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I just went to Krispen's site for the 10th Anniversary 30 second looping project and was really blown away at all the really interesting and cutting edge music I hear there. I thought it would be very educational for everyone to explain how they put their particular piece together. I record a lot of my live improvisational shows and for the last seven years I have only improvised live and not done any compositions (though I revisit sets of instruments and will have set scales/modes/rags/maqams and rhythms that I'm in love with for a while). Frequently, I'll go back to those shows and hunt down loops that I do want to use in my abstract electronica CDs (I have a tendency to alternate composed, computer driven abstract electronica recordings with live looping recordings). I did the same with this particular piece, throwing it into ACID to manipulate the loops I 'sampled' from my self. Anyway, this particular track was from a one off theme show that I did (I love to do theme oriented shows just once or twice) called 'Weird Kalimba" where, for the first time since the turn of the millennium I used only traditional West African, North African and Middleeastern instruments and did a very avant garde show with them. On this piece I used just West African rattles (several different kinds from bamboo rattles to seed pod gourds to even a South African set of rattles made out of the husks of Moth chrysalises). I then used the Echoplex with INERT equaling SUBSTITUTE (one of my favorite techniques) and rounded to 8th notes so that singing long tones in a particular scale the EDP would grab individual 8th note values of long tones I was singing, randomly. I love to play this game randomly because the piece starts sound really weird and without form and the more you play the game, the more all 8 notes (or however many you choose) will fill up. By singing in falsetto, I can effect a loop that sounds as if the Pygmies of the Ituri Forest had accidentally drunk some on LSD spiked punch. The 'melody' is just me using a couple of different extended vocal techniques (warble singing and trill singing) along with a couple of interesting technique where 1) I pound rhythmically on my chest with my fist which causes very quick comb filtering effects to change the timbre of my voice as I also manipulate the overtones of my falsetto notes and 2) where is grab the loose skin just above my adams apple and shake it rhythmical which causes a very interesting modulation effect on the voice. both of these techniques look really strange (as it does when I play my Filipino nose flute or manipulate the overtones of my horribly phallic looking toy voice changer) and the audience will sometimes laugh when I do this but I think it produces really cool vocal effects. yours, Rick Walker