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process threads . . . or what have you
Howdy . . .
There have been two or three attempts to begin threads which
received no list
replies. I did get some offline comments, but would have liked to
see more of
the group's opinions... I'll give it one more try.
I'm with Miko on this one . . . I think that one of the cool things about
this list is that there is a lot of potential for discussion of creative
process issues - - there are a of of creative people here . . . but
seemingly gear seems to be more exciting than music? Hopefully, I'm
mistaken
and it's just that people find it difficult to discuss this sort of thing:
more of the doers than the theoriticians.
> It seems that *most* of us improvise... some completely, other's not
>quite
> so
> much... How do we create meaninful work of this nature which will endure
> and
> still retain that free spirit?
>
For me, I guess it's the same kind of process (though slightly different
aspects of it) as writing. A lot of it comes down to accepting what one
likes, yet being able to have a somewhat objective perception as to what
works, what doesn't and what I'd like to change. In other words,
examination
and reexamination of strategies and vocabularies.
Often I try to approach different situations with different mindsets. Some
bands/situtations get the full McGilla (effects/loopers, etc.), some get a
different set of parameters (say bass and amp only). I take this strategy
from Stravinsky's idea of "freedom being in small box" . . . which I
interpret as finding more freedom in a finite set of variables than one one
does from "complete freedom," where there are "no" parameters. I tend to
like composers that use finite rules for certain pieces (Stravinsky as
noted, Webern, etc.) so I try to bring a little bit of this sensibility to
the table during some of the improv situations that I get involver in. Some
might say that this sort of thing verges on NOT BEING free improv. Also, of
course, there are many improvisors who take the exact opposite tact: I feel
that Miles Davis always sounded about the same, it was his choice of
contexts that changed.