Support |
On Thu, Jan 29, 2009 at 2:04 PM, Sjaak <tcplugin@scarlet.be> wrote: >> Anders Bergdahl wrote: >> It just seems like most players here come from more Jazz/progressive > (what ever that means) >> musical background than I do. Whats great about looping music is that > it defies genre. I can't see the phenomenon you mention, "looping music". To me the looper is just another instrument and the choice of staying with or crossing between musical genres is rather up to the individual IMHO. However, we all use different sound source instruments to feed our loopers audio, and that may certainly cause a wider genre spread than what you may found on a trumpet player mailing list - just to pick an example. And the musical taste is wide on this list; for example, there are lots of guitar players on the list that like the music of Robert Fripp, but I can't say I'm a very big fan of that approach (well, I like the theory of it but not always the way it sounds). Talking guitar sound and playing I appreciate more the way of playing and forming the tone that comes from the early Delta Blues players, refined by Jimi Hendrix into an amplified tone (must mention Johnny Winter as well). But except for Hendrix and some early Jeff Beck stuff I tend to not like the music very much in which this guitar expression usually comes out. When I first learned to play guitar I couldn't understand why all those bands had to put in vocals and organize the music into blocks as "verse", "chorus" etc. As a teenager I made me listening reel-2-reel tapes where I only recorded intro, solo, outro and weird breaks of the songs (crazy, yes I know ;-) I especially loved to hear the drummer and bass player wander off into different directions during a guitar solo. I was a sort of multi-task lister and had problems finding music that calls for that lisitening. So I would say "musical frustration" is the background I'm coming from. It was great to discover "jazz" because in that "genre" you could find music played with no restricting block organizing - only players making noise that relates to other players and I loved the sincere attitude in letting the listener experience how the music is being born - rather than being performed as a kompsition. "Ku-lu-se-mama" with Coltrane and Pharoah Sanders especially comes to mind here. It was also nice to discover Terje Rypdal back in the late seventies because he used an electrified guitar tone to play a music that did not rely to a defined genre (wonder why the record shops filed it under "jazz". Maybe because the drummer use a lot of ride?). Greetings from Sweden Per Boysen www.boysen.se www.perboysen.com