Support |
Larry and the loopers on list, Larry, your achievements are impressive and humbling for my admittedly baby steps chops. I also admire your privilege, having more or less raised myself in a working class, musically illiterate family (by your standards, at least). All I have are my ears and what the sounds of the world can teach me about structure, proportionality, harmony and disharmony and a broader acoustic perspective. In short, a musician I am not by your standards, even if I try to apply such an acoustic perspective to musical instruments. I do have some questions, then, and other's on the list should feel free to contribute to such a discussion. Where does 'looping' then fit in with this very clearly marked classical and jazz canon from which you appear to be working? You say that we are slaves to technology, but can I ask in what ways we can engage with looping as a musical technology without enslaving ourselves? Personally, my instruments of choice are found sounds, synthesised sounds and, like yourself, classical guitar. Unlike yourself, I have no classical training, and as such, turned to looping to provide a real-time acoustic echo to learn more about the sounds I am making with the guitar. I have mainly relied on listening to learn what little I know, and in some ways have come to think of looping tools as a "third ear" with which to allow some critical distance from the things I am doing with the guitar. Nonetheless, however, I also use looping tools because it's fun! Afterall, one should be 'play-ing' an instrument, not just working it. Sooo, my point is? At 28, I have to say that my musical journey is still beginning. I should like to take it further and really push my personal boundaries with regards to music, but I know that I doubtfully will ever have the privilege or education to, as you say, break the rules from a position of thoroughly knowing them. So I stand on the shoulders of those who have already attempted to break them. Which is ultimately the pretense at the heart of the issue here. Rules are a social system of control that can become very oppressive, and also a system that accepts very few into the inner circle of fully knowing these rules. So the looping as a technological enslavement issue is to me not about enslavement, but personal surrender to an alternate system. I know that one system is closed off to me - that of classical and jazz music - and I also am inspired nonetheless by what I hear coming from that system. So the rejection hurts. It is a paradox to be sure, but in the surrender to and learning of a technological system one can find a very rewarding and enriching freedom from the constraints imposed by other, perhaps more social systems - a type of self reinforcement that I can in fact be master of a domain, even if it is a limited technical domain. Slowly and surely I am opening the definition of that technical system to include sound, and eventually, hopefully, music. Whether that's music to your ears or not is not much of a concern to me, I'm just another human trying to get by and have a little fun and retain personal integrity in the process. Since I don't want especially to be judged for not conforming to the standards of a privileged few, for now I don't call myself a musician... sincerely michael