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leave the stage and let the loop go on forever. we did it a couple of times, much to the amazement of the audience. nothing is worse than not knowing when to applaud. stephen. __________________________________________________________________________ "Losing all hope is freedom." (Edward Norton / "Fight Club") Visit the official [īramp] website at www.doombient.com ----- Original Message ----- From: "Jesse Lucas" <jlucas@neoprimitive.net> To: <Loopers-Delight@loopers-delight.com> Sent: Monday, February 21, 2005 8:28 PM Subject: Re: ending ambient pieces when playing LIVE shows > Oh, no, wait, punk rock is minimalism... > > Fuck. > > -J > > > > Jesse Lucas wrote: > > Historically, minimalist pieces usually end with a studio fade, or a > > brick wall-type ending. > > > > You either do that, or you have no endings and just blend each piece > > into the next. > > > > Actually, historically, minimalist pieces ended with, what, punk rock? > > > > 1, 2, 3, 4! > > > > -J > > > > > > > > Michael Firman wrote: > > > >> Set the feedback to about 70% and walk away. > >> > >> On Feb 21, 2005, at 12:45 PM, David Beardsley wrote: > >> > >>> David Kirkdorffer wrote: > >>> > >>>> I'm curious to hear ideas and techniques people have used (or > >>>> stopped using) > >>>> to end an ambient piece of music at a live show. > >>>> > >>> The long fade. The longer the better. > >>> > >>> -- > >>> * David Beardsley > >>> * microtonal guitar > >>> * http://biink.com/db > >>> > >>> > >> -- > >> | Michael A. Firman > >> | maf@mlswebworks.com > >> | http://www.mlswebworks.com > >> > >> > > > > >