Quote from: bitewerksMTB on December 28, 2009, 07:48:57 PM
I remember Soddy reviewing the comp THE RITA did dedicated to Incapacitants & my track was the only one (I think) that received a 10 for rawness or something related to nasty atmosphere? He definitely has a clue about what he's reviewing & not simply stating how "Amazing" everyone is.
This is my impression. Grunt was also on the comp. but can't remember my "scores". I would guess that none of qualities reached top points, while none really low too. Which is most often, perhaps unconscious aim for certain balance & equilibrium, at least in those days. When I would read the "points", it would make sense. I could actually related to the grading and get the point.
Quote from: heretogo on December 28, 2009, 07:51:12 PM
I'm not so sure about the usefulness of such a scoring system. I understand the appeal and as a personal "notebook system" it probably works fine. Problem is, how to universally assign scores like 6.5/10 and 7/10 for a single category? Let's say we have a full-length album, something where the basic ingredients of the sound change don't stay constant for the full duration. How do I take the 10/10 rawness of the first 5 minutes into account if the rest of the album (30 min) is less so (say, 5/10). Is it just the arithmetic mean ((5+10)/2 = 7.5 /10) of these two values? Or should I weigh the values based on their duration (5*10/35 + 30*5/35 = 5.5 / 10 (rounded to nearest half))? Which of these would be more accurate? Maybe one should use scores like 1/3 instead? But then the scale becomes too crude to capture any subtleties. To me it seems just as arbitrary as describing something as "a screech-fest of humongous proportions, a vile distillate of gang-rape in a back alley at 4 AM".
Quote from: divine Soddy says
There`s a fair bit of overlap, but I`m hardly suggesting this to be an exact science. Call it another tool in the eternal quest to locate the shit you wanna hear.
In case of Soddy, this is indeed limited exclusively to HARSH NOISE. Not for something else. I think what he says about harsh noise, is valid:
"most of us listen to noise for the same reasons, and are usually listening for the same damn thing. Noise is, before anything else, a word. A word implies a limit. If we can have a limit, we can have a fixed analytical system.".
For words, there are meanings. Dense is dense. a'la "The density of a material is defined as its mass per unit volume". One simply layer of sound or occasional bursts with lots of silence between is hardly "dense noise". You could think something such as Whitehouse "new britain" being very stripped down, no density, but plenty of rawness. While Control would score high on craftmanship and density, but hardly anything on rawness and harshness.
I'm not suggesting that there should be numeric value. I have always been kind of opposed to numeric values, especially in rating how "good" album is. Never done it, never will. My example and admiration just goes to Soddy's method of trying to find language & method what applies.. hmm, lets say among the experts. I don't think numeric value indicated good or bad either. It tries to expose some sort of level. I would not feel "lacking" if my noise doesn't get high points on some of the qualities.
When someone usually asks me how some record is, I reply, "it's noise". For some its enough. Others ask, what kind of noise. Terminology of what sets apart CCCC and Incapacitants is useful. Terms what make sense, since word has a meaning what is generally accepted, beyond purely emotional personal feeling. Soddy's post suggest people to find their preferred methods and acknowledged this to cause e-mail flood of flaming from people who disagree.
When I read "rich, seaweedy and intensively peaty. fresh, fruity and immense, with notes of cherry, ionide, toffee, smoke and sea salt all fighting for recognition". It could be description of a release. Yet it makes more sense if you're Whiskey head, and you know exactly that you need that peaty & smoky flavor with hints of salty brutality. It's not simply enough that it's light yellowish liquid that has some % of alcohol. You investigate descriptions throughly and then decide if you want to go for it. Terms have a meaning, which applies even when tastes are different. Although most of us just probably try to fool ourselves thinking the flavors are that special, hah.
But hey, this description of screech fest of 4 AM gang rape? Already used? I'm sure that'll sell records!