Quote from: Cementimental on June 07, 2012, 05:06:48 PM
Seems to me that too many (not saying all or most!) modern PE fans/artists have the opposite approach to 'keeping it real' - ie they talk the talk about how they are just using extreme imagery and ideas as a comment on society, a provocation, an apolitical exploration of the aesthetics or whatever other justification, but then when they start talking about their actual politics and opinions it turns out they really ARE racist/bigoted in a mundane and, in the context of their chosen genre of PE, disappointingly un-self-aware unexamined way.
If there is too many, do you have any examples?
I certainly am not apolitical nor my "bigotry" should be surprise to anyone? This is most certainly covered in my own work, but again, it's not about me as person, but about those ideas.
Quote from: HongKongGoolagong on June 07, 2012, 06:44:54 PM
Quote from: FreakAnimalFinland on June 07, 2012, 03:24:22 PM
While someone expects the "street cred" similar to hip hop, fails to see that as far as I can see, industrial/post-industrial of any kind had the same motivation or characteristics?
Certainly the shock tactics in the pre-bling era of the early 90s had great similarities to classic PE in my eyes. Geto Boys 'Mind of a Lunatic' is mentioned in comparison to Whitehouse a couple of times in 'Still Going Strong' (Impulse Publications, 1993) - bearing in mind that the 80s hip-hop pioneers such as Afrika Bambaataa were entirely aware of people like TG and influenced by them, I don't think it's too unlikely that some self-consciously 'extreme' rappers will have been made aware of the likes of Come Org.
Similarity as shock tactics, to me is hardly relevant. So is the "someone talks over electronic sound". We could compare to many things. Many music styles, poetry, movies, performance arts etc. The interest in "extremes" and provocation is so big part of popular culture, not to mention culture overall - it's all sex, death, violence, men enslaving women etc since dawn on mankind.
My point has been and still remains: the introduction of mundane (read: common; ordinary; banal; unimaginative) person as key element of noise. When we look into hip hop, be it true or false representation - am I wrong or it's most of all "me and boys" type of approach. Appearing public, in photos, in promotion as themselves, promoting themselves as persons, doing lyrics in style of
"The police wanna see me in an early grave
But I ain't trippin on em muthafuckin pearly gates
Ways to get a nigga 'fore he get me
Always keep my 'stola with me
Never beg for my life if they muthafuckin hit me"
The common, ordinary, banal, unimaginative life of some guy, doesn't make me interested for the guy himself. I couldn't care less about him as person. His face, his name, his posse, etc.
While perhaps slightly different:
"Right To Kill :
That's yours
That body's yours
Beat it
Fuck it
Dominate, mutilate, strangulate
Rape and bugger it
Kill it
Eat it
It's your right to kill
It's your nature
The ultimate pleasure
Kill! Kill! Kill!
It's your fucking right to kill
It's your fucking nature
Kill! Kill! Kill!
It's my right to kill!"
Especially at the time, what did WB present about himself? Does the song talk about WB as person? He does say "it's my right to kill", yet it comes out as ideology (perhaps too strong word, though) presented from general perspective, rather than story about his random misbehavior in contemporary society? He is not ego boosting stories of him and his posse making mess.
To me it appears significant difference, where we really do not know, nor do we care much, about what guy, how he looks like, what he does in his daily life. We would care if his recording is good and if it provides inspiring content. Having noise recording with the guy talking about his uninteresting life can be utmost let down.
NIT, Mentors, GG Allin or Geto Boys could be the Jerry Springer show. Perhaps sometimes some unadulterated grotesque fun. But I doubt majority goes to same category?
I think the question about media representation is fairly interesting, yet that's beyond artists control (in some ways). But it's not beyond artists control if he decides to sing about banal himself, with his face in the cover. You know, compilation of vegetarian noise. "Oh, Tim is vegan! Cool". Huh!? I consider the great possibility that my pathological hatred for such things as reality tv or people who offer nothing but try to get their face/name in public, is reason why I don't "get" why that could be interesting. I would put animal rights (or animal bizarre! hah) compilation to my cd player anytime over projects compiled over idea of gathering together social group based on peoples diet. As I would rather listen to material what evokes the feeling of historical transgressive moment, than Average Joe's sob story of lost girlfriend. The basic urge may be caused by exactly same things - but it manifests in entirely different light - depending what person is after. Seeking fame and recognition for himself or his ideas.