Quote from: Levas on October 01, 2012, 10:05:18 PM
QuoteQuality is a perceptual, conditional and somewhat subjective attribute.
yes. i agree with that. but just not having universal meaning of quality that everyone understands the same (like meter, liter etc.), is quite difficult when discussing these topics.
It may be difficult, but as its done in just about every field of culture and every style of expression, I don't think noise is somehow utterly different from everything else.
It wouldn't have to go to discussion whether something is good or bad. It would be merely about people knowing what are measures that constitute "quality
control".
Lets say you got liquid, which has alcohol in it - you can drink it, and it does its job. Regardless is it "good quality" or not. It won't matter if different people consider different things good. Lets say strength (= % of alcohol) as only measure of whether it's worthy of drink. Or perhaps strength itself irrelevant, when it's main purpose alcohol is to enhance taste experience. And what if taste is necessary to be sweet - or utterly pungent and smoky? It's up to personal taste whether you like something or not, BUT it's up to quality control if originally set expectation/function is fulfilled. And the people will return over and over and over again to something where quality standard is high. As opposed to keep trying something where quality standard is whatever. If you can't accurately measure anyone taste, you can observe other things:
-Is there quality control at all, or is it low (= anything goes, based on temporary wish to do whatever feel fine at that moment, and results which are quite ok, but really not that excellent, will pass into production).
-If these is clear quality control, did it work out or fail (there is expectation & promise of something, but does the releases
actually meet such expectations)
We live in world, what embraces consumption. We live in cultural climate where every individualists creation automatically is rated somehow valuable - and this whole postmodern approach tries to remove possibility of any meaning and value of anything.
It leads often to situation, that we are being sold stuff we don't want or need, by people who could do better, but won't bother. It is valid for whatever consumer product you can think of. It doesn't matter do you buy sausage, beer, microwave owen, cellphone, photobook, movie or noise release. You got someone offering you product-line of tempting items.
I don't know ANY record collectors who's collection would constitute only very top-of-the-game milestones. We all are satisfied also lesser achievements what clutter in our shelves and are streaming from stereospeakers, when it simply suits the purpose. We are ok with 72dpi inkjet poster of photo, what as good quality was supposed to be platinum contact print of original film. We are ok with mp3 file of album, even if it as best quality appeared as uncompressed analogue format. We are ok with food created of industrial waste, as long as it's deep-fried to look ok'ish. We're ok to sit in front of TV, since something is
on. We accept shallow charcoal copies. We accept plagiarism. We accept identity theft. We accept all kinds of compromise just to have one less thing to think about. So to be part of regular current of life - it's up to oneself to be proud or repulsed.
But somewhere below all these things doing their best to approval of living in middle of glorification of "whatever dude" -climate, exists also people who will not accept. And even if there is probably endless stream of lucky incidents, what can be found in canon of art - there is also found the talent, visionaries, people committed experiments, people committed to reaching higher, etc. I certainly regret too relaxed attitudes in some ways - meaning my own works. I know I could have done better, but didn't bother, since it appeared to be "enough". In some cases this can open the "writers block" and lead to better things, but as never-ending drain of compromises, probably not.
It could be interesting survey to check out what are without doubt most listened noise albums by people - and how many times you'd generally listen to it. I'm sure it's connected party to high profile and availability of release and time when person got the release... But not totally. Lets say why Pulse Demon of Merzbow appears to be so much more worshipped than Tauromachine?
Can it be that good quality noise album awakes reaction "great fucking album! I will never listen it again" (reasons being, it wasn't that good afterall or it's similar to a lot of stuff, so instead to relistening, you can just listen something else). Or "great fucking album! I have listened this every week for year, and still kills". Despite personal tastes, I would assume there are certain bands and their certain records which simply are so much better. And there are some labels who simply had much more such releases than other labels. It can lead to conclusions of some people having more quality control and therefore more focused results which survive better test of time and temporary trends & moods.