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Hi all. My first looping machine was my grandfather's stereo dual cassette recorder (I plugged my old korg a5 pedalboard in a really old eko analog delay pedal ('round 600 or 800ms of delay) and then all in the mic input on the recorder), and, while sending on the A deck a cassette of rivers and forest sounds, recording guitar delays and fx on deck B, then getting the recorded cassette in deck A recording on a second cassette everything and adding other guitar fx. A few years later I bought my first 4 tracks recorder, and being able to turn the cassette and get the backward sounds opened up a whole new world to me. Then I got a korg A1, and I thought 'what the heck can I do with all this delay time?' (2.6 secs in hold delay mode and 1.3 secs in normal delay). After another few years I got the Headrush, and 19 secs of delay seemed to me to be a good delay time, then I put my hands on a friend's EDP with 50.3 secs, and I got him to sell me the machine... Now I'm searching to 4 mb sims to have even more time... Hell, loops are addictive, aren't they???:-):-):-) P.S. I still use all of the above mentioned machines, except for the Eko delay, which broke after two years of use/abuse, and I gladly loop on all of them... Peace Luigi ----- Original Message ----- From: "Rick Walker (loop.pool)" <GLOBAL@cruzio.com> To: <Loopers-Delight@loopers-delight.com> Sent: Friday, December 14, 2001 11:51 PM Subject: FIRST LOOPING MEMORIES > Some one mentioned this to me the other day and it got me to reminiscing > about my history of looping. I said that I had been looping for 9 years and > he said, "no way, man, I remember you using a digital delay to make a >loop > in Union Grove Music in the early eighties". It jogged my memory and I > started thinking about it: > > For a quick historical note, my group TAO ELECTRICAL did a performance at > the old Art Center in Santa Cruz '81 or '82 with three tube Echoplexes with > the record heads removed and, one by one, left the stage at intermission > with the loops running (slightly out of syn). It was at an avante garde show > with Henry Kaiser. We thought we were so clever.........ha ha. > > We weren't nearly the first but I've been looping since then. Michael > Haumesser (Not Michael, the brilliant electro/acoustic musician from >Rhode > Island) was my inspiration. He's the first person I ever saw who made > cassette loops and altered his echoplex. He was also the first person I > ever saw play prepared guitar. I steal from his creativity to this very day > ;-) > > I also remember starting a performance when one of the very first digital > delay machines came out (must have been '82 or '83) where the 'loop' was > sped up so fast that the phrase I had entered was just an abstract rhythmic > sound that I used as the 'bed' of the piece. I slowed it down (very > slowly) at the end of the piece to reveal the phrase "It doesn't mean a > fucking thing". > I remember I thought I was so clever.........ha ha > > How about a FIRST LOOOPING MEMORIES THREAD? Either your first >experience > or the first time you saw someone looping in a way that changed your >life. > NOT A COMPETITION...............AN HOMAGE............anyone up for it? > > yours, Rick Walker (aka, Loop.pooL) > > > > >