Flying Rabbit Wrote:
I figured you'd have the hook-up and still buy cassettes.
Yeah, it's pretty ridiculous at this point. I would say probably 60-70% of emails I recieve on any given day are from cassette labels with something new coming out. It's a bit of a catch-22 and kind of interesting--the tape is usually associated with pre-internet music listening--yet the internet has made it so all of these tape labels can now reach a wider audience (as such we have had the sprouting of 1000s of such labels it seems). So before, unless you were in Ann Arbor, or Lowell, or whatever that little hippy town in Maine is that Matt Valentine hangs out in, you were kind of screwed on the releases that were limited to 25 copies or so. Now if you're quick on the trigger you can grab so many of those--the downfall is of course there is such a lack of quality filter.
It seemed for awhile (has gotten a little better the past two years or so) that every jackass with a contact mic, delay pedal, and recorder was putting out tapes on a weekly basis. There was so much really bad/uninteresting noise that everything really started to blend together and honestly the "cassette community" as a whole suffered by becoming what all of the PE/harsh noise detractors had always claimed--just a mess of noise, the art and invention piece was muddled and lost in a big way. As a result it seemed some great labels went away from the format almost to regain any sort of sonic credibility (Toth's Polyamory is the most significant loss in this category in my opinion). Also, some pretty amazing artists really cleaned up their sound--made it more accessible--seemingly to just separate themselves from the influx of poor product/imitators of what they had been doing (I submit as evidence my former favorite band Emeralds).
Fortunately, it seems to be getting a little better, or I have just found labels/artists that I trust at this point so don't really get burned by crap releases these days. It's hard to sort out though for sure when first getting into tapes, you can wind up spending a lot of money on some really bad stuff. On the plus side, each individual cassette that you grab for $5-10 isn't going to kill you--and it's a fun way to discover some new stuff somehow (can't really explain that, so just trust me on it).