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Paul Dresher and Ned Rothenberg: Opposites Attract, New World Records 1991: I'm not sure how essential this is on the larger scale, since I seem to be the only person to have ever bought this record, but it was certainly a huge inspiration to me. Paul Dresher has done a lot of work with tape-based looping systems. Ned Rothenberg is an NYC-based woodwinds virtuoso. Opposites Attract is the result of 4+ years of collaboration, and offers a number of interesting perspectives on the challenges of live-looping with an ensemble, and on how looping technology was evolving at the time (1987-1991). The liner notes describe the process of making the disc. Dresher had designed a live tape-looping system, a 4-track reel to reel deck with an extra playback head, thus allowing 4 loops and 8 separate playback tracks. For the initial 1987 recording sessions, they did live looping with Rothenberg's various instruments (alto and tenor saxes, shakuhachi, bass clarinet and ocarina) and Dresher's guitar, and layed tape loops from Dresher's looping system onto 24 track tape. They then assembled a band of some of NYC's best avant jazz players, including Mark Dresser on acoustic bass, Anthony Jackson on electric bass, and drummers Bobby Previte and Samm Bennet, and overdubbed live parts onto the pre-recorded loops. There were immediate problems with the sessions, the loops were autonomous and didn't synchronize well, plus they felt the looping left the music static and limited their compositional freedom. So the project was abandoned for a few years. In 1989, they picked up the project again. By this time, digital samplers and computer sequencers had become affordable. An opportunity for a live performance provided the impetus. They sampled the loops from the original master tapes, and spent several weeks constructing a single 45-minute piece which they performed live with a sequencer and a keyboardist triggering the loops. This was a success, so they returned to the studio and worked on the material again, using some of the performances from the original 1987 sessions and also adding new overdubs. The music is similar to some of David Torn's work from the 80's and 90's, only the loop sources are mostly from woodwinds instead of guitar. Several pieces are built around rhythm loops generated from keyslaps on a bass clarinet, amplified and EQ'd to sound like some mutant mix of roto-toms and a tabla. The songs range from edgy funk workouts to ambient soundscapes, with some terrific playing from all involved. This disc proves that extended technique woowind sounds are an excellent source for looping, and I'd love to hear more musicians explore this area.