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Why get hung up on a term? Academia might have a narrow definition of "Experimental Music" but unless you are performing for academic audiences, who really cares? BTW, all of academia is likely not in agreement on what constitues "Experimental". If you go to Berklee, Mills, University of Miami, University of North Texas, etc. they are all likely to have differing notions of what it means. Many years ago, I studied "Experimental Music Composition" under Herbert Brun at the University of Illinois. I'm still trying to figure out what all of that meant. Let's just say, there weren't a whole lot of notes being played or put to paper. But the experience defeinitely influenced (warped?) me. I believe we are all of our own best references for this type of questions. If YOU think it's experimental, then it is. If some critic wants to then write you off as somehow not being so, then listen to their criticism, evaluate it for any value, and move on. I don' think it's such a big deal. I should also add that such labels are only not for ourselves, but for our audience. It's a way of setting up expectations. So two sets of labesl are appropite. To myself, I think of what I do as "Classical New Age Surf Jazz" (or smethng along those lines). But if I tell others about it, I probably just cal it "Electronic Guitar". I might even get away with "Progressive/Experimental Electronic Guitar". -George