problem is usually finding out what things are as much as finding copies
yes! and this is why concentrating on "significant" artists isn't always the most rewarding way of approaching some genres
― seapunk run. run punk run! (Noodle Vague), Thursday, 26 April 2012 19:23 (fourteen years ago)
the fun in owning a copy for me is totally destroyed by that kind of elitist bullshit
guarantee there's a million $1 12s out there more fun to play and more fun to own
― coal, Thursday, 26 April 2012 19:24 (fourteen years ago)
"significant records" >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>> "significant artists"
― coal, Thursday, 26 April 2012 19:25 (fourteen years ago)
Hey, I like the Analords. Mostly. I just REALLY think he needed an editor to go through and whittle them down to about, say, 6 albums. But point taken. I mean, I really don't need any Smojphace records, K?
I dunno. Some people have one really great record in them, and you don't need to worry about the rest. But with other artists, it's like you learn to trust them, and accept that you'll give an ear to most anything they do.
― They have fangs, They have teeth! (White Chocolate Cheesecake), Thursday, 26 April 2012 19:25 (fourteen years ago)
define significant however u want
has nothing to do with genre and everything to do with the way people approach music. to some listeners, "significant artist" is a very helpful way of negotiating the sea of musical possibilities. to others, less so. like, i'm specifically interested in moodymann at the moment. someone else's opinion that artist-orientation is not the ideal approach to the genre is therefore useless to me.
― THE KITTEN TYPE (contenderizer), Thursday, 26 April 2012 19:28 (fourteen years ago)
i was careful to say "not the most rewarding". i get that orientation is very useful for some people. i get that when you hear something you really dig you want to immerse yourself in it. but i'm suggesting that there are other ways of exploring records that might ultimately prove to be a richer experience, and that some genres are less amenable to a "great artist" reading than others.
― seapunk run. run punk run! (Noodle Vague), Thursday, 26 April 2012 19:32 (fourteen years ago)
yeah, i get you. it's not like an interest in a specific artists can't happily coexist with interest in significant records, dollar bin bangers, etc.
― THE KITTEN TYPE (contenderizer), Thursday, 26 April 2012 19:33 (fourteen years ago)
like i don't give a fuck about a standard canonical history of rock music either but i can see that a) on some level it is a true reflection of the way popular rock has been produced and consumed and b) the canon is so entrenched that it's a legitimate thing to discuss and think about, even if you contest it or reject it
― seapunk run. run punk run! (Noodle Vague), Thursday, 26 April 2012 19:34 (fourteen years ago)
neither a) nor b) are necessarily true for all flavours of music tho i think
or one level it makes a lot of sense to think about the history of dance music as being centred on the garage bands and one hit wonders and not the Beatleses
― seapunk run. run punk run! (Noodle Vague), Thursday, 26 April 2012 19:36 (fourteen years ago)
and some of this might account for why single artist comps are less of a thing
― seapunk run. run punk run! (Noodle Vague), Thursday, 26 April 2012 19:37 (fourteen years ago)
like i want a copy of this is jungle sky vol 4 for that soulslinger "rock lobster" thing. can't imagine anybody wants much money for it, and don't feel inclined to immerse myself in the soulslinger ouvre.
― THE KITTEN TYPE (contenderizer), Thursday, 26 April 2012 19:37 (fourteen years ago)
I do think this conversation is being derailed by the fact that we're talking about several different genres - not that it's the genre itself that makes a difference, but who is expected to buy a record. That if we're complaining bout limited runs for indie artists who only expect to sell 100 copies vs limited runs where DJs are the people who will buy the records? (Sometimes wonder how some labels manage to stay afloat considering they seem to give out more promos than they ever sell 12"s but still.)
― They have fangs, They have teeth! (White Chocolate Cheesecake), Thursday, 26 April 2012 19:40 (fourteen years ago)
i said right at the start that there's different reasons for limiting supply but any and all of those are pertinent to the thread question i think.
― seapunk run. run punk run! (Noodle Vague), Thursday, 26 April 2012 19:42 (fourteen years ago)
this is true, but i'm inclined to think that important artists sort of "deserve" a certain kind and quality of attention, perhaps especially if they toil in genres that don't focus on the significance of the artist as an organizing principle. like it's their due for the work they've put in and the joy they've given, a gesture of thanks. it arguably makes them easier to share with the world at large in a way that will amplify the gratitude.
