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I see that M-Audio has a new controller called a Trigger Finger which has 16 pads and several knobs and sliders. I want one badly because it is small and lightweight and has the equivalent of two octaves of modal triggering capabilities which in my harmonically limited universe is my idea of a good time. I used to use my Roland Octapad as what I called a modal log drum and I loaded up several different world music scales from C to C into it so that I could trigger my old Akai S950 sampler......voila, a modal electronic baliphone with no wrong notes (as long as you don't modulate...............lol). I've been using my Octapad again to control my Repeater loops melodically. I love doing this with a complex timbral loop like a brass candy dish, stuck and controlled by overtone comb filter manipulations using the chamber of the mouth. The portamento effect when going between intervallically disparate notes is so cool using this technique and I love taking a found object and suddenly recontextualizing it into a tuned and playable musical instrument. Again, credit where credit is due (which seems to be my spiritual lesson and work for this week), my brother Bill is the person who hipped me to this technique and I think he does it as well as anyone I've seen. I especially love how he uses a sequencer on his midi guitar to drive octave and fifth jumps on his Repeater loops. If anyone wants to hear the results of a very cool experiment that Bill did using me, a kanjira and a Bansuri bamboo flute as his guinea pigs let me know and I'll e-mail it to you off list. I think it is too hefty to post at L.D. although I'm a little murky on the accuracy of that statement.