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On 7/22/64 11:59 AM, "André Donawa" wrote: > Here's a clip of Jaco doing his thing. > An incredible innovator for his time. > Definitely pushed the boundaries of what bass was supposed to sound like. > > http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wvSOquDOfVo I saw Jaco do this in the early 80's and he was the first person who inspired me to loop. I remembered thinking that, as a drummer/percussionist, there were so many things you could do if you could clone yourself. At the time, I was blessed to be in a band with three and sometimes four percussionists but this was extremely rare. I thought I had started live looping in '95 with the Jamman from Lexicon, but a fan of our band told me that he saw me looping at the old pre-earthquake Union Grove store looping with my voice and a kalimba with a pickup and an MXR digital delay that it would be YEARS before I could afford looping music and playing over it. I remember now, spending a couple of hours there irritating the owner, Richard Gellis because I was so into it.......lol......He's now a close friend! Once he did it reminded me of the tape looping we did by disengaging the erase head on old tube Echoplexes and also of a piece I did with Tao Electrical by looping the phrase "It doesn't mean a fucking thing" on a cheap digital delay set on infinite repeat and playing it so fast that it sounded like an interesting percussive sound (without any intelligibility, slowing it down at the very end of the piece until the last repitition was intelligible and then stopping. Wow, I hadn't thought about that performance in years and years till you posted that, Andre! Thanks for the trip down memory lane. Long Live Jaco Pastorius!!!!! rick walker