Continuing the tour of netlabel interviews per country in alphabetical order, I dug up a Danish netlabel called Drowning
 and asked its founder and curator Danny Kreutzfeldt some questions on 
their state of operations. Drowning focuses on drone and doom sounds, 
not everyone’s cup of tea, but, as you’ll read, their answers still 
provide interesting insights on how some labels operate and the parallel
 with the diy music scene.
Wyrm – Ouroburous Harpegnathos
Can you please introduce to us the people who run Drowning. 
What are their backgrounds. Is it just you running the whole label 
Danny?
Drowning is run solely by me. I live in Denmark and work professionally 
with web stuff, but have been involved with electronic and extreme music
 since adolescence. My first release was a dubby ambient EP on the 
pioneering netlabel Thinner in 2002. From 2002 till 2008 I released a 
lot of music on netlabels and physical format labels. I was a part of 
the Noisejihad concert/party-organization until we closed in 2008. At 
some point I also ran a small hateful CDR label called 8K Mob.
Today, I’m involved with the Danish electronic music label Uhrlaut. 
Back in 2008 it was the first label in the world to have an official 
collecting society (KODA) backing an LP/CD release, which was also made 
available as free Creative Commons mp3s. While I’m not really active 
making new music anymore, I still have a solo music project called 
Periskop, with which I’m currently working on an LP/free download album 
on Uhrlaut in 2013.
When did you feel the need to create Drowning? Why the focus on drone/doom? Was there a lack of labels focusing on the genre?
Drowning is a drone & doom netlabel, which means it mainly releases 
drone doom metal. I’ve been fascinated by this type of music for a long 
time. The notion of brutal primitive sound taking the form of slow 
evocative art immediately appealed to me. But Drowning is not a strictly
 genre-specific label and I’m interested in releasing anything 
drone-based or doom-like, as long as it fits the overall aesthetic. This
 is pretty normal for the many labels out there releasing drone doom 
metal, but I don’t think there are any of them that operate as a 
netlabel.
I started Drowning in 2009 as a pet project, where I could try out 
things related to doing music on the web. Because of the monumental 
overproduction and overpromotion of culture, these are interesting 
times. One consequence has been that music as a consumer product has 
become almost completely worthless. The obvious solution to this is to 
turn every label into a CC-based netlabel. But this raises the question 
of where the value is in music these days. And despite offering music 
for free, if the promotion is not done well, people will still feel like
 you’re trying to steal their time from them. All this fascinates me.
How does Drowning relate to the local scene? Do you organize 
concerts? Do you have any connections with local promoters? Or do you 
operate solely on the internet?
A firm grounding in a local scene is very useful for an artist, band or 
physical format label. This is also somewhat true for a netlabel, but 
sadly I have plenty of connections and not enough time. So far there has
 only been one Drowning release event, which was earlier this year in my
 hometown Aarhus for Moongazing Hare’s “The Sunderland Wreck”. I’ve been
 meaning to do some showcases for ages, and it’s probably the one thing I
 need to find better time for, in order to promote Drowning effectively 
in Denmark.
I noticed on your website you have some videos as well. Do 
you feel the video component is essential in the process of bringing 
people to listening to the sounds?
Well, for the moment they are no-budget videos made by the acts 
themselves – and mainly just an excuse to have a presence on YouTube. 
YouTube is where most people younger than 60 check out new music, but 
there’s so much, and the suggestion function is extremely poor. If a 
good well-subscribed YouTube channel has made the effort of uploading a 
release, I think it’s a very nice gesture and holds a lot of value. Even
 though it doesn’t generate a lot of traffic to the netlabel site, it 
gets the music heard. As a netlabel though, it only really makes sense 
to make videos for YouTube, if you release an already established name, 
that people are actively searching for.
If none of this is happening, the long way around would be to build 
up your own successful YouTube channel, or search for channels you can 
try to push your stuff to.
I know you personally been involved with several label and 
music projects under a few different genres. Do you notice a parallel 
between those niche genre scenes? I’m talking in terms of how they 
position themselfs in the netaudio / cdr / commercial aspect.
The one thing I would say strikes me the most in all scenes or genres 
these days is, how big the difference can be between the high quality of
 some music compared to how few people that are into it.
While this has certainly been emphasized by the cultural 
overproduction, I really don’t think this is about our culture getting 
more superficial or uncritical. In fact I think the opposite is 
happening on many scenes. It’s more about the average musician being 
naïve about how the work is being perceived among all the other stuff, 
that’s out there. It’s extremely important to have the whole package 
make sense: Music, band name, album title, artwork and whatever story, 
message or impression you can make the whole thing revolve around. 
Otherwise very few people will know why they should spend time on it.
This also falls back on many labels, which may be good at making 
quality music products, but are completely clueless about local or 
online promotion, so they have no idea how to get the releases out once 
their distribution partners close down.
In this sense, musical talent is less and less just about making good
 music, and more and more about also getting the whole act to make 
sense, and about making things happen around you.
Can you tell us a little on the Danish netaudio scene? How many labels are out there? What genres they cover?
I don’t think there is a Danish netaudio scene, and I have no idea how 
many Danish netlabels there are. I remember Kyoto had a good electronic 
dub thing going back in 2005-2006, and I know Illphabetik have been 
releasing random electronic crap for ages. And then there’s Uhrlaut I 
mentioned earlier, which also deals with electronic music.
However, I’ve been seeing more and more DIY labels putting their 
stuff up for free download once the physical limited edition product has
 sold out. This is a wonderfully obvious thing, that I would encourage 
any DIY label to do. A fine example of this is Golem Tapes from Aarhus, 
which caters an eclectic style around experimental rock, tape loop 
drones and surreal jazz.
Thank you for your time! Any last words of advice for people 
digging through netaudio to discover good music or the folks curating 
and promoting it?
To the people looking for good netaudio: Good luck.
To the people running netlabels: Don’t waste people’s time; don’t 
release boring mediocre music just because you can; don’t make confusing
 websites just because they look cool. People will hate you and leave 
you.
 
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