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It seems to me that the number of note being played at once by the drone instrument isn't really the point. Indian music, by and large, lacks voice leading and modulation. You can play a C chord or even a C13 chord till the cows come home and it would still be pretty minimalist, harmonically speaking, if there were no chord changes. When I said that it isn't minimalist or repetitive what I meant is that, despite the strict structure, the variations will come. And if the group is good, they may REALLY come. They never abanden the raga, but they may add some out notes like a jazz or blues player would do. And they dont abanden the tala but generally they don't play it straight over and over like a loop would. The variations that you here in classical indian music reminds me more of Bach than Eno, outside of the harmonic content anyway. The main thing though is the comunication. Its split second, like in jazz. As a listener, this element of unpredictability keeps me grounded, not spacing off and floating away the way I do with ambient and techno. -Chris ________________________________________________________________ Sign Up for Juno Platinum Internet Access Today Only $9.95 per month! Visit www.juno.com