts on the sleeve, exposed buttocks on the back or the inside sleeve when it was a gatefold, cheeky and sexy song-titles...the music might be cheesy and boring, but disco was apart from dancing absolutely about sex and eroticism.
What about 60's, 70's & 80's porn soundtracks pressed on vinyl? including nudity for the artwork? You can argue those are not mainstream, but what if those are released on big music labels like Warner Bros. Records or the BASF or Philips record labels, the same companies that also produced the (blank) cassette tapes? Pressings of those records must at least be in the 1000's if not a lot more.
Sex and eroticism has always been part of popular music culture beginning in the 50's with Elvis Presley, MC5, The Stooges, Rolling Stones, Madonna and so on, not even going on other cultures (hip-hop, dancehall, reggaeton etc.) that are a lot more in your face with that kind of stuff.
Sex was always there and will be always a big part of mainstream music. Look at 50 cent, look at Tailor Swift, look at Cardi B, look at the popularity of 50 shades of gray. Maybe not as in your face as the hard BDSM stuff (well, kinda is sometimes), probably not the raunchiness of Bizarre Uproar, but behind the curtains these mainstream artists fuck a lot more, and probably a lot weirder than your average PE artist.
Wait, what was my point again? Sex and PE. I'm not against it. Go for it. I like sex, you like sex. Do it, do it now!