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> --- Kevin Cheli-Colando <kevin@minds-eye.org> wrote: > > >The answer that keeps coming back is just that I'd > like to see how the >music changes when I have even > more attention and energy available. > > I find that often just the opposite is the case. I > have more attention going to how my set up is > different (truncated compared to my home setup) and > how the audience is reacting. Last time I played out > we did a big jam thing at the end and my girlfriend > said, "you played really well but at the end you were > totally overpowering everyone else. I had no idea as > there wasn't a monitor pointed at or anywhere near me. > > Really, the best musical experiences I've ever had > were when playing (with or without loops) in a > controlled environment like my studio or a practice > space. I'd love to find a situation like that again > but I can't seem to find anyone in the SF area who'd > be up for it. All the energy of an "audience" PLUS > the beauty of an improv partner with none of the > hassles of schlepping gear. Yeah, I can see that and that thought is probably what keeps me from actually trying to play out at all. I suppose the best would be to have a studio in a place big enough to have people over who like to hang out and hear strange live music being created. Kevin How amazing, how amazing! Hard to comprehend that Nonsentient beings expound Dharma. It simply cannot be heard with the ear, But when sound is heard with the eye, Then it is understood. - Tung-shan (807-869) Sound and Vision: http://www.minds-eye.org