Quote from: HONOR_IS_KING! on May 31, 2012, 06:40:19 PM
On top of that his business/professional credentials are in the shitter as well. Too broke and too retarded to mail stuff out?!?!? Anyone in Finland play those games? And yet you still woo over them because of their past work?
His opinion is quite weak and has nothing to do with the Industrial/PE/noise scene that I was apart of in the Midwest. He spoke for himself and himself only.
If we talk of his music and him as artists, issues such as if he's reliable businessman are irrelevant. I would never order anything from Crumer and I do not recommend anyone to do so. But I strongly recommend to order latest CD from Second Layer. This is perhaps the great sign of phenomena what I was talking about.
Music is normalized and localized and it's not really about if his album is good, but who's buddy he was and whether he was nice guy. This soon infiltrates into actual content of music and artwork.
I base my opinion on observation, meeting & discussing with people. There can exists people and "scenes" out there I know nothing about. But question is not whether there are exceptions - few or a lot of them - but of change where obviously and without doubt scene isn't what it used to be.
Like what would be popular genre defining labels like MSNP, Self Abuse, Deadline, AWB, Arbeit Group, Armed & Loaded, Aeon, DOM usa, Circle Of Shit, Jinx, Sound Of Pig, Taint Entertainment, Banned,... etc etc... compared with No Fun Prod, Rainbow Bridge, Chondritic Sound, Blossoming Noise, Hanson, Apop, American tapes, gods of tundra, etc etc.. Of course there will always exists the fringe area of harsh and transgressive noise (say TF/PE, Trash Ritual, and so on), but nobody could deny that the stream of popular noise from USA that defined the "uprise" of new american noise is something that approaches noise often from very different angle. I don't say the labels would be bad. I worship some of them who took the "new" approach, yet I can't associate myself well for the mentality of "generation y". I guess we need Zeno Marx to explain the generation difference and the change in scene where shift of attention from Jap noise or euro industrial/ambient was taken over by American new wave noise? hah...
QuoteSocial psychologists and journalists like New York Times columnist David Brooks argue that the way our generation uses social media sites reveals a level of self-promotion not found among previous generations.
They say Generation Y has turned into Generation Me. Apparently our egoism is just a click away.
Phenomena is global, yet in form of actual releases, I see differences between continents. That some do not belong and some do not even know what the hell is talked about, doesn't change what just about every social psychologists and experts have studied and pointed out. Even when being seemingly outsider, observations seem to apply.