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Mark wrote: "I disagree. Most people don't play music to be unique. They play to entertain. They play to express or evoke emotion. " I agree with you, Mark, but I also think most people who play music don't make much of an impact outside of the realm that you mention. As an artist, I think it is natural to try and make a mark...........to try to be unique. If you strive for greatness you run the huge risk of failing, but if you don't strive for it, you can't be truly great. I know that with live looping as an example, I have the technique, the equipment and the ability to go out and play entertaining modern electronic dance music that would be vastly more successful in terms of album sales and paying gigs, but in my own personal artistic life, I just would rather try to be unique (even if it makes me obscure or even unheard of). I agree with you that the bulk of musicians do emulate their heroes which is fine, but you have to have the heroes to inspire to begin with. If someone didn't strive to be unique and artistic..........to try to blaze new ground, then who would the bulk of musicians emulate? What happens because of the marketing of music and the general idiosyncracies of a lot of trail blazing artists is that for every 100 really unique players there are (I think of people like Andre, Bill, etc.) 1 of them makes it to the mainstream consciousness. In this day and age with the way the music business is evolving, I seriously doubt that Hendrix would become as popular as he was, if he were just starting out. Dylan, certainly , would not have gotten a multi-record deal that allowed him to grow into the amazing artist he became in the 60's. He would have gotten a one record deal with an Indie label and then he would have sunk like a stone...................far the worse for us all, I"m afraid. But then again, if you just completely eschew the paradigm of the music business today, there is something very spiritually gratifying to be committed to art with a capital "A". I think it's incredibly important that someone like Van Gogh kept painting even though he was unsuccessful. (and by the way, I would never in a million years compare myself to any great or famous artist, but I believe that if some people don't strive for more than just entertaining then we won't have great art. If it takes thousands of us to fail so that a handful change the world of music....................it's all worth it in my book. That being said and done, Mark, I don't care what your motivation is for playing, I just really dig what you do, so please keep doing it. yours, Rick