Support |
At 3:15 PM -0700 6/13/07, RICK WALKER wrote: > >So, my long winded point is that there is a distinct danger using >this technology >to play TOO MANY LOOPS at the same time. Why am I >shouting.............................I DON'T KNOW WHY!!!!! > >your thoughts? Rick, Just playing a bit of devil's advocate here. I'd definitely agree that having the ability to record so many loops does tend to allow people to compose cluttered arrangements. However, there is a technique that this -- having many available loops, that is -- opens up very well. Rainer touched upon applying classical orchestration to your looping. Look at the way many composers (Mozart; Ravel's Bolero; heck, even Ennio Morricone) pass parts between different instruments, often playing with the way orchestral instruments combine with each other, doubling each other's parts and passing the lines from instrument to instrument. So, you could lay down a part with a flute line. Next, double that line with a clarinet. Third pass, eliminate the flute, but double the remaining clarinet with an oboe. Next pass, oboe and bassoon; then bassoon and, say, french horn; then french horn and flute again, only in harmony a fifth below, etc., etc., etc.... While you could do the above with only two loops and overdubs/undos, it sure is a lot easier to do it with multiple loops, especially if you're revisiting parts. Of course, it goes without saying that just because you've recorded 8 separate loops doesn't mean you have to play them all together (or, well, you could: if you're going for a really massive line, or an overall jumbled texture). I guess that the bottom line is that there really are no rules (not even this one). Just know what you're doing and, more importantly, WHY you're doing it. That way, you'll be driving your gear, rather than letting it drive you. --m. -- _____ "I want to keep you alive so there is always the possibility of murder... later"