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My music tends to involve setting up a bunch of simultaneous complex processes and then interacting with them. There is too much going on for me to be in control of each process simultaneously -- so my 'big ears' (such as they are) need to be applied selectively to determine which process can use my attention., which can be let alone, and which has warn out its welcome and need to be stopped or muted. This is a lot easier in a solo situation. At 1:13 PM -0800 2/27/05, Gary Lehmann wrote: >It seems to me that one reason for solo looping is the ability to use your >"big ears" to stretch your musical boundaries, in a way that ensemble >playing, even with the most gifted musicians, usually does not--they all >have their own agendas, and their mind reading is spotty at best. > >I truly enjoy finding my way in unfamiliar musical situations--but looping >while improvising is all of that! > >I like what Andre said in the Ronan interview (thanks Chris!) at 1:19:10 >about "throwing my playing back at myself"--and listening twice as hard as >you play! > >Gary -- "The test of a first-rate intelligence is the ability to hold two opposed ideas in the mind at the same time, and still retain the ability to function." F. Scott Fitzgerald Visit "Before the Fall -- Images of the World Trade Center" at http://www.foryourhead.com Emile Tobenfeld, Ph. D. Video Producer Image Processing Specialist Video for your HEAD! Boris FX http://www.foryourhead.com http://www.borisfx.com