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Re: the impermanence of looping
On Jan 25, 2005, at 1:49, Dennis Montgomery wrote:
> Hi all,
> I just started looping with the arrival of my EDP+ about a month ago
> and I try to create a new sound collage/loop every day. Spending some
> time every day working on music has been my routine for quite awhile.
> My primary musical activity of the past 20+ years has been to write
> and record "songs". This is a very goal oriented activity which looks
> toward the end result being a CD of my music. The hardest aspect of
> this mode of work is that I work out a part and once it's recorded, I
> have no real reason to play it again. It's like saying goodbye to a
> great new friend as soon as you capture a representative recording of
> it.
>
> Anyway, since I started looping I've made it a point to not record
> anything. This is very exciting and unfamiliar ground for me. There
> have been some pieces that I turn the feedback knob back as I sit
> debating whether to let the creation fade into the ether or hit a
> record button somewhere fast! So far, I just let them all fade away.
> It definitely forces me to focus on my music very differently than I
> did before...the point being the present moment rather than the future
> finished piece. I come to looping from a Fripp/Eno place and am
> familiar with Fripp's perspectives of music and musicians. I just
> never thought I'd find it this much fun to do myself!
>
> I'm not really as much of a serious nutcase as this sounds (hmmm...or
> am I???), but it's trippy to me that deciding to try realtime looping
> has opened this whole philosophical area for exploration that I never
> really tried before.
> Dennis
Dennis,
That was a very inspiring post! I'm thinking and feeling the same way.
Greetings from Sweden
Per Boysen
---
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