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>-- One reason I personally have been trying tooth and nail to steer away >from effects-laden, ambient-styled loop work is because I've found that >it hard to capture and hold a live audience with that approach. Now, >for a lot of ambient musicians, that's exactly the point -- to NOT >necessarily demand their focused listening, and to function as a >background environmental aspect just as much as a foreground element. >For me personally, though, I want to be able to grab and hold a >listener, and I've found that it's hard to do that with the >ambient/ebowed/droney/rubato/soundscapey angle. this is the reason i only do pure ambient music at punk rawk shows (and bookstores ... but the only one open to it around here closed a while ago) ... ambient infiltration of a loud-music event is such contrast that notice is taken regardless of the performer's intent. i have to explain to people they don't need to pay attention ... that i'm there to prime them for the next act. some bands/promoters don't get this idea ... and think playing Mudvayne (yuck!! i can't believe they're from my hometown) in between sets is a "good idea, not like yours, suit and tie guy!" >Andre says, "Please post and critique specific musical work on Looper's Delight!" OK. i'll start by saying that a cd i made of your mp3s gets played daily in my mom's coffee shop, it's in the changer right after Namlook/Schulze's Dark Side Of The Moog 8 and right before a Jimmy Smith live set from 1958. i find it pleasant ... more later. Eric Williamson www.suitandtieguy.com