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Since I'm from Philadelphia, I'll have to chime in and let everyone know that Franklin referred to it his invention as a glass armonica, not a celestia. Being that it's Ben's tri-centenial and all we're sensitive about such matters. Amazing instrument, wish I could get my hands on one without dropping any cash. On 3/29/06, joe rut <joerut@lycos.com> wrote: > What an amazing instrument! I saw the singer/songwriter Michael Penn >play in Ventura years ago. The main thing I remember about the show >(other > than that the drummer was DJ Bonebreak from X - one of my fav bands) was >that the pedal steel player also played a celestia, also called (i think) >a > harmonium? He did some amazing stuff on it, running it through various >processing gear. Would love to hear one looped! > > Joe Rut > > ----- Original Message ----- > > From: "daniel stevenson" <stillllscary@yahoo.com> > > To: loopers-delight@loopers-delight.com > > Subject: ben franklins glass celestia amplified and looped > > Date: Wed, 29 Mar 2006 06:24:58 -0800 (PST) > > > > > > ive been playing one in my sleep lately & when i wake up the tips > > of my fingers are pruned up.im making loops but without > > hardware...it seems to be a psych~tele~phonic looping interface.i > > cant wait to get to back to sleep... > > > > > > --------------------------------- > > New Yahoo! Messenger with Voice. Call regular phones from your PC > > for low, low rates. > > > > > -- > _______________________________________________ > > Search for businesses by name, location, or phone number. -Lycos Yellow >Pages > > >http://r.lycos.com/r/yp_emailfooter/http://yellowpages.lycos.com/default.asp?SRC=lycos10 > >