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Hi Fabio, really cool video, your music is amazing! It really resembles the Sakamoto/Alva Noto work, but in a new and fresh perspective. I have a question: how do you process the piano sound live, to make it sound glitchy? I am experimenting with this kind of things using my guitar, but the only way I could do this is with offline editing, so first I record the sounds and them I put the pieces together in my DAW, creating the beats. But I always wondered how this would be possible to do live. I would really appreciate your help! Thanks and good work with your music! Cheers, Alex Klinke www.myspace.com/alexandreklinke On Mon, Oct 5, 2009 at 3:51 AM, Fabio_A <eterogenus@gmail.com> wrote: > Hi all, > her's an excerpt from my live performance at the Antwerp (BE) European >Live > Looping Festival (30th maj 2009): http://www.vimeo.com/6904552 > Last year I've been trapped in the glitch sound; that kind of >Sakamoto-Alva > Noto work, if you know their work. > I've found interesting to... play a clean piano sound and then have it > glitched after looped. Here you can listen 3 loops going on with >different > glitched tempi (in 2 of them I was looping with feedback variations). > The result - in my opinion - is like a piano that sounds in the middle >of a > rain of small piano notes and fragmented melodies... > > Enjoy (...if it fits your taste) > > Fabio > www.eterogeneo.com >