Quote from: FreakAnimalFinland on June 22, 2016, 09:14:19 PM
I do think there is a lot similar in being stuck in "local social scene" as well as being outside everything. Both of these involve strong disinterest in seeking what is GREAT FUCKING NOISE. Wasting time on some local guys out of "obligation" and not seeking what is vital, creative and powerful at this very moment (or before). Or wasting your time on creating shit, thinking fooling around with kaoz pad and generic laptop plugins makes your work somehow noteworthy. Because lacking all ability to see what is happening out there. All being focused on fact that anything is worthy because your own cluelessness.
If you follow atleast something. Not even as obsessive fanboy, you may realize why not all local acts are worth praise, or why your own stuff needs to be go further...
Agreed on this part. Some people don't need to be obsessed with noise, but it's clear when there are other intentions.
I think also a lot of people notice the parroting of gear, pedal chains, etc. I once watched an industrial / noise show where all of the artists were great in their own way, but they all basically did the same set with different machines, and sometimes the machines weren't different; elektribes and various glowing orb multi effect devices, etc. The drum machine dirge, the samples of serial killers or women crying, the same synth LFO setting, etc, the same hills and valleys. It was still good, but it's not something to aspire to. Some performances are masterpieces, others are ham sandwiches.
I also think it's a matter of balance and intuition. I don't like rules or rulebooks about things that are nebulous and on a somewhat case-by-case basis. I pay attention to what I pay attention to, I steadfastly ignore the rest. I think this ties into why people do noise / industrial / PE in the first place. Some think it is about being nihilistic and not caring, or others think it is about being cynical and jaded. More and more rarely do I feel like someone is NOT doing something to scream "me too!" and be part of a group.
I personally am more in the realm of a somewhat modernist "truth/beauty/genius" kind of approach to making noise, I don't have a problem with it being called art, and this is because I am easily bored with people making sounds that I feel are unenthusiastic. If you can't be ecstatic about making a racket, you're just kind of trying to take more than you give to your audience, which is what leads to people being jaded in the first place... Like some cyclical feed of noise performance scoffing at audience scoffing at noise...
With that in mind, I am a part of a "scene", if I must call it that, to the extent that the scene contains people who are thrilling, or at least, are good to hang out with.
Speaking of being jaded, I've had 3 people that couldn't wrap their heads around finishing an email interview over the last couple of years. Did they think it was cool to do that? I don't know... with all of the instant access of this current world, I just think it is much easier to see if people care or not, whether they are "in the scene" for good intentions or not.