The thing that bothers me is the way that the term IDM (or possibly it's just something that's happened in parallel with the growth of the term) has crystalized the music from being 'electronic music that messes with your head as much as it makes you want to dance' to being either breakcore or Autechre knockoffs, and turned it from a genuinely open ended melting pot into something stylistically limited and mostly pointless. Meanwhile, a lot of things that would originally have fit well within the remit of IDM (eg Burial, Ricardo Villalobos) seem to get more or less ignored by the IDM 'community' because they're 'not IDM'...Gabba Flamenco Crossover said:Yeah, hate it. Electronica is bad enough but IDM is worse. What's wrong with calling it techno?
Slothrop said:The thing that bothers me is the way that the term IDM (or possibly it's just something that's happened in parallel with the growth of the term) has crystalized the music from being 'electronic music that messes with your head as much as it makes you want to dance' to being either breakcore or Autechre knockoffs, and turned it from a genuinely open ended melting pot into something stylistically limited and mostly pointless. Meanwhile, a lot of things that would originally have fit well within the remit of IDM (eg Burial, Ricardo Villalobos) seem to get more or less ignored by the IDM 'community' because they're 'not IDM'...
gek-opel said:One of the key narratives of post 2001 dance music (largely 4 to the floor) has been the incorporation of innovations that were previously the preserve of the electronica kids... micro sounds, hyper edits, defibrillating hi hats (Christ these are even all over The Knife's new album...) every one of the classic IDM (or really Warp Records-style mid-90s electronica if you are to be precise) aesthetic tropes has been successfully incorporated into more classicist dance tracks, (see Villalobos' OTM pronouncement that "sound design ended in 2001 with Autechre") but to be honest, whilst it is pleasurable, by now is this not beginning to feel extremely (over)familiar? It amounts to little more than a shuffling of the deck of pre-existing ideas, doesn't it?
spackb0y said:In the NME this week (I was just reading it in the supermarket, honest) theyre raving about a new compilation on Alt Delete records, called "Digital Penetration" which is full of all this indie-neo-rave stuff.
gek-opel said:@ Swears: it's enough yes, but for how long?
@ Anyone whose actualy heard this indie-neorave shit: Is it just indie bands coveing old skool rave tunes, do they use electronics or what?
gek-opel said:@ Swears: it's enough yes, but for how long?
@ Anyone whose actualy heard this indie-neorave shit: Is it just indie bands coveing old skool rave tunes, do they use electronics or what?
spackb0y said:Here's the tracklisting of that Digital Pentration comp:
"Digital Penetration 1 is the birth of a series of compilations which will feature 50% established acts and 50% unsigned, all in the indie/electronic cross-over bracket, see below for Digital Penetration I tracklisting, and look out for it in the shops in early June.
These New Puritans - Chamber, Supersystem - Miracle, Shit Disco - Disco Blood, The Presets - Are You The One, The Neon Plastix On Fire, Revl9n - Closer, Cut Copy - Going Nowhere, Mother and The Addicts - Oh God Stop Hurting Me, Corey Dargel - I Dont Remember, Crystal Castles - Air War, Architecture in Helsinki - Do The Whirlwind (hot chip remix), Envelopes - I Don't Even Know, Letters and Colours - Alpha, Bricolage - Footsteps, New Young Pony Club - Get Lucky (Dance Edit), Theoretical Girl - It's All Too Much (demo), Klaxons - 4 Horsemen Of 2012, Dandi Wind - Balloon Factory , We Are Wolves - L.L. Romeo, Shychild - The Noise Wont Stop"
from http://www.myspace.com/altdelete although that doesnt seem to be working at the moment
not really sure what most of those bands soundlike...
spackb0y said:In the NME this week (I was just reading it in the supermarket, honest) theyre raving about a new compilation on Alt Delete records, called "Digital Penetration" which is full of all this indie-neo-rave stuff.
Norma Snockers said:So are you a go between myspace, the artist and what? Are you a parasite or do you add anything? maybe I've missed the skills you've got?
voldemort said:haven't really started pimping hardout and spamming people with links. I suppose you could say i'm a link beteween artists and general public.
parasite, that's so funny. I add value.
not maybe cuz, definitely.
voldemort said:if tunes/artists were furniture...
...I'd be the polish
voldemort said:I only put that page, as it looks now and uploaded tunes to it in the last week. It's like closure on my wee label. I'd registered it in 04 but actually forgot all about it and the password until someone out of the blue hit me up wanting to be a friend last week. Before that it only had maybe 14 views and no friends. The tunes on there deserved a second hearing and I thought I'd try and form a hub of kiwi only groups around it in the friend link section.
This might help.
http://pollywannacracka.blogspot.com/
Mostly I tend to sit in the background saying yeah, nah, that needs work, try this, how about this sample, or swap the intro with the outtro, that line sux, too many syllables, not enough bass...yadda yadda yadda
End result, I think the tunes come out sounding better but you'd never know cos you never heard the originals.
I've also sorted out licensing deals, negotiated collaborations/remixes with other artists, put on and lined people up for gigs, done graphics for releases and flyers. Tried to get their heads on straight and avoid the parasites and vampires you speak of and mostly the danger of believing their own hype.
That is value for money cos i do it initally for nothing just a belief in the artist and their tunes but not all of them. If any money happens then a percentage of profits after paying costs incurred and maybe shared songwriting credits is pretty standard.