Support |
So, my JamMan RAM came today from visionsoft-which appears to specialize in Amiga computer stuff. It was no problem installing them and I am now digging the loong loopage. It was under $50-very cool. Any of you mad scientist types want the old chips? I'll trade 'em for a a tape or something. Oddly, the first effect of having 32 seconds of looping instead of 8 has been to make me more conservative-instead of building ambient textures etc, my instinct is to lay down a 8 or 12 bar chord pattern and play leads in a pretty traditional way. I'm sure this is just because I couldn't lay down these kinds of patterns before so it's, like, new. So now a question. Since I got the additional memory, I was excited to do the multiple loop thing, so I hooked up the second JM footswitch for Function/Select, and it ain't working right. When the second footswitch is connected, the first one (Reset/Byp/Tap) doesn't work. What's the deal? The first footswitch is the one that came with the unit; the second is a generic one that came shrinkwrapped to a piece of cardboard hanging on a pegboard at the music store (as is the 2nd stereo cord). I'm thinking maybe I got the wrong kind of 1/4" stereo cord. Now, I'm not a loopdoctor or anything, but the one time I tried the Boomerang, I couldn't get it to work. Granted, I was at Guitar Center in Hollywood and the clerk dude had no idea what the 'rang was (this was about a year ago-I don't know if it's useful for Motley to send 'em hate mail, this cat was just on a trip where he wanted to sell Grunge (TM) distortions and CryBabies to teen boys), andhe wouldn't get the manual. I guess what I'm saying is that I think the interface arguement is really complicated. I think it would be really arrogant for me to say that, since it wasn't immediately visually obvious how the thing worked that it was a bad design-no gear is that intuitive (example-a guitarist I played with bought an overdrive, a yellow box with level and gain knobs and a footswitch. He never figured out that he should set the level knob in relation to the level of his clean sound). I don't really know what I'm saying-yes I do-I don't think the folks at DOD made a poorly designed overdrive; I think this guitarist was not very clever. I love the design of my Digitech PDS 1002 2 second delay (which I used as my only looper for 5 years before buying the JM). There's a switch for delay range (125ms, 500ms, 2sec), knobs for time, regeneration, mix, output, and input. There are two footswitcheswith LEDs-one marked "repeat hold" and the other "bypass." When the bypass light is off, the delayed sound is not heard. When the repeat hold light is on, the sound in the delay continues playing and any new input is passed through, not delayed. The first time I tried this box it made sense and I understood how to use it as a looper. Granted, it's wrong to have the bypass switch light off when the effect is bypassed-they really should have labeled that switch something like "engage." Still, this little dude is a really flexable looping too-better than any of the rack delays of similar vintage collecting dust at the local music store. At the same time, it's pretty useless if you want to play loops in time with other musicians, unless they follow me. Tap tempo rules for that. I tried the 8 second version of the Digitech double-wide and it was impossible. Exactly the same layout, but I think the delay ranges were 500ms, 2sec, and 8sec-trying to match a tempo in the 2-8 second range using a knob with no display was just not humanly possible. I guess what I'm trying to get to is my feeling that a lot of the things I want gear to do are not things that can be presented in something like a DOD overdrive or a Fender Princeton amp, which can be operated without reading the directions by anyone who's not a complete pinhead. If the JM didn't come with directions I'm pretty sure I'd have no idea what to do with it (the same way I felt trying to use the 'rang at McGuitar Center relying only on my experience of other delay devices and a vague recollection of a Guitar Player review. So, there's stuff which is intuitive (fuzzbox) and stuff which is not (JamMan), and then there's stuff which, once somebody tells you how it works, is logical to operate (most looping devices) and stuff that is not (bassoon). I dunno where all this is going. Probably everything I said is totally obvious to people who actually design stuff, but it seemed useful to me to work it out aloud. Here's a bonus non-gear point. Check out Anthony Braxton if you haven't already. He does a lot of different compositional stuff involving repetition and juxtaposition and has a very involved logical system including a catalog of different kinds of repetition. I particularly dig his Composition 23C (his pieces have complicated graphic titles and are usually know by number instead) on the Arista LP New York, Fall 1974. It's a series of 12 phrases, repeated, adding a phrase each time, so it's played: 1, 1+2,1+2+3, 1+2+3+4, etc. Flute, muted trumpet, and upright bass play the melody in unision while the drummer improvises. It's a kind of repetition I've never heard used before, and it's cool because familiar material keeps reoccuring, so it seems song-like, but the length of the song form keeps changing. You could play a tune like this like an accordion too-in 23c the form just gets longer, but there's not reason not to shrink it back down again or slide it up and down, maybe using hand signals to cue the band to add or subtract a phrase like in one of John Zorn's game pieces. Why not use this as a game, like one of those drinking games where the idea is to force your opponent to take off the last phrase? I have no idea how we can do this kind of thing with looping delays, but it's probably pretty easy in CSound or other compositional software. Anyway, check out Braxton. Graham Lock's book Forces in Motion does a pretty good job of translating Braxton's ideas into regular English, and I'm a big fan of his 70s quartet with Dave Holland, Barry Altschul, and either Kenny Wheeler or George Lewis. You can find a leadsheet for 23c in Ronald Radano's dissertation on Braxton (but not in the published book version) if you have a good music library handy. -- Jeff Schwartz jeffs@bgnet.bgsu.edu http://www.bgsu.edu/~jeffs/main.html