Quote from: Andrew McIntosh on July 11, 2012, 03:02:55 AM
This forum has already brought up for discussion a lot of artists who don't fit into the definitions given in the title piece above - there's a thread on fucking hip-hop for fuck's sake... a lot more energy could be spent on the very, very huge amount of artists and projects that do fit in. That this has to be stated is a little surprising to me.
My response to this could overlap with the "On not being an artist" thread (and a few others besides). I think people involved in the soundproduction racket are more hesitant to talk at length about soundwork whose characteristics might overlap with their own work - lest they appear too sales-y. A big no no, that. The rules of decorum call for a certain degree of affected restraint. (Affected is the operative word.) At the same time, it's generally given – and expected - that anything one says in a public forum is self-serving and therefore part of the broader sales pitch (re- "My shit is cool", for example, because "I'm cool.")
If you'll bear with the questionable sense of decorum -
Taking myself as an example. A while back, on another forum, I started a thread that attempted to characterize a potential trend in the future possibilities of one particular area of sound. One commentator came out with, "Well, of course you'd say that because your work sounds like that." It doesn't ("sound like that") but I wouldn't blame him for assuming as much since I'd often offered words in support of "that" kind of sound. I've met people at events who, having never heard anything I'd done, assumed it sounded a certain way based on certain comments I'd made, or perhaps a certain persona I'd projected.
The point is, we're all expected to be SHAMELESS WHORES. But it's easier to do that when you can talk about something significantly less "controversial" - eg something somewhat removed from your own special area of productive interest.
EDIT Of course, I'm probably just saying that cause I want to appear cool.