The issue is that some read Natural and they believe that means VERY natural, all the stuff left in, other than gross lees and ZERO additives. I know that isn't a truly accurate representation of what most(?) natural wine makers are trying to do.
Bottom line, if the wine isn't tasty, what the point. I always think back to those westerns in the saloon. The cowboy downs his glass of whiskey and through a breathless moment speaks "Smooooth" Yeah, right. I drink wine to enjoy the flavors, but I cannot imagine the appeal of flavors that are off or repelling to most taste buds.
To each his own variety but, lets not get silly. People did get sick and die from bad brews, bad food etc in the 'good ol days.' If your wine making desires are to abstain from all the chemicals, that's fine but that can also include some risks in terms of how long it will keep or what 'interesting' flavors will be there. It's a choice but no, thanks, within reason I'll stick to more modern methods of wine making. The OP's article points to some wines the, while natural, are not necessarily all that desirable to the average wine drinker.
If you haven't taken time to read the article you really should do so BEFORE posting responses. Some basic, and admittedly more strident comments from it are posted below. I believe that the majority of participants on this forum are trying to return from the overly modernized wines and return to more natural wine production BUT without reverting to the more extreme ends of the spectrum. I may be wrong but judging from the comments I've seen in the sections of this forum, I think that's not a far fetched interpretation. (My forum readings are 99% from Beginners Section, General Wine making, Recipes, and Country Fruit Wine making)
Pro Modern:
"...a glass of cloudy, noticeably sour white wine from a virtually unknown vineyard in France’s Loire Valley..."
“The weird and wonderful flavours will assault your senses with all sorts of wacky scents and quirky flavours.”
"Once you know what to look for, natural wines are easy to spot: they tend to be smellier, cloudier, juicier, more acidic and generally truer to the actual taste of grape than traditional wines. In a way, they represent a return to the core elements that made human beings fall in love with wine when we first began making it, around 6,000 years ago. Advocates of natural wine believe that nearly everything about the £130bn modern wine industry – from the way it is made, to the way critics police what counts as good or bad – is ethically, ecologically and aesthetically wrong."
But among wine critics, there is a deep suspicion that the natural wine movement is intent on tearing down the norms and hierarchies that they have dedicated their lives to upholding. The haziness of what actually counts as natural wine is particularly maddening to such traditionalists. “There is no legal definition of natural wine,” Michel Bettane, one of France’s most influential wine critics, told me. “It exists because it proclaims itself so. It is a fantasy of marginal producers.” Robert Parker, perhaps the world’s most powerful wine critic, has called natural wine an “undefined scam”.
Pro Natural:'
"Yet, as natural wine advocates point out, the way most wine is produced today looks nothing like this picture-postcard vision. Vineyards are soaked with pesticide and fertiliser to protect the grapes, which are a notoriously fragile crop. In 2000, a French government report noted that vineyards used 3% of all agricultural land, but 20% of the total pesticides. In 2013, a study found traces of pesticides in 90% of wines available at French supermarkets."