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Yes, that has been a favourite of mine for many years. There is also a track by a lesser known band called Stump. Theres a track on their 1988 album 'A fierce Pancake' called Charlton Heston where they use all these frog sounds to generate the bed rhythm and it sounds great! Ritchie http://www.mp3.com/rdomain ----- Original Message ----- From: Ryan <Rynolee@mindspring.com> To: <Loopers-Delight@loopers-delight.com> Sent: Sunday, January 28, 2001 11:18 AM Subject: RE: animal intentions and random 'looping' in nature > About other animals making music... > > Pink Floyd made this song on their Double Album entitled Ummagumma > (check the spelling on that) and Roger Waters put this song together > called Several Species Of Small Furry Animals Gathered Together In A Cave > And Grooving With A Pict > > give it a listen and that will answer any question > > ryan > > > -----Original Message----- > From: Rick Walker (Loop.pooL) [SMTP:GLOBAL@cruzio.com] > Sent: Saturday, January 27, 2001 5:07 PM > To: Loopers-Delight@loopers-delight.com > Subject: animal intentions and random 'looping' in nature > > Matthias wrote: > Do animals have intentions? I think so. But I would not consider > their noises music, would you? Or is it that just some species have > the ability? > > Rick Walker replies: > Interestingly enough, I have just read an article in the science > section > of the San Jose Mercury (which is actually a pretty informative lay science > resource) where some modern biologists and zooologists (jeez: are there > three 'o's in zoologist?) are beginning to think that there are actually > several species of animals who they think are actually making 'music' as > opposed to direct communication. I threw the article out but they > mentioned whales and dolphins and some species of birds. > > and to bring back to topic (looping that is), > Several years ago during the summer cricket season I was on my porch > late at night, just thinking, and listening to the 'song' of the >crickets. > I love when random events sometimes sound like funky syncopated patterns > (like listening to a sample and hold function on an analogue synthesizer, > something I used to do to get inspiration for funk patterns). Anyway, > the crickets were really going at it and in a seemingly random way. >All > of a sudden they coalesced into this really funky sequence which then >fell > apart after about five seconds or so. It caught my attention because I > had > not really been listening to it. Anyway, I went back to musing again >and > a > couple of minutes later I heard the same damn syncopate sequence, 'note' > for > 'note'. At this point I started listening intently and sure enough, the > same sequence occurred a couple of minutes later. At this point I started > listening for other rhythmic sequences and began to notice them. Sure > enough I started hearing an emerging pattern that was repeating perfectly > every 2 minutes or so. At this point using the random '16th notes' of the > first pattern I tried to see if I could figure out the periodicity of the > pattern. It took me about half an hour but I finally figured out that the > crickets were in a perfectly predictable and very, very slow 19/4 time > signature. I was so blown away by this randomness that I sat out there > for > two more hours until I had completely memorized the sequence of perfectly > repeating multiple cricket clicks. I was astonished and I have never > incountered anything similar in the ensuing years. > > The only other experience that I have had is that (and this repeats > every summer at about the same time) there is a large and long shrub tree > in > the front of my brothers' home. > Every summer two sets of crickets live on different sides of the shrub > (which is about 15 feet long) Each group > chirps in unison but the speed of the chirp is just slightly off. What > happens is that when you stand in the > very middle of the shrub, you hear the two repeating chirp patterns cycle > away from each other and cycle back > (as in two loops with slightly random speeds) the amazing thing is that > when > the two patterns overlap, psycho acoustically it sounds like the crickets > are right in front of your face in dry 'mono'. As they start to go out of > phase, it suddenly sounds like a beautiful ambient reverb has been >applied > to the chirping until finally you start to hear the two sides as separate > chirps. Then you can hear then pass the equidistant point (perfect 8ths > notes for 5 or 6 repitions and then move to the percieved 'shuffled' beat > at > 67%, then the last 16th note at 75% and finally into flamming and then > tight > flamming before they sync up again. It is a beautiful and peaceful > phenomenon that I look forward to every year. Loops out of sync. > > I dont' have an ounce of anthropomorphism in me (it having been beaten > out of me by my skeptical, cartesian logic medical doctor father) so i > don't > think any of these things were intentional. They weren't making music but > they sure as hell were looping. > > I just am in love with how the random becomes rhythmical to our > perceptions. I personally love to set up to loops that are at randomly > different speeds and let them interact. A fun trick is to set the Windows > Media Player (or Mac equivalent) on repeat mode and open up several > different drum or transient sounds at once and let them cycle in and out > with each other. > >