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--- Warren Sirota <wsirota@wsdesigns.com> wrote: > I don't know what [Jaco] was using - you can't see much > of it - but it was > really surprising and cool to be watching this great > music and suddenly see a looper! >From Guitar Player, 1984: As Jaco described the effect, "I've got an MXR Digital Delay, which I put through one amp, leaving the other amp clean, to cause a natural sort of vibrato. I'ts almost like an organ Leslie [rotating speaker] effect or flanger. A good example of that effect is the title cut from the 8:30 album, or the tune 'Continuum' from the live Invitation album. I also used that effect a lot on the Joni Mitchell records, particularly on 'Coyote' and 'Hejira' on Hejira, or 'Goodbye Pork Pie Hat' and 'God Must be A Boogie Man' on Mingus." and Bill Milkowski, in his Pastorius biography, describes a typical Jaco solo showcase like this: During Joni [Mitchell's] road show, Jaco was featured in a solo bass spot every night. Using the repeat function of an MXR Digital Delay, he would lay down an ostinato, loop it, and then play solo lines on top of the repeating riff. As he played, he would--of course--slide around the stage on the baby powder sprinkled beneath his feet, and he would often get the crowd to clap along with the beat while he danced and strutted his James Brown moves. As the solo gathered speed, Jaco would turn up the built-in fuzz tone of his Acoustic 360 amplifier full blast and launch into an explosion of feedback, quoting from Jimi Hendrix's "Third Stone from the Sun" and "The Star-Spangled Banner" along the way. He would then climax his showcase by laying his bass down on the stage (pickups still howling), climbing on top of his amp, and jumping onto his instrument. Sometimes he would mockingly whip the bass into submission with his guitar strap, like some sort of comical Marquis de Sade. -t- __________________________________________________ Do You Yahoo!? Tired of spam? Yahoo! Mail has the best spam protection around http://mail.yahoo.com