Deceit
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Post by Deceit on Oct 28, 2021 17:12:01 GMT
a genre I don't see mentioned on here that often.
Throbbing Gristle - The Second Annual report (first album that I listened to that I remember vividly scarring me! Harsh electronics meets spoken word meets punk meets free improvisation)
Zoviet France - Shouting at the Ground/Shadow, Thief of the Sun (The band that has gotten the closest, imo, to sounding like a post-industrial, pagan ritual; absolutely sublime stuff)
The Hafler Trio - Kill the King (A Journey through a long distant, biotic land)
Nurse With Wound - Spiral Insana
Organum - Ikon
Nocturnal Emissions - Drowning in a Sea of Bliss (some of my favorite collaging of sound ever put to record; the second track is an absolute beast)
P16.D4 - Kühe in ½ Trauer
23 Skidoo - The Culling is Coming
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Post by themoviesinner on Oct 29, 2021 7:52:41 GMT
I'm really not a fan of electronic music and industrial is no exception. I mean there are several albums with industrial influences that I think are masterful (for example Absence by Dalek, which is among the GOAT hip-hop albums, or The Mind Is A Terrible Thing To Taste by Ministry), but otherwise most industrial albums I've listened to just didn't hook me very much. The closest album to industrial I can think of that I find really great would be Perdition City by Ulver, but I think that albums isn't fully industrial, but falls more into the ambient/darkwave genres (which I generally enjoy quite a bit).
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Deceit
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Posts: 651
Likes: 688
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Post by Deceit on Oct 29, 2021 15:26:11 GMT
I'm really not a fan of electronic music and industrial is no exception. I mean there are several albums with industrial influences that I think are masterful (for example Absence by Dalek, which is among the GOAT hip-hop albums, or The Mind Is A Terrible Thing To Taste by Ministry), but otherwise most industrial albums I've listened to just didn't hook me very much. The closest album to industrial I can think of that I find really great would be Perdition City by Ulver, but I think that albums isn't fully industrial, but falls more into the ambient/darkwave genres (which I generally enjoy quite a bit). Thanks for the response! I can see where you're coming from, and while Industrial/musique concrete/electroacoustic and electronic music as a whole is my bread and butter, I can understand a general kind of disliking for this style of music, especially if you look for more technicality and instrumentation in your music. I think if you like Ulver and other of the more ambient bands that come out from the metal scene that you might dig bands like O.L.D and Phantomsmasher, who use electronics in a more post-rock/post-metal context than anything industrial. As for bands that are heavily associated with the Industrial scene, I'd say Zoviet France and Nocturnal Emissions (their later albums), would fit more into the ambient side of the genre. Cheers!
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Deceit
Full Member
Posts: 651
Likes: 688
|
Post by Deceit on Oct 29, 2021 15:27:01 GMT
I'm really not a fan of electronic music and industrial is no exception. I mean there are several albums with industrial influences that I think are masterful (for example Absence by Dalek, which is among the GOAT hip-hop albums, or The Mind Is A Terrible Thing To Taste by Ministry), but otherwise most industrial albums I've listened to just didn't hook me very much. The closest album to industrial I can think of that I find really great would be Perdition City by Ulver, but I think that albums isn't fully industrial, but falls more into the ambient/darkwave genres (which I generally enjoy quite a bit). Also, Dalek is fucking amazing! So cheers to that also
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Post by themoviesinner on Oct 29, 2021 16:03:31 GMT
Thanks for the response! I can see where you're coming from, and while Industrial/musique concrete/electroacoustic and electronic music as a whole is my bread and butter, I can understand a general kind of disliking for this style of music, especially if you look for more technicality and instrumentation in your music. I think if you like Ulver and other of the more ambient bands that come out from the metal scene that you might dig bands like O.L.D and Phantomsmasher, who use electronics in a more post-rock/post-metal context than anything industrial. As for bands that are heavily associated with the Industrial scene, I'd say Zoviet France and Nocturnal Emissions (they're later albums), would fit more into the ambient side of the genre. Cheers! Thanks for the recommendations! I'll certainly check out the bands you mentioned whenever I get the chance.
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