― THE KITTEN TYPE (contenderizer), Thursday, 26 April 2012 19:43 (fourteen years ago)
i'm primarily concerned here with EDM artists, the way that their legacy is perpetuated and shared
― THE KITTEN TYPE (contenderizer), Thursday, 26 April 2012 19:44 (fourteen years ago)
"deserve" vs market economics vs the artist's wishes for themselves is the nub here isn't it?
once your product is out in the world you don't have much choice as to who takes an interest in it, but it's reasonable to try and exercise choice as to the ways in which your work is presented to the world - as far as you have control over that.
― seapunk run. run punk run! (Noodle Vague), Thursday, 26 April 2012 19:45 (fourteen years ago)
and isn't there something beautiful about the idea of an art without legacy? about evanescence (cue terrible band joeks) and experiences that live within maybe a finite set of brains?
not that i'm identifying any particular artist for who that is or isn't an ideal, i'm just suggesting it as a possible ideal
― seapunk run. run punk run! (Noodle Vague), Thursday, 26 April 2012 19:47 (fourteen years ago)
i love finding old records and its like wtf is this, and it just is what it is and who even knows
― coal, Thursday, 26 April 2012 19:51 (fourteen years ago)
yeah, it is a nice idea, especially in this commodified age. and i'm new to the artist that this is all sort of indirectly centered around, so i can't really speak to his desires and how they play into the way his legacy has been curated. i'm just a recent convert to his music and naively want it to be more recognized among the (perhaps imaginary) group of "people like me".
― THE KITTEN TYPE (contenderizer), Thursday, 26 April 2012 19:59 (fourteen years ago)
I think that perhaps the whole Nuggets goldrush thing kind of turned me off that ideal of "ooh, I will find this old record that will be WTF is this and who even knows" because it all got so carefully documented and labelled and found that after a while, it just became about the rarity of the thing, and not the actual goodness. And then when MP3s hit the Nuggets obsessives, it was just like... there no longer *was* such a thing as that kind of rarity when anyone could find, like, obscure 60s Thai garage rock covers of Bond Themes at the click of a mouse.
― They have fangs, They have teeth! (White Chocolate Cheesecake), Thursday, 26 April 2012 20:00 (fourteen years ago)
more music should be harder to hear
― Lamp, Thursday, 26 April 2012 20:00 (fourteen years ago)
lol, sure. basically i just want the people who make the music i like to receive some recognition for it. maybe that's money, maybe it's acknowledgment, maybe it's availability or something else, i dunno. the more the better though.
― THE KITTEN TYPE (contenderizer), Thursday, 26 April 2012 20:02 (fourteen years ago)
What, recorded at frequencies that only dogs and children under the age of 15 can hear?
x-post
― They have fangs, They have teeth! (White Chocolate Cheesecake), Thursday, 26 April 2012 20:03 (fourteen years ago)
after a while, it just became about the rarity of the thing, and not the actual goodness
which is why afaik the widespread mp3 availability of previously obscure record collector stuff hasn't damaged the prices much? maybe ebay has pushed prices down because instead of hunting round yr local shops or record fairs you can literally search the whole world for things
― seapunk run. run punk run! (Noodle Vague), Thursday, 26 April 2012 20:03 (fourteen years ago)
seems to me that the prices for most things have gone up astronomically in the last decade, due to the fact that everybody in the world can bid on the same things at once.
― THE KITTEN TYPE (contenderizer), Thursday, 26 April 2012 20:05 (fourteen years ago)
ok that makes sense, i don't collect or pay it any heed
― seapunk run. run punk run! (Noodle Vague), Thursday, 26 April 2012 20:06 (fourteen years ago)
Who is the artist that this is centred around, because I'm sorry but I kinda gave up on the electronic music nominations thread after the first 500 posts or so. :-/
Sorry, I'm losing track of this thread because I've been trying to read it, and watch lifeboats out on manoeuvres in the bay, and steam some vegetables and drink a pint of doom bar all at the same time, and my concentration is shot.
― They have fangs, They have teeth! (White Chocolate Cheesecake), Thursday, 26 April 2012 20:07 (fourteen years ago)
Great thread idea this. NV what you said about ' the idea that everybody shd be packaged in some way for my convenience is an idea very much born of the specific market economy we live in and not the self-evident democratisation it might look like' very much struck a cord with me. Like in the past I've seen people more or less dismiss whole genres of music because they lack ease of consumption, or because they don't fit with the exact method of consumption preferred by the listener. It's a very entitled attitude and beyond that just not a very healthy way to approach the world.OTOH though I'm not sure I'd want to hold up artists who stand against this process of extreme availability as some kind of heroic figures. Although I'm not convinced this is the case with Moodyman in particular, I think that generally only releasing music in small runs, only releasing your music on vinyl/physical media etc can often be quite a cynical exercise that is very much part of 'playing the game' in the music industry - because it hypes up demand for your music, with everyone rushing to get hold of a precious copy before they vanish, and it because it creates a kind of mystique of your music being in some way special (whether or not this is borne out in reality) which in turn helps guarantee a strong niche fanbase who feel bonded to it and return over and over again. Also it obv feeds into this whole culture of collector-fetishisation which I also feel is not very healthy.
