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On Sep 28, 2004, at 1:34, Tim Nelson wrote: > However, I did just find this: > <http://www.nordische-musik.de/artikel/aarset.php#equipment> > (Scroll way down for the equipment list) > > My German is not so good, but it looks like apart from > his trusty DD5, the looping part of his rig is Line6 > (DL4 or EchoPro?) and a Repeater connected via a > Mackie mixer. Thanks for that link! Getting bookmarked here :-) > That's funny, Per, that you were recently compared to > Aarset by a Norwegian; so was I! (By a trumpeter from > Oslo who himself always gets compared to Nils Petter > Molvaer, although he says they sound nothing alike!) Yes, it's funny how odd comparisons ppl can come up with! As for myself I sometimes get the strangest first impressions of some new music and later on I just can't understand how I could hear it "as such". > Like you, I also use a cello bow on guitar sometimes; Yes. That's an easy way to get a warmer sound ;-) I like using "physical" effects as much as possible and loop the real sound, as an alternative to using electronic effects. Have you tried any other sized bow for guitar? I went for the cello bow right away and never actually tried a different model. For that "rich and warm low sound" I also like to use a tenor sax. Sax is, like playing guitar with a bow, a monophonic instrument and as such it makes a lot of fun to loop, building layers for chords and trying to chop them up for beats or to get some kind of LFO filter to move them. A lot of looping guitarists seem to like using the e-bow. I think that too makes you monophonic, right? > do you also get the inevitable Sigur Rós comparisons? > :P Noop, not yet. But I like them a lot (cool vocals). I try to also bring the sax as much as possible and maybe some think "it's jazz" when they see that instrument, getting instantly flpped out of that Sigur Rós mode ;-) - per