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At 2:49 PM -0800 12/30/09, Matt Davignon wrote: >I'm glad you brought this up, Christopher. > >One of my frequent goals in looping is to try to not sound like I'm >looping., or to blur the line between what is looped and what is live. >I often get the impression of performing some slight-of-hand tricks as >well. Some of the stuff I do: .... > >--Create loops of different lengths (on different devices) that are >long periods of silence punctuated by only one or two notes. Play >something live that these notes will change the character of when they >appear. Phasing is good. I've spent a lot of time working with analog sequencers and their digital equivalents -- e, g. on the Nord Modular. A little phasing can give the listener the feeling that the music is governed by a rule, but that the details of the rule cannot be pinned down. > >-- >Matt Davignon >www.ribosomemusic.com >Rigs! www.youtube.com/user/ribosomematt > > >Christopher Darrow <thedarrow@gmail.com> was like: >> >> Looping is a juggling act, and a bit of magic. It takes a bit of >slight of >> hand to keep all the balls in the air. >> I think whatever is done with INTENTION to achieve this "counts." >> When I say that looping is a juggling act, I mean that (back when I was >> looping all the time) I found that something new must constantly be >added to >> the loop for it to remain interesting. (To me or the audience... I >make no >> distinction.) So I found the shortest possible means of "building" >each of >> my songs. (Not that I always chose that route, but good to have the >musical >> "straight line" on tap.) >> But sometimes, there is just some necessary space that has to happen... >> while switching instruments, letting a cycle finish, whatever. So >sometimes >> I would throw in a line of vocals or even something as simple as >smacking >> all the open guitar strings so they'd ring and fade, or perhaps an >> unnecessary momentary reverse. Anything to keep it feeling live. >> (I also found that the mix needed to be at about 60-65% loop to make >up for >> the extra energy and volume of the live inputs or else the loop would >> automatically feel stale and canned right away. But I can't fit that >into my >> juggling metaphor.) >... -- Emile Tobenfeld, Ph. D. Video Producer and Digital Photographer Image Processing Specialist Video for your HEAD! Boris FX http://www.foryourhead.com http://www.borisfx.com My photography can be viewed at http://www.flickr.com/photos/22231918@N06/collections/72157603627170351/ My videos can be viewed at http://www.youtube.com/Tobenfeld "Don't make book, if you cannot cover bets." -- Tom Lehrer