― Mr Andy M, Thursday, 26 April 2012 20:08 (fourteen years ago)
"ooh, I will find this old record that will be WTF is this and who even knows" because it all got so carefully documented and labelled and found that after a while, it just became about the rarity of the thing, and not the actual goodness.
totally agree with this, its more about just hearing things and going oh yeah this is great. i like a lot of "small records" in that i dont want to say look at this "amazing best ever hidden nugget" more like, ah im feeling this right now, its a smaller thing
which is why afaik the widespread mp3 availability of previously obscure record collector stuff hasn't damaged the prices much?
because loads of great old records aren't expensive, will never become collectors items, and discogs is full of them
― coal, Thursday, 26 April 2012 20:09 (fourteen years ago)
(Realise a lot of what I said already covered by other posters but felt like chipping in anyway).
― Mr Andy M, Thursday, 26 April 2012 20:09 (fourteen years ago)
think the thread is about kenny dixon jr/moodymann
Oh, Moodyman. Never mind! I gotcha.
― They have fangs, They have teeth! (White Chocolate Cheesecake), Thursday, 26 April 2012 20:09 (fourteen years ago)
"i love finding old records and its like wtf is this, and it just is what it is and who even knows"
i endorse this statement.
― scott seward, Thursday, 26 April 2012 20:12 (fourteen years ago)
think the way im looking at this is when you go to a foreign city and see the sights and yes the sights are amazing but just wandering around neighborhoods and getting the bus somewhere randomly is also amazing. are those streets more amazing than the great cathedral or gallery....no probably not, but i know where i have more fun
― coal, Thursday, 26 April 2012 20:13 (fourteen years ago)
relevant interview with kenny g of ubuweb just went online seconds ago
http://rwm.macba.cat/uploads/20120425/memorabilia_kenneth_goldsmith_conversation_eng.pdf
― Milton Parker, Thursday, 26 April 2012 20:22 (fourteen years ago)
Like in the past I've seen people more or less dismiss whole genres of music because they lack ease of consumption, or because they don't fit with the exact method of consumption preferred by the listener. It's a very entitled attitude and beyond that just not a very healthy way to approach the world.
as i see it this is sort of backwards, no offense. the problem isn't that people dismiss these genres, it's that they aren't given the proper point of entry. we aren't all obliged, after all, to find our way into all things. it just doesn't work that way. our lives are small and brief. for the most part, we find what we best help each other find. and that means adapting to the needs and wants of people whose needs and wants are different than your own.
if we prioritize "the record" over the artist then we risk marginalizing the artists that make records happen. a record never had an idea, never composed a track, never had to feed a family. it is people who do these things, and people who deserve the attention and reward for the place music holds in our lives. that's why i'm kind of a zealot about the importance of the artist, and about the value of sharing and outreach. sure, there will always be interesting records to find and buy for cheap, but that does little for the artists who made them.
― THE KITTEN TYPE (contenderizer), Thursday, 26 April 2012 20:23 (fourteen years ago)
there will always be interesting records to find and buy for cheap, but that does little for the artists who made them.
― THE KITTEN TYPE (contenderizer), Thursday, April 26, 2012
true for all used records regardless of price
also i buy plenty new music
new records: cost price no limited edition bullshitold records: cheap dont line scalpers pockets
― coal, Thursday, 26 April 2012 20:26 (fourteen years ago)
and there are a lot of great moodymann records either way
The underground will always be alive and well. The mainstream doesn't care about us. We're no threat to them because they can't possibly understand us. You know, in this culture everyone wants to be in the white hot center. I say let them. We'll take the margins where there is real freedom. This will continue unabated for those who cherish such values.
from that Kenneth Goldsmith interview. feeling him.
― seapunk run. run punk run! (Noodle Vague), Thursday, 26 April 2012 20:30 (fourteen years ago)
"a record never had an idea, never composed a track, never had to feed a family. it is people who do these things, and people who deserve the attention and reward for the place music holds in our lives"
wait, hold on, are you saying that people are better than records? that's absurd.
