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> -----Original Message----- > From: Krispen Hartung [mailto:khartung@cableone.net] > > ----- Original Message ----- > > > When someone comes backstage after a gig to say "your show was so > > impressing" my immediate reaction is distrust. > > Me too, Per! It's just a ploy to get us in the sack and steal our > limelight. > Damn looping groupies, anway. :) > > Kris What a relief to find out that others have this problem too! It gets so I can hardly walk down the street without being mobbed sometimes... I'm not as contemptuous of audience relations as some others here. A performance is a social interaction. Applause is part of that interaction, and part of the context. I can play terrific music as background in a restaurant and have 2 people nod at me with satisfaction and feel good about it. If I'm totally ignored it feels a bit frustrating. If I'm playing with a singer and there's no applause after a piece it feels weird. I take none of these as a reflection on the quality of the music. Someone "earns" my applause, or inner approval, or repeat business by doing something interesting and perhaps beautiful on stage (or on recording). As a guitarist, I am sometimes envious of people with more facility than I, but only if they're using it to accomplish the above. And, in fact, I usually admire the knowledge, ear and taste far more than the facility - but sometimes the facility is integral to it (to take a single random example, say, in the case of Leo Kottke). Warren