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Andy wrote: "I couldn't find anything in the original article to say that livelooping can be anything other than building up layers. If anything, that's the myth that hurts us by turning off potential listeners." I agree with you, Andy, but I think we have to see this article as it lies in a broader context. I interviewed for well over an hour for this article with and, in that interview, I tried to give props out to all the interesting live loopers in this community who are doing innovative things with looping, many of which are not pop oriented singer/songwriter oriented approaches (and some who are). But the fact of the matter is the Boston Globe is a populist newspaper and just out of necessity, can't be encyclopedic, scholarly or even thorough about musical phenomenas. Additionally, the paper is going to radically limit the number of words that can be printed. The journalist, Adam Conner-Simons was enthusiastic and thorough in his interview but I knew that much of what I relayed or even artists that I tried to talk about or the history of our movement would not make the final cut. It's just the nature of mainstream print journalism and even web journalism these days. But what happens to our movement as a whole as the result of us getting coverage, albeit limited, from magazines like Guitar Player, the Boston Globe, the O'Reilly Digital Media site, etc, is that it legitimizes our efforts to promote when we are talking with regional journalists, radio DJs and , eventually television producers. I am keeping a constant , upgraded file with all the live looping articles I find in prestigious and/or popular journals and I send them immediately to the press or even to venues or festivals that I'm trying to book. They are little 'badges of legitimacy'. On some levels , for the hard corp and the 'converted' amongst us, this might seem hollow, but it is not........................it is a very legitimate way to popularize what we do so that we can make our scene grow. Let's face it, if a few hundred people who read these articles only to receive a cursory understanding of what's really going on in the trenches of the movement and amongst the innovators go out and buy a Looperlative or Ableton's Live or a laptop to run Mobius, Sooperlooper, August Loop or whatever, it will stimulate the engineers and designers of these machines and programs to further innovate and we'll all profit from it. It will mean that the people putting on looping festivals will, eventually be able to get economic sponsors to actually pay all the people who pay out of their pockets to present their amazing music to the world. I envision some amazing collaborations for upcoming Y2K festivals, but currently, I can't raise enough money and audiences just don't provide enough door income to manifest some of these ideas. That said and done, the amount of money I've been able to raise in the past few years is vastly more than three years ago and it would be raising as we speak (if it were not for the awful state of the global economy right now) So, I say, let the KT Tunstalls and the Joseph Arthurs and the Imogen Heaps of the world get the first mainstream press about live looping.....................we're still out on the crest of the way trying hard to lead the way. If articles about them increase interest in live looping, we'll be the next wave of artists who will benefit from it all. It's always been the nature of innovative artists.................very few of them make the top of the pops, but it doesn't mean that we aren't having a huge influence on that scene because we aren't yet mentioned. We will be.