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I have a project that's essentially a duo with a DJ. He also plays drum kit and analog synths, in addition to turntables and a phrase sampler. I play keys(Rhodes and Nord Lead), bass, and program a lot of grooves and textures into an MC-303, ER-1 and Nord MicroModular, as well as live looping w/JamMan and Repeater. One of the ways that we keep the prerecorded material fresh is that neither of us will have heard the other's preprogrammed loops before the gig. The stuff we do is probably the closest to hip-hop as far as the grooves go, but there's a lot of improvisation. At our last gig, we added a trumpet player, sax player and guitarist. Several audience members noted after the show that we seemed to be genuinely surprised at times at the sounds we were making, and that this carried over the the audience's experience as well, they stuck around just to see where we might go next. It was pretty satisfying. These gigs are hard to pull off because of the amount of gear, and consequently set-up time, it takes to do them, and the difficulty of explaining to club owners just what to expect ("No, it's not a DJ set, no it's not a "live" band per se, yes it'll sound like the CD, but no, we won't play any of the material from the cd, blah blah blah"), especially in a part of Oregon not exactly known for being on the musical cutting edge (Ted K., I feel your pain :-). Still, it's one of the best contexts I've ever found to play in. -- ------------------------------------------------------------------------- Dave Trenkel New and Improv Music http://www.newandimprov.com improv@peak.org -------------------------------------------------------------------------