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Dennis Montgomery said: "Before you start building a loop, do you have a preconceived idea of what the loop should express or do you just let the sound of the loop guide you?" I have to say that because I have a strong tendency to be both too intellectual in my musical approach and also to controlling in my over all aproach to music that I have come to love the fact that a live looping device can capture amazing serendipity. I've fallen in love with playing an instrument that I don't have control of and looping a phrase that takes on a lot of beauty do merely to the fact that it is repeating. I've been playing a purple anodized, inexpensive pocket trumpet that I got for peanuts at the NAMM show. I'll never be a good trumpet player in my life but I'm coming up with some very, very cool looping shit with it and I may even have the courage to play it at the Boise Experimental Music Festival that I"ll be headlining at the end of April. Scares the crap out of me to consider taking it but I think I"m gonna anyway. There is something very beautiful to me about randomly looping something and then having it define where you should go next. That is one of the reasons I love the EDP so much because I can at any given instant, use techniques that allow me to suddenly recontextualize the fascinating timbral world into music. John Cage said that "Music is just Organized Sound" our looping gear allows us to organize an amazing pallet of sounds that we are not necessarily in control of. If one is too controlling (one of my music and emotional character defects) then improvising live in front of an audience can be a truly liberating experience. I just did a featured spot at the first 3 day Dark Elektronika Festival in San Francisco (Binaural Dimensions). I wrote a long detailed blog about this experience at tribe.net ( http://people.tribe.net/looppool/blog&topicId=1c50aa89-b3fd-4b9f-bb79-c789f114d2b6 ) so I won't go into more detail here, but suffice it to say that I lost my DSP processor which meant that I was completely unable to pitch shift, square wave tremolo, reverb or otherwise modulate my simple found sound sources for the concert.'' Everything that I had worked hard for the week before went completely out of the window in one fell swoop. I was devasted. This put me in an emotional tizzy and I felt like running away. All the other acts were really heavy with huge subsonic slabs of electronica. Anyway, I apologized to the audience and said that the 'darkness' of my performance had to come from the way I was feeling and the primal instruments themselves and not the processing.........................I thought I just sucked terribly but the context of the performance pushed me into places I didn't want to go and people really liked what ended up happening. A sweet woman said that she had seen every act at all three days of the festival and that she found my performance the most inspiring. She said she wanted to go home and start making music.....................................lol, I thought I sucked!!!!!! But Serendipity and chance saved the day. I was approached by many musicians over the course of the evening who complimented me on my performance and I ended up loving the evening even though in the middle of the performance I though it ranked with the worst failures I'd ever mounted on stage. Yeah, Serendipity and Live Looping..............................it's pretty dang cool to be on the edge and let your gear force you into places that make you grow as an artist.