I only read the first page... anyway, I love electronic music... and I think this might be the first time i completely agree with Steve here. It is basically first-draft perfume commercial music.
The whole Blair Witch Project type hype around Burial is just stunning...ly absurd.
Musical concern: Burial
143Whaaaat the fuck is going on in here? Is there a hidden PRF page I was missing for all those years?
Truth to be told: I'm Kerry King. Seriously.
Truth to be told: I'm Kerry King. Seriously.
Musical concern: Burial
144You can't see the NSFW sub-forum? I'm not going to explain the content specifically but I'll throw some words out there as a hint.
"Lube"
"Interns"
"Funnel"
"Starkers"
"Shorn"
"Plinth"
"Gaping"
and
"Sex Piss"
"Lube"
"Interns"
"Funnel"
"Starkers"
"Shorn"
"Plinth"
"Gaping"
and
"Sex Piss"
run joe run wrote:Kerble your enthusiasm.
Musical concern: Burial
145tommydski wrote:Nina that posts here is not Nina Nastasia, folks. Incidentally, I am not Tommy Ramone.
Emmanuelle Cunt isn't Pete Doherty either.
but ahm still a barcode
llllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll
Musical concern: Burial
146I think it's time for Steve to reveal that he's not Steve Albini.
Come on Professor Hawking, fess up.
Come on Professor Hawking, fess up.
simmo wrote:Someone make my carrot and grapefruits smoke. Please.
Musical concern: Burial
147tocharian wrote:What do you mean “postmodernism has had its moment”? Do you mean that artists are swearing off digital manipulation and creating everything from scratch? Postmodern strategies are here to stay, although there will always be cranky modernists who insist on whatever their idea of authenticity is.
I’m not quite sure what curator art is, but what Kavinsky, SebastiAn, Justice, and Mr. Oizo do goes beyond curation. Maybe you could say that their approach is akin to what Cat Power did with “Can’t Get No Satisfaction”, i.e. detected some small element in a song, extracted it, and recombined it with other elements to make something entirely different in mood and texture. But you couldn’t even call their music curation based on the samples they use. A lot of the Ed Banger artists’ raw materials is cheese (Goblin’s “Tenebre”) or outright garbage (Simian’s “We Are Your Friends”), from which they make something astonishing—which in my opinion makes what they do more like Jean Tinguely and his sculptures constructed out of industrial and consumer detritus.
I think postmodernism is at the heart of this thread, so i'll say my two cents and then get out, because when it comes to electronic music i'm completely out of my depth and completely uninterested too (it's also 3 am and i fear attracting ire).
No, postmodernism isn't going anywhere. No, I'm not a modernist who will say that it has had its day. However, as a discerning cultural critic I feel compelled to write that postmodernism, as a philosophy, can and does set itself up to be dismissed. Yes, it sets everything else up to be dismissed as well, but in the end it is the product philosophy for a population obsessed with the idea that variety is the spice of life.
In the end I think it comes down to the fact that theoretically you CAN do anything, but it doesn't mean it will have any substance. Burial's music, like Kavinsky, etc..., might be considered art, but "art" - just like film and music - is something that is currently defined by consumerism and has been reduced to KITSCH. You can still call it art, or film, or music, but with this added amount of democratically-innduced postmodernism/consumerism, kitsch is going to be tagged on to it.
What I dislike about Burial, as well as his peers, as well as the cut-and-paste "beep beep" thing he's into, is the kitch consumerism that is inherent in the music. This democratic consumerism is found in rock too, that can't be denied, but it appeals on a more specific level. It's as if these electronic dj's NEEDED to appeal to everyone - to appeal to a wider market - in order to make music, so what did they do? Reduced everything to the most easy to swallow shit you could possibly get.
So this music can theoretically be taken seriously - so what? When other people dismiss it, because they don't like kitschy democratic stuff, they have a valid argument.
Well, that's just, like, your opinion, man.
Musical concern: Burial
148tommydski wrote:You can't see the NSFW sub-forum? I'm not going to explain the content specifically but I'll throw some words out there as a hint.
"Lube"
"Interns"
"Funnel"
"Starkers"
"Shorn"
"Plinth"
"Gaping"
and
"Sex Piss"
What about "Ass Tongs"?
Musical concern: Burial
149I don't think Burial is kitsch or post-modern. The latter term implies a critical distance from his own work which I don't think he has (though you could say that his sampling is a post-modern strategy). Kitsch is an even less appropriate term as I see no indication that he does not take his music seriously, or puts an ironic dressing over it. If by kitsch you mean "bad", then fine, but this is more a judgment call.
The general arguments put about dance or electronic music on this thread seem to have missed great swathes of what makes it different from rock and special to a lot of people. The first chapter to Simon Reynolds' Energy Flash is here and offers more of an insider's perspective, an alternative view of club culture to the predominant "yuck!" reaction here. There's a lot to disagree with, but I like it.
The general arguments put about dance or electronic music on this thread seem to have missed great swathes of what makes it different from rock and special to a lot of people. The first chapter to Simon Reynolds' Energy Flash is here and offers more of an insider's perspective, an alternative view of club culture to the predominant "yuck!" reaction here. There's a lot to disagree with, but I like it.
Gib Opi kein Opium, denn Opium bringt Opi um!
Musical concern: Burial
150The general arguments put about dance or electronic music on this thread seem to have missed great swathes of what makes it different from rock and special to a lot of people. The first chapter to Simon Reynolds' Energy Flash is here and offers more of an insider's perspective, an alternative view of club culture to the predominant "yuck!" reaction here. There's a lot to disagree with, but I like it.
Substitute "thread" with "forum" and I agree. Not sure what Simon has to say about this Burial kid, but surely the whole Ed Banger or Kitsune Maison roster certainly is a modern-day analog to the things that Reynolds mentiones he like(s/d).
Burial feels and sounds like some sort of after-school project in anonymity. I wonder what will happen if Burial revealed and its... its.... Sufjan Stevens.
"Pro Tools is too California Hollywood bullshit.”