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Kumonkorpse Recordings
United States
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Experimental
Experimental music is an umbrella term for practices that prioritize exploration, process, and discovery over adherence to established genre norms. It embraces new sound sources, nonstandard tuning systems, indeterminacy and chance operations, graphic and open-form scores, extended techniques, and technology-led sound design (tape, electronics, computers, and live processing). Rather than a single style, it is a methodology and ethos: testing hypotheses about sound, structure, and performance, often blurring boundaries between composition, improvisation, sound art, and performance art. Listeners can expect unfamiliar timbres, unusual forms, and an emphasis on how music is made as much as the resulting sound.
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Gorenoise
Gorenoise is an internet-born microgenre that fuses the gurgling, pitch-shifted vocal aesthetics and macabre pathology themes of goregrind with the texture-first extremity of harsh noise and harsh noise wall. The style prioritizes obliterating distortion, clipping, and tape-saturated, basement-level fidelity over riffs or song structure. Tracks are typically very short or arranged as continuous, amorphous slabs of noise; rhythm can be absent, replaced by sputtering drum-machine blasts or junk percussion pushed into the red. Medical samples, surgical ambience, and grotesque artwork complete the transgressive, DIY package. Where goregrind still leans on riffs and drums, gorenoise minimizes musical gesture to focus on timbre, saturation, and body-horror atmosphere—effectively treating the classic “toilet bowl” vocal as another noise source within a wall of hiss, feedback, and low-end rumble.
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Harsh Noise
Harsh noise is an extreme form of noise music characterized by dense, high-volume, full-spectrum distortion that largely rejects melody, harmony, and conventional rhythm. It focuses on texture, saturation, and the psychoacoustic impact of sound. Rather than songs, works are often evolving blocks of feedback, amplified object sounds, and overloaded electronics, shaped into walls, bursts, or streams of sonic pressure. The aesthetic foregrounds physical intensity, unpredictability, and timbral complexity, often presented at ear-splitting sound-pressure levels. Although related to industrial and power electronics, harsh noise minimizes the role of beat and voice, emphasizing raw noise generation and continuous timbral sculpting. The scene is deeply DIY, thriving on small-run tapes, CDrs, and underground performance spaces.
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Cunnyupyadunny
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Melodding was created as a tribute to
Every Noise at Once
, which inspired us to help curious minds keep digging into music's ever-evolving genres.