― scott seward, Thursday, 26 April 2012 20:38 (fourteen years ago)
feel like if you want to remain outside the library of babel then you shouldn't record and distribute your music
― ogmor, Thursday, 26 April 2012 20:56 (fourteen years ago)
that seems a bit absolutist
― seapunk run. run punk run! (Noodle Vague), Thursday, 26 April 2012 20:57 (fourteen years ago)
to be fair, most people shouldn't record and distribute their music.
― scott seward, Thursday, 26 April 2012 20:59 (fourteen years ago)
god loves a trier
― seapunk run. run punk run! (Noodle Vague), Thursday, 26 April 2012 20:59 (fourteen years ago)
I take your point here - certainly people aren't obligated to investigate anything, and certainly there are also many people who would be willing to give something a chance if it was more easily available or closer to their current sphere of interest. I am also very much in favour of the kind of sharing of knowledge among fans that you talk about here, and indeed this makes up a large part of my engagement in online music discussion, despite my feeling that I'm neither an expert or an insider on anything much in particular. And there have totally been times when I've shared the frustrated sense you describe that an artist is harming themselves - both in terms of their chance of getting the recognition we feel they deserve and just their ability to make a half-decent living - through the way that they choose to release and present their music.
However I also do believe that people's decision not to engage with certain kinds of music is not solely down to the scarcity/availability of it and ease/difficulty of access to it considered in an objective sense - it can also often be to do with the particular ways that someone has chosen to consume music, and to they way that they see themselves as a consumer (and sometimes perhaps more widely as a person). Common examples of these choices that I'm sure we've all encountered - "I will only buy music on vinyl, I refuse to buy mp3s as I feel they are worthless and that labels who trade in them have poor quality-control". Or "I will only buy albums of individual tunes, and don't listen to collections of DJ-mixed music or radio shows because they do not give me enough close control over what I listen to and when". Or "I will only buy and listen to mp3 at 320kb and above, anything lower is offensive to my refined sense of hearing".(I realise here that I'm splitting the difference between what I presented upthread as two different sides of the debate. I dunno, it's something I need to think more about).
― Mr Andy M, Thursday, 26 April 2012 21:11 (fourteen years ago)
There is no reason for music should be hard to get in 2012. Exclusives are a great way to make me completely disinterested in your music; why should are you making it harder for me to give you money?
And allowing music be out of print in the age of digital distribution is completely asinine and borderline obscene in this age of eternal copyright.
― Your Favorite Album in the Cutout Bin, Thursday, 26 April 2012 21:53 (fourteen years ago)
and this isnt an entitled attitude...?
― r|t|c, Thursday, 26 April 2012 22:21 (fourteen years ago)
In the age of digital downloading, records that would otherwise not make enough money for a physical re-release should now at least be digitally available.
― The GeirBot (Geir Hongro), Thursday, 26 April 2012 22:30 (fourteen years ago)
someone gave me a copy of the ruby jones album on curtom today for free! such a good album. sadly, none of you have ever heard it.
http://userserve-ak.last.fm/serve/_/8397241/Ruby+Jones+rjonesa.jpg
― scott seward, Thursday, 26 April 2012 22:33 (fourteen years ago)
well, no. i seem my "job" with regard to the music i care about as evangelistic (i'm bad at my job, btw). i don't want people to give it to me, i want to give it to others. it'd be nice if other people were doing the same thing, but i don't necessarily expect anything of anyone.
art history is littered with tales of ostensibly great and important figures who died in poverty and obscurity because the fashions of the moment changed or were never with them in the first place. with that in mind, there's every reason for every fan to be an evangelist, a popularizer, a sharer. this is the sort of thing that keeps an artist's name alive and allows their reputation to grow and spread. altruistic evangelism wants the beloved creator to be enjoyed and celebrated by as many people as possible, so that they don't have to suffer the indignities of waning cult celebrity.
― THE KITTEN TYPE (contenderizer), Friday, 27 April 2012 03:05 (fourteen years ago)
scott, by way of comparison, is an accomplished evangelist. he may like records more than people, but he likes records a lot, so it works out okay.
― THE KITTEN TYPE (contenderizer), Friday, 27 April 2012 03:06 (fourteen years ago)
i've got to say that your privileging the artist over the work feels like a way of justifying your personal preferences via the idea of "people are more important than objects", i don't think that argument holds archeologically or in a world of mass-produced goods. some aesthetics are about subsuming the individual in the culture - the culture is more important than Great Man theory, and who cares if the artist's name is alive?
― seapunk run. run punk run! (Noodle Vague), Friday, 27 April 2012 05:39 (fourteen years ago)
and most times in a DJ set you won't have a clue who 90% of the records are by
― coal, Friday, 27 April 2012 06:36 (fourteen years ago)