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Here's an interesting Cagian ambient sound experience of my own: Last spring I participated in an Installation/Performance Art Exhibit with visual artists Jeffrey Hatfield and Allison Schlegal; the central theme was observation of the creative environment. My primary sound source was a sampled music box manipulated with a Kurzweil K-2000 and sequenced with Vision. I decided to augment these sounds with ambient microphones in the installation space, an idea derived from Cage's assertion that there is no pure listening environment and that all ambient sounds becomes a part of any listening. These ambient sounds were the audio reflection of video images being captured and projected in various parts of the space. I placed four microphones in very visible positions throughout the rooms and ran them into my various processors and lo-fi pedals. In my rehersal the room sound filled in the cracks around the prepared tapes which I was playing asynchronously against each other. When the show opened and the room filled with people, everything changed. Rather than performing the prepared guitar and Rhodes piano parts against the tape as I had intended to, I was glued to the mixer peering into each room's audio environment looping laughter, or someone's observation, or their shuffling feet. One person said something when entering the space and I looped and manipulated it the whole time they were there. Soon, the audience caught onto the fact that they were being watched and listened to and they began to perform. This is were it got really interesting, one group of people picked up these heavy old oversized bank ledgers which were a part of the installation and started to read entries "january 2nd, 1946 Deposit: six hundred and fifty three dollars and three cents...". They did this spontaneously as the prepared tapes were playing back a piece using a pitch derived from a sample of a spinning coin. It was incredible! People started creating spontaneous poetry which I looped, transformed and wove into the prepared tape portions. At the climax of the show the artists, who were upstairs typing (yeah, I looped that too) in a small booth visible through portals and on a video screen, announced that the show was closing and began counting down the minutes and then seconds. I created micro-loops within the countdown mixed with random ambient noises like paper falling (there were papers being dumped from the ceiling). I didn't record a single second of the night. I truly wish I had because it was some of the most magical spontaneous interaction I've ever experienced. I temper my sense of loss with the assurance that those sounds were a result of environment, moment, and interaction and should be left in that time and space. _______________________________________________________________ Get Free Email and Do More On The Web. Visit http://www.msn.com