We recently did Dead Door Unit interview for Noisecast when Ken was on tour. It has not yet been published. Will be announced when its out. There was one topic I was thinking earlier to start as discussion on forum. I know some people were slightly annoyed about "music fragments" on Dead Door Unit, so question was accurate to ask from him.
I had been just listening RLW CD, old one on Selektion label. As good as it is, when kind of thrash/speed metal sampling starts, its such an turn off. Not that I would dislike thrash metal. Not at all, and I do understand how revolutionary it may have been when also guys like Merzbow gets to hear death metal for the first time and then samples Morbid Angel into his noise, hah.. but my own perspective is that, for me, it is not "exotic". It's like "what's next? Metallica playing on noise CD?". Just something that doesn't fit there.
It is curious thing, since someone plaing vintage marching songs or old wartime pop music is like THING on industrial/martial stuff. Or you got artists sampling atmospheric passages of classical music or jazz, which seems just fine. It makes me wonder does someone hear those things like I hear metal? That the clips there are not just "abstract", but they are indeed someone elses songs thrown into noise. Like lets say, Prurient was using looong passages of Arvo Pärt on one of his old CD's. Back then, in USA underground music circles artist would be unknown mythical name. From todays perspective, just putting Pärt orchestral drone going on, isn't necessarily working with same way. It may sound just like putting clips of Morbid Angel on noise CD.
So I am wondering if people find kind of unwanted music clips from the noise. Something you'd hope wasn't there. Something that is too familiar, too easy, kind of.. that reeks or someone just grabbing first Reader's Digest mozart LP for scratching turntable noise and you're like.. uhhh.. wtf?
And what music passages could be ok? Thematic, conceptual elements? Connections to wider culture/life in general?