Support |
<<>I've been forcing myself to record 1/2 hour improvs at home, all live, no >overdubs- after the first few hours or so, I really have to strain to come >up with ideas, ...>> This basically what I do all the time with my setup-- alternating playing periods with marathon fx-editing and sound-design sessions, so that I can use new timbres and textures, in new combinations (multiple-output guitar into mixer=MANY possible parallel fx layers) when I switch back to improv/taping. I feel like I'm "dueting" with my processors, learning their interactive options as i play, never sounding the same from one session to the next, because I don't make notes or try to be "precious" even about particularly gorgeous combinations--having the sounds and the performances they inspired on tape is enough. Editing down the hugh piles of tape that accumulate from whole days filled with playing is a pleasant chore that gets put off usually for months on end...and seems to require a totally different part of the brain, not the lizard/wizard/angel part that I'm after during the playing; it's oriented towards finding some way of sharing the results with other ears...but I often get bogged down here, and just go back to more taping, since I prefer listen to the unedited tapes. It reminds me of my days as a painter, stepping back to evaluate/discover next step/find new doors into work in progress--I find I'm always trying to structure my music-making to be more like my experiences as a painter--I simply find sound and time more compelling than color and form at present. The net results in terms of playing new things vs. rehashing old tricks seem to break down into these fairly obvious experiences: during the playing: Old stuff still sounds old; Old stuff sounds fresh, and I'm inspired to extend it into new realms; (most likely) New sounds call forth new playing even if only slightly varied versions of old stuff...but sometimes totally surprising. During playback of tapes: old stuff often sounds good--leads to new practice/composition efforts; New stuff that sounded wonderful at the time may not hold up; (best result) "What WAS that cool thing!?!?"...leads to much analysis, often frustrated, but inevitably, back to more sound design and technical practice, and the start of the spiral/circle... David