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Well I've collected all my thoughts and cereal boxtops to join in the recent questionfest....here goes: 1.Who's on the forefront of looping? Commercially, dollar for dollar, year in year out, probably either the dreaded Mr. F or old Mr. Delirium Tremors himself, no surprise. >From an aesthetic vantage point the forefront belongs to artists that I would suspect are not only not on this list but little concerned with anyone elses opinion of their work or collection of gear. To be popular one must be a mediocrity. 2.Why is Fripp and his work seen by many people in a difficult at best context? People's expectations can ruin anything. IMHO all you get for your ticket purchase is a seat in the hall. If you want to be assured of hearing familiar tunes, go see the Beach Boys or Wayne Newton, they ALWAYS play the same tunes and try to please their devoted followers,(what a great crowd..anybody here from Cleveland?). When an artist has many facets to their work. it's unlikely they'll all be showcased in a solo concert, especially when a goodly volume of that work is in a group (duo,trio,quartet,quintet,sextet,ensemble), and all are done with seperate intent. Solo Fripp is NOT King Crimson, what's the mystery folks? 3. When was the seminal moment that I knew looping was for me? When I first ran the Wurlitzer electric piano into the analog tape echoplex in the sound on sound mode, in the mid-70's. Abuse of a Space-echo and then a couple of half- track decks was not far behind. 4.What is it about looping that makes it different from other musical pursuits? The instant multi-track dynamics are certainly the most immediate of the intrigues. Artists confined to monophonic outputs from their instrument(trumpet, old synth, etc,) can realize polyphony within a far more casual context than studio multitracking has traditionally presented ( an aspect that is changing). This freedom I believe extends one's desire to hear all sound subjected to the manipulation of the loop, once begun. To be honest it's the same issue as humor: you either get the joke or you don't ...explaining it is of no use to the unexperienced. Only mass market exposure to the technique's result will alleviate this ad man/ manufacturer's nightmare ( and this is happening around the world, every hour, every day now). Listening to, and/or making loop music is an aquired taste.For me, after 20 years there are still lots of new recipes to be created via the tools at hand, be it a dull knife or a deluxe food processor, the artisitic integrity is the true fulcrum. Enough of my blather...loop on. Bryan Helm