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Keller Williams is very entertaining. He must be as he sells out theatres every night. But he's a player and not a tweaker. I've seen a lot of loopers who arent very good players, they just tweak effects to try to make it interesting. Thats cool and all, but they are at a big disadvantage (imo). There's been some recent videos posted of players focused 110% on there pedalboard. That to me is certain death onstage. If you are going to use effects as instruments, they should be as natural to control as a Stratocaster. On Sep 15, 2008, at 6:42 AM, Rainer Thelonius Balthasar Straschill wrote: >> So what are your thoughts regarding how you approach making >> your solo looping gig more visually engaging? > > A few thoughts in no particular order (without defining a clever > and easy to > follow concept I might add): > > * As a looper, you have the advantage that the music keeps playing > (or can > keep playing) even when you're not playing your instrument. > > * Adjusting parameters/settings on some kind of effects processor > (which > includes a looper) can look very unappealing - see the following > thoughts. > > * Someone adjusting parameters on a big synth with lots of knobs > and an > immediately audible result for the audience can look cool (think > somebody > tweaking knobs on a Waldorf Q while an arpeggiator pattern runs). > > * Diving through sub-menus on a multi-fx device always looks stupid. > > * This is only surpassed in its nerd factor by someone looking at a > computer screen and working with a mouse. > > * Using something like a kaoss pad is normally accepted by the > audience. > > * Move around on stage. Make eye contact, more generally engage the > audience! > > * Play an instrument that looks cool. > > * If possible, try to create a relationship between the device- > operating > things the audience sees you do and an immediate effect on the > audio output. > > * Good lights and good video projections are good. > > * I would rather not have somebody sit in mainly for optical > appeal - but > there may be exceptions to the rule. >