NOISEXTRA - A podcast about noise

Started by FreakAnimalFinland, May 31, 2019, 12:16:12 PM

Previous topic - Next topic

host body

Anyone write the lists down? I listened to the episode yesterday while running, but can't remember all of the ones I haven't heard.

Eigen Bast

#136
House Arafna - Asche - https://hausarafna.bandcamp.com/album/asche
Linekraft - Industrialized Criminal Histories - https://hospitalproductions.bandcamp.com/album/industrialized-criminals-history
Hivemind - Elysian Alarms - https://difficultinteractions.bandcamp.com/album/elysian-alarms
Jumping Tiger - Demo  - https://hospitalproductions.bandcamp.com/album/demo
H.C.O.D./Aischrolatreia - Crystallization
Skin Crime - Stories and Studies of Strange Things
Ron Morelli - Betting on Death - https://hospitalproductions.bandcamp.com/album/betting-on-death
Incapacitants - Onomatopee Suicida - https://totalblack.bandcamp.com/album/onomatop-e-suicida
Empty DNA - Moon Crawls Above - https://hospitalproductions.bandcamp.com/album/moon-crawls-above
Mo*te - An Idle Complaint - https://dadadrumming.bandcamp.com/album/an-idle-complaint
Thirdorgan - Thirdorgan - https://norentrecords.bandcamp.com/album/thirdorgan-nrr132
Turman/Weise/Dilloway - Electronic Extension - https://helicopter.bandcamp.com/album/electronic-extension-2
Richard Ramirez - Vulgar Tastes
Gnawed - Subterranean Rites - https://malignantrecs.bandcamp.com/album/subterranean-rites
Prurient - Casablanca Flamethrower - https://tescogermany.bandcamp.com/album/casablanca-flamethrower

\/\/ ya you are right, was doing this mostly off memory. Added links to as much as I could find too

Strangecross

i remember the pick being Thirdorgan's CD called 'Thirdorgan', not The Pornography of Despair

Got to say this is the pick that interested me the most


W.K.

Yet have to listen to the last episode, but that Jumping Tiger demo is a beauty. Very simple and effective shrieking high energy noise blast. Sounds like anyone with 3 pedals, a microphone and looper could have made it and that's why I like it, no-nonsense noise at its best!
Straight murkin' riddim blud, absolute vile gash

Strangecross

^Jumping Tiger- I don't think it sounds like anyone could make it but I know what you mean- for me it stands out as a great release because the associations and imagery granted from the song titles is really rich, and not common in noise- a new aesthetic in its 'vision'.

^^^There is a tape on No Rent called Thirdorgan, and there is a CD called Thirdorgan. They both have the same minimal design and name, but I'm pretty sure they are different releases and Mike is speaking of the CD.

Eigen Bast


Yrjö-Koskinen

Quote from: Eigen Bast on December 18, 2020, 07:30:36 PM
jesus...thirdorgan is screwing with me!! Here's a CD link sample
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9oI9r90-9NA&feature=emb_title

Not the most digestable stuff. But I have to say it was immediately attractive to me.
"Alkoholi ei ratkaise ongelmia, mutta eipä kyllä vittu maitokaan"

Ahvenanmaalla Puhutaan Suomea

Strangecross

Quote from: Yrjö-Koskinen on December 18, 2020, 09:18:04 PM
Quote from: Eigen Bast on December 18, 2020, 07:30:36 PM
jesus...thirdorgan is screwing with me!! Here's a CD link sample
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9oI9r90-9NA&feature=emb_title

Not the most digestable stuff. But I have to say it was immediately attractive to me.

Yeah. Not what I was expecting at all.
It was mentioned in the podcast that could not tell how the sounds were being made...I'd say its pretty easy to understand how this was made, but he must be talking about different tracks with "unbearably high pitched tones."

Zeno Marx

It's cool that Steve Subterranean got a mention.  Not sure if he has in the past or not.  Can't remember.  His operation is an often overlooked jewel.

Trevor Paglen of Noisegate was mentioned an episode or two ago.  They talked about his cool book, "I Could Tell You but Then You Would Have to Be Destroyed by Me: Emblems from the Pentagon's Black World", published by Melville House.  I dig patches, so I found this interesting:

https://youtu.be/2_hv2YOJ8ck
"the overindulgent machines were their children"
I only buy vinyl, d00ds.

-NRRRRK-

Listened to the latest episode on Sickness' "I have become..." yesterday and really enjoyed the artist-in-his-own-words bits on certain aspects of the record.

Fistfuck Masonanie

Sickness episode was very good, I liked the format with the artist interview and label head discussing the various aspects about the release. Would be great if they can get others to participate in this format moving forward.

