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Hi all, I've been doing a lot of looping this year since I went stereo with a 2nd EDP+. I'm on one of my existential 'why do we loop' trips again. This time though, I'm not asking 'why we loop' but 'what are we trying to say' when we create a looping piece? My recent looping pieces seem to be defined by the texture of the sound I put into them. The texture determines the mood. After I build it up then I'll try to contrast it with a new loop. After building that up, I'll return to the initial loop like a theme restatement thing. The whole process though is very abstract, the meaning is defined and always shifting with whatever happy accidents occur in the loop itself. How are others doing this? Before you start building a loop, do you have a preconceived idea of what the loop should express or do you just let the sound of the loop guide you? Those out there who perform for an audience, do you ever introduce a loop like, "this is a loop about <my dog><France><groundhog day><whatever>"? One of the exciting things I'm finding about looping is it's a whole new musical form of communication with a new language of techniques and a new way of saying things. Dennis