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> From: Greg House [mailto:ghunicycle@yahoo.com] > Sent: Friday, August 29, 2003 9:07 AM > To: Loopers-Delight@loopers-delight.com > Subject: Looping traditional musical forms / looping philosophy > --- Mike Barrs <mbarrs@nightviewer.com> wrote: > > >And then there is the problem of the "crash to a singularity" >> when you've built up a looped "A" section with bass, rhythm >> guitar and lead, and then suddenly move to naked guitar on the >> "B" section because it needs a new bass line and new rhythm > >chords. If you're not working in the ambient soundscape style, >> you can't hide these transitions with washes of delay and reverb >> tails. > > This is a different issue entirely, and not one exclusive to the > Repeater. Yeah, I'm getting that impression. > If you're doing all kinds of different parts and layering > up a whole bunch of stuff before moving to the next section of the > piece, you're always going to have problems like this. As someone > else said, it would be easier to move through the different parts > adding a layer at a time instead. I've tried that, and it works with some things. It's a question of how far you think the audience will put up with you building a basic structure before you get to the "good stuff". > That said, if you can get to a Phil Keaggy concert, this guy does > this better then anyone I've ever seen. I don't really hear it on > his recordings, but in concert he uses loops on every single song. > And all he does are traditional song arrangements, no "washy > ambient" material at all. He does the entire show solo, with a > Lexicon Jamman and the loops come in and out all the time. > It's pretty much seemless too. If you weren't watching him dance > around on the footpedals, and hearing other parts coming and going > when there's only one guy on the stage, you'd probably never know > he was looping (ie, if you only heard the audio). It's really quite > amazing, and it sounds like what he's doing exactly what you want to > do. <snip> Drat! I keep hearing Keaggy's name come up, and I'm never in the right place at the right time to see him live. I wish there were more live performance videos of artists like this, for us beginner loopers to cop a few ideas. Mike Barrs