The Mason Jones episode had me going back and listening to Crash Worship ‎– The Science Of Ecstasy. Has anyone attempted to re-issue any of the group's material. Perhaps they aren't interested anymore which would be a shame. A box set or even some individual re-issues would be much appreciated.

FreakAnimalFinland

Seems like K2 episode is online now. Good vinyl I listened not so long ago!

So far in 2021:

Bad Sector – Polonoid (with Kyle Wright). I like early Bad Sector stuff, but some later works, including his live gig I attended, was way too much leaning to rhythmic electronic music. Good discussions here, including story of the special edition coming with floppy disc containg file for screen saver, haha...

Maeror Tri – Language of Flames and Sound. OEC actually repressed this, nearly like the original. disc is just in more convenient plastic sleeve than just attached in middle of the die-cut brains. Really noteworthy album, that gets pretty noisy too. When noise CD needs to be repressed, it usually tells there is something unusually good there.

Sickness – I Have Become the Disease That Made Me. Talk about unusual and obsessive way of making noise! I know handful of people who just seemingly can't let go. Track is never finished and small tweaks are being made over and over again. I know this leads to different results, than just farting out random noises. Personally, always been somewhere in the middle. Rarely random, rarely edited too much. This is really nice episode, as it containt the Noisextra crew, but also publisher and the artists sharing their recollections about the album. Even when being track-to-track commentary, it is also partly interview that illuminated several things in Sickness that I don't think I ever read from interviews?

In Conversation with Mason Jones (Trance / Charnel House) Good interview episode, talking about Trance, his early 90's Japan tours, bringing over artists, arranging shows before internet era, doing absolutely noteworthy and important Ongaku Otaku magazine, and so on and on.

Esplendor Geometrico – Mekano-Turbo (with guest Shane English) This episode is unusual as it is rare case of nodding approval towards the old industrial tape blogs! I personally NEVER downloaded single rare tape. I was never part of that scene. Never had soulseek, don't even know how torrents work or what to do with similar file sharing software. All that said, nevertheless, it seems odd that such things seem to never be mentioned? One can glorify handful of tapes being dubbed or sold by distributor, yet blogs that made impossible material available for hundreds of people who had no idea such stuff even existed.... I know some prefer that there is no access to everybody. Insist that it is not the same to download and be really personally involved. Yeah, sure. But despite I personally have zero interest in downloading music, it would seem like crucial for history of genre to acknowledge also value of that side. Like guest of this episode, he concludes first time being exposed to EG, was on... was it Mutant Sounds blog? We are talking about things that happened c. 15 years ago. Seemingly not that long, but it's like people in 1990 talking about thing they listened back in 1975...

Premature Ejaculation – Anesthesia (with guest Charlotte Sartre) XXX actress with interest towards industrial talk here about Premature Ejaculation, as well as he work in the business, effects of both covid and pornhub scandals.

Listener Questions - I sent bunch of question for them too, and some appeared here. I have listened all their "publicly available" episodes, since Merzcast. That's a lot of giggles and plenty of noise information what can't be found elsewhere. It would be brilliant if they could gather oral history of noise -type of book. If anyone read things like Please Kill Me book, that seems pretty good format for noise book as well. Instead of author writing history, you got the oral history, straight from the sources. There are books about noise, but I feel there still is not THE book, that could capture variety of global noise. It is possible that such book could emerge, not from "academic study", but compiling oral history and publishing that as-is.

https://www.noisextra.com/archive/

E-mail: fanimal +a+ cfprod,com
MAGAZINE: http://www.special-interests.net
LABEL / DISTRIBUTION: FREAK ANIMAL http://www.nhfastore.net

PTM Jim

Quote from: FreakAnimalFinland on February 25, 2021, 08:38:39 AM
It would be brilliant if they could gather oral history of noise -type of book. If anyone read things like Please Kill Me book, that seems pretty good format for noise book as well. Instead of author writing history, you got the oral history, straight from the sources. There are books about noise, but I feel there still is not THE book, that could capture variety of global noise. It is possible that such book could emerge, not from "academic study", but compiling oral history and publishing that as-is.

This is probably the best way, if not the only way, to properly get a definitive book done properly. An academically researched book might get you good information, but personal stories and recollections are so much more important and "real." Would love to see that happen one day. The only problem is Noise as an actual recognized genera is nearly the same age as punk (not counting the Futurists and all the experimental stuff from the early 1900s up until the mid-70s) and Please Kill Me was published in 1996. We are already 25 years behind and I'm sure a good chunk of memories are hazy and very, very hard to find publications from the time to gather for quotes. I'm not saying is cannot be done, but it will come with extreme difficulty. With the right help, anything can be done I guess though.

Zeno Marx

"the overindulgent machines were their children"
I only buy vinyl, d00ds.