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At 5:21 PM +0000 12/23/05, mwsmart@insightbb.com wrote: >Cool article...thanks for that link, Warren. My approach to looping >has always been to use actual chord progressions, repeated like >in a normal jazz performance. It can be done quite easily, really, >but I guess a lot of people just don't do it. Play in some kind of >bass+chords or drums+bass+chords, etc accompaniment and loop it back. I work alone, with just a guitar and some effects. Usually my loops begin with one or two chords, or sometimes a four-bar ostinato. it is a challenge to keep it interesting over time, for sure. I haven't yet started taking advantage of the capabilities of my new Echoplex, but w/ the RC-20XL I try to work with 16 bars (four iterations of the four-bar pattern) and add new information sparingly. I'll do something in the first and ninth bars, for example. And since I'm a songwriter who also does loop improv, I will often resolve the loop by moving it into a song and saying goodbye to the stored info. -- David Gans - david@trufun.com or david@gdhour.com Truth and Fun, Inc., 484 Lake Park Ave. #102, Oakland CA 94610-2730 Blog: http://playback.trufun.com