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----- Original Message ----- From: <sine@zerocrossing.net> To: <Loopers-Delight@loopers-delight.com> Sent: Monday, January 13, 2003 19:32:PM Subject: Re: Or, the occasionally opaque veil of opinion > Not talking about the portland loopfest (or any other loop shows I've seen) > I'd like to say that I'm not really sure what you mean by "Transparent > technology." >From my viewpoint it is often most desireable to produce the work without making the slightest accommodation for the technology it is produced THROUGH. My acquisition of looping technology was something I wanted to do in order to achieve a result thought about many years before I could afford to buy any of it. I'll be the first to say I don't exploit the features of my equipment fully. The Loop Is then a construct that existed before the equipment was purchased to produce it. The only real variables I like to contend with are loop length when it comes down to it, and the main irritations I encounter occur when I want to sync up to utilize drums somehow. I have enough backlogged music to do to not have to address such items, so for now it's not an issue. Transparency is not non-existence, rather non-interference. In the same manner I find that it is by playing music that my soul is able to sing, and in so doing I become transparent, unaffected, honest with the work. > In the scope of world history what we're doing is *really* new. There will be > bumps in the road. I remember listening to Adrian Belew's "Desire Caught By > The Tail" and thinking, "Adrian's got a new Guitar Synth and he wanked around > with it and made an album." All but a few tracks seemed thin in the content > world... unless you think of them as an album about the GR-300. (not >sure if > this was the model, but you know...) Later I read an interview where Adrian > basically confirms what I'm saying, so there you have it. I think I remember reading something from that here actually. I agree with the idea, and do my best to not become ensnared in such situations. Lord knows when you can afford to buy items like the GR300 etc., it's inevitable that such an effect upon playing will occur. I would then wonder if planning such a purchase for several years has the opposite effect, ie the reverse of You Can't Always Get What You Want. Sometimes You Can, eh? > But he stuck with the Guitar Synth and quickly learned how to *use* it, > instead of showcasing it's features. This is difficult. A lot of gear can be > overwhelming. One must work in a sensitive way and all the time LISTEN. I > played at Mat's Switch Show and what I found interesting is that some of the > best stuff seemed to happen when musicians were all of the sudden thrust with > new people using different instruments. I think it was because that's when > people really started listening to each other. This is something we all have > to strive for, and believe me, I know I can be guilty of getting lost in what > I'm doing. This is especially bad when you're shooting for purely improvised > music, and double plus bad if it's experimental. There's a difference between > playing "noise" and making noise. Many are not sensitive to this difference. > Many listeners are not sensitive to the difference either, and this often can > lead to bad reviews of great shows. (I have no way of knowing if this is the > case in Portland) Sometimes however, people are just wanking, and that's kind > of OK too if that's what they like to do and they can find people who >like to > listen to wanking. Sometimes I think that such communications are one of the things I miss the most here. One finds surprises galore playing with others. Often happy ones. > Oh well, I'm just rambling now. Blood sugar's low. Late dinner! Arrgh! > Mark Sottilaro > > "S.P. Goodman" wrote: > > > I don't believe however that technology should "add" to my music, instead > > that it be as transparent as possible to my hoped-for/intended result > > > > >