quoted 13 lines I think its kind of interesting how Venetian Snares came to be part
> >I think its kind of interesting how Venetian Snares came to be part
> of "IDM".Because really before snares's stuff came out on planet-mu, not
> much hardcore was really included in the realm of "IDM". Snares was
> just some new variant from the hardcore scene.
>
> i don't know what influences VS actually has, but to me and the
> people i've conversed with, they're regarded as being in the
> "distorted electro" camp that could be considered the next
> generation of industrial dance, centered around labels like
> ant-zen, hymen, spectrew, and hands. i'm guessing these artists
> are people who grew up liking nitzer ebb, meat beat manifesto,
> and skinny puppy's 'vivisect vi' as much as they do throbbing gristle
> and merzbow.
Interesting even more that you have that perspective.
Releasing on hymen snares also got the connection to the power noise scene.
But really before that there weren't any breakcore/hardcore artists
associated
with that scene...
I know aaron likes alot of different music, but before he blew up
he was most connected to the midwest hardcore scene - his first
releases were on isolate, history of the future, addict, and before that
he made alot of .mod music that you might loosely consider hardcore.
Hardcore as in Delta9, Tron, Industrial Strength...
In my experience, the hardcore scene was definitely interested
and influenced by 80's "industrial", but it wasn't culturally
a continuation of it. Its one of those things that rose out
of many influences, but isn't the direct child of any of them.
Of course, by the end of the 90's, hardcore had its own tired
forms that people who were into that scene were getting
tired of and trying to break out of.
Which actually has been a great thing for the "hardsounds" scene
in the past few years. The degree of mutation, and incorporation
of different sounds, from breakbeats, to heavy processing, to
more abstract structures and more melody - from people like
doormouse, snares, tarmvred, emotional joystick, curtis chip...
has really been its saving grace.
When it comes down to it, aaron is an individual,
and not really bound by any kind of limits of a scene.
quoted 9 lines with aphex twin's "come to daddy" and his remixes for NIN and a
> with aphex twin's "come to daddy" and his remixes for NIN and a
> few others, james attracted the attention of the industrial/ebm
> crowd i mentioned above. he certainly caught my attention. prior
> to the chris cunningham video, my impression of AT was a stylised
> logo which said "slick soulless cold electronic" and the knowledge
> that everyone and his brother was namedropping 'ambient v2'.
> james has also dabbled in hardcore-ish, gabba-influenced
> insanity, and some people just like their music hard-sounding,
> whatever form that may take.
this is true. the thread has come up here and other places many
times that people got into idm through aphex twin, remixes of nin
particular and the come to daddy video. its funny how something
thats really a minor blip in popular culture can have a big effect
on a small subculture.
quoted 6 lines i'd also submit that autechre's beats and glitches have gotten a lot
> i'd also submit that autechre's beats and glitches have gotten a lot
> harder-sounding over the years, the so-called "number-crunching"
> and glitchy sounds could very well appeal to the same types of
> ears that enjoy the clanking metal of einsturzende neubauten or
> bring to mind a hyper-edited version of the electroacoustic
> soundscapes of nurse with wound and organum.
most definitely, in theory. i think alot of people into abstract/noisy
beats
have at the very least flirted with the stuff you mention, if not been
big instrial heads in a previous life. although i find that younger folks
(i'm 26) very likely have never been exposed to it.
its funny, because in the world of the internet, antzen/hymen, hands etc
is the continuation of the industrial scene. but most if the self described
industrial kids are more into trancy ebm, or some ever-repeating
early 90's flavor aggro. its sort of a time warp that never really
progresses.
- cutups
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