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I pretty much agree with Kim that the signal-to-noise has been skewed away from looping as of late, but I'm not sure I'm convinced that all of the examples of OT-ness he gave are really that far afield. I mean, when a listmember asks about midi controllers, mixers or rack wiring, it's usually in the context of how to set up or best use a looping device, whether or not that is specified. Our loopers don't exist in isolation. We've got to send signal into them, and their output has to go somewhere. If we were a fuzzbox list, I'm sure people would be discussing the relative merits of different types of guitar pickup; a guitar pickup is not a fuzzbox, but it is certainly a factor in the performance of the fuzzbox. I look at a question about a mixer's aux sends in the same way; someone probably wants to know more about how to best route a signal through a setup that is centered around one or more looping devices. Also, a lot of the non-looping gear discussion was concerned with pre- or post-processing a looped signal. That's not, IMO, *six* degrees of LD, but maybe two or, at most, three... I believe the Peter Gabriel thread was sparked by someone's observation that he includes a JamMan (AS an instrument) in the list of instruments he used on the latest album. The "acoustic guitar as drum" topic was, at least as I understood it, offered in the light of looking to explain/solve the tone difference between the original and looped signals when using the instrument WITH A LOOPER to creat a variety of timbre and to fill several simultaneous musical roles in live performance. We've had numerous threads in the past dealing with pre-electronic cultural equivalents of looping such as the use of ostinato in Bach, Reich and the like, the prominence of repetition and cycles in gnawa and gamelan musics (to name a few); a thread about the didgeridoo has the potential to be VERY on-topic, even if we don't specifically mention looping didgeridoo-ers like Dr. Didg or Tom Heasley, but talk about techniques for getting a seamless drone going, which essentially serves a similar musical role as at least one aspect of looping, but can be done acoustically. I do agree with Kim completely about political posts, though. As interesting as the sentiments expressed may be (on both sides, in many cases), such posts elicit reactivity to the extent that topicality is lost completely. And the bandwidth goes waaay up. No, I don't think we've run out of legitimate looping topics at all, but I do think we have to provide a context. The instruments we play THROUGH loopers, the different ways we might hook the loopers up, the pros and cons of techniques we use to record and distribute the recordings we make of our loop-oriented music, the reaction of audiences and critics to loop-based music; that's all relevant, an integral *part* of looping, not merely "related" to it. Kim's certainly not off the mark in asking us to try harder to stay on topic, and we certainly *do* tend to wander even through legitimate on-topic threads, but it IS often hard to define the edges of that gray area where looping stops and OT begins. -t- --- Kim Flint <kflint@loopers-delight.com> wrote: > So what is the problem? __________________________________________________ Do you Yahoo!? Yahoo! Mail Plus - Powerful. Affordable. Sign up now. http://mailplus.yahoo.com