tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7805361.post7798801322728810127..comments2023-07-16T08:55:24.018+02:00Comments on S̈́̎͐ͮ̃̅ͧͯͣ̀ͬ̀̑ͩͥͤ͒̎͡҉̛͉̬̜̩͚̗͎̱̰͎̺̰͙͙̻̥͘͜u̴̴̸̥̤̯̮̘̩̓ͩͨ̽̊̂͢n̒ͮshine in my throat ░░░░░░░░░: interview: 7 questions on DincaRosa Menkmanhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/01733045840051946372noreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7805361.post-56510197433601259862010-07-08T16:27:30.829+02:002010-07-08T16:27:30.829+02:00Yea,
every time it seems chipmusic - genre - issu...Yea, <br />every time it seems chipmusic - genre - issues have a lot in common with glitch -genre - issues. <br />The interview is quite old, 3 weeks, so since I presented at Manchester I already got some similar feedback from the speakers at the conference, which is very helpful. Thanks!<br /><br />In the end of course glitch music (witch has for sure characteristics of a genre) is kind of more mature (yet not death in my opinion) than glitch video, which is still developing a lot from my point of view. <br />I do not believe that the possibilities of glitch art will end, nor that "the genre" will die. I get this question a lot lately and it just feels a bit to pessimist to me, or maybe positivist? Or just radical in a conservative kind of way. Like we need to put ends and starts (delineate) to genres. <br />It reminds me of Geert Lovink's writing that <a href="http://networkcultures.org/wpmu/geert/2010/06/01/the-underground-feeling/" rel="nofollow">"Underground […] so clearly no longer exists. [...] All that’s left is Style"</a>. <br />Or the beautiful remark: <a href="http://www.davidoreilly.com/2009/02/datamoshing-is-so-over" rel="nofollow">"Datamsohing is so over!"</a>. The proclamation of death of a genre I think says more about the writer than about the particular genre itself; the writer might just lack the imagination or insight to see the next step the movement is going to take.Rosa Menkmanhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01733045840051946372noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-7805361.post-58582621007113447332010-07-07T19:38:48.349+02:002010-07-07T19:38:48.349+02:00i recognize many things here, uhm ...
anyway, ge...i recognize many things here, uhm ... <br /><br />anyway, genre studies is quite a rich field and is often based on the assumption that if a genre doesn't change, it is a dead genre (bakhtin). they all change, and are usually not used as the elite wants it to be used, but how it fits in with previous concepts for a majority of people/institutions. i guess.<br /><br />glitch (music), as you know, has been a genre for a long time, and imho lost its critical potential when it became a recipe of aesthetic elements and techniques. i guess?chipfliphttp://chipflip.wordpress.comnoreply@blogger.com