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Re: Looping Therapy
I believe that there is a certain style of music that is absolutely
therapeutic. When the stress level at my work-place goes up (I am a
software
engineer) I tend to put on the headphones and listen to Steve Roach
(World's
Edge, Well of Souls), Eno (Neroli, Thursday Afternoon), Fripp (Gates of
Paradise), and it puts me in a relaxed state that is very conducive to
focused,
detailed thought. Gregorian Chant has the same effect on me. While I like
classical, rock, and King Crimson (it's own category!) I find that music
to be
too structured and demands too much attention. (Of course, there are
times at
work where KC (THRaKaTTaK, B'BOOM) is entirely appropriate!)
I have had the EDP for about a month now and my playing seems to have just
naturally gravitated toward the therapeutic edge of the spectrum. I see
nothing
wrong with following one's bliss, to borrow a phrase from J. Campbell. I
think
it is very commendable that some of the folks here on LD are playing for
patients in hospital.
-Allan
Petr Dolak wrote:
> As I observe the direction of our discussions, it seems like majority of
> loopers (male loopers) essentially does entertainment stuff: live
> performances, home experiments, etc. And I wonder if there are some who
> would be using looping techniques and tools in some other forms, like in
> therapy, specific healing methods, and so on. It seems to me that
>looping
> could be very helpful e.g. with psychiatric patients, since it gives many
> many options to be creative. Looping sounds, voices, whatever. The list
>can
> be long.
>
> Any ideas, experiences, thoughts?
>
> petr
> pepetr@crnet.net