I disagree. Ever listen to Kalmah? Finnish death metal band. They'd start off some of their songs with strange noises or end them that way. Sounds like someone swimming through a swamp or someone scratching or writing on a chalkboard or other strange songs that make you think "wtf"? Brings cool imagery to the mind. Not in anyway musical though.
There is a BIG difference between the stylistic choice of the Burden ending and ANYTHING Kalmah deals with. I'm pretty sure about 95% of this board are Kalmah fans, and the beginning of songs like Hollow Heart just have some intro samples. I don't really think WTF either, since all of their albums have something to do with swamps, and Hollow Heart is really one of the only songs to begin with samples.
Back to Burden's ending. I took a college music course (just went through musical evolution from gregorian chants to modern day) and when we got to Schoenberg (twelve tone system, everything sounds like shit but "works"...) we spent a lot of time discussing intent vs. actual artistic value. If Mikael wrote the part to sound ugly or boring, and it is ugly and boring, that doesn't make it artistic or good by any means. I don't know where I'm going with this actually. Still don't like ending.
You've made some decent points and are definitely entitled to your own opinion, but to state that the ending is not "artistic" is absolutely ridiculous.
Art is subjective. Someone could carve a beautiful image from a watermelon, or someone could carve an ugly image from a turd (or vice versa). We both might debate about which one we like/don't like, and either of us might have the audacity to claim "by God Dear Chap, That's not art!" when in fact, they are both pieces of art, period. Just because you don't like it, doesn't mean it's not art.
All that said, I LOVE the ending. One of the elements I think is so great is that before the detuning occurs, it just so happens to be one of the most "jolly" Robin Hood style, acoustic guitar, folk melodies that I've ever heard from Mikael, which he then turns into a detuned hilarity. I can picture the look of confusion/disappointment on many faces when they hear this for the first time, and that makes me laugh! It makes me laugh every time I hear it. One of my friends can't stand the ending (he's extremely averse to out-of-tune git-fiddles, so he skips it). It's both surprising to me, and not surprising, that some people have to skip it.
The difference is, that he did it for the laughs apparently. Something you do for the laughs, or just simply to shock the hell out of your listener, doesn't really qualify as art in my opinion. I think art requires a certain coherence (ideawise) that that part simply lacks. With your open-minded definition of art, basically anything can qualify as art, even "FUCK YOU" smudges on dirty windscreens.
You've made some decent points and are definitely entitled to your own opinion, but to state that the ending is not "artistic" is absolutely ridiculous.
Art is subjective. Someone could carve a beautiful image from a watermelon, or someone could carve an ugly image from a turd (or vice versa). We both might debate about which one we like/don't like, and either of us might have the audacity to claim "by God Dear Chap, That's not art!" when in fact, they are both pieces of art, period. Just because you don't like it, doesn't mean it's not art.
All that said, I LOVE the ending. One of the elements I think is so great is that before the detuning occurs, it just so happens to be one of the most "jolly" Robin Hood style, acoustic guitar, folk melodies that I've ever heard from Mikael, which he then turns into a detuned hilarity. I can picture the look of confusion/disappointment on many faces when they hear this for the first time, and that makes me laugh! It makes me laugh every time I hear it. One of my friends can't stand the ending (he's extremely averse to out-of-tune git-fiddles, so he skips it). It's both surprising to me, and not surprising, that some people have to skip it.
The difference is, that he did it for the laughs apparently. Something you do for the laughs, or just simply to shock the hell out of your listener, doesn't really qualify as art in my opinion. I think art requires a certain coherence (ideawise) that that part simply lacks. With your open-minded definition of art, basically anything can qualify as art, even "FUCK YOU" smudges on dirty windscreens.
Yet being narrow-minded and using hearsay to back up your assertions don't exactly make you sound like you know what you're talking about.
Maybe Bosch was laughing hysterically or manically while painting The Garden of Earthly Delights. Does that make it any less impressive?