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Re: extremely lofi ideas for the poor noisemaker
Now them's my kinda ideers!
Poppin' the top off a Kiwi 20/20,
Shorty
----- Original Message -----
From: Sven Anderson <svena@accessinn.com>
To: <Loopers-Delight@annihilist.com>
Sent: Monday, September 20, 1999 4:36 PM
Subject: extremely lofi ideas for the poor noisemaker
> hello loopers
> for those of us who can't run out and buy all the new fx processors
> available...
> i was visited by a revelation last night. and honestly it isn't very
> significant. but it really does sound cool. take microphones (cheapies
that you
> don't care about) and push them up against things that move. like
reel-to-reels.
> leave them there. listen to the nice beats and loopy things this
>produces.
if you
> do it right, and the microphone is slightly offset each time the machine
goes
> through a cycle of motion, the sound loop morphs very slowly into
>different
timbral
> bits. its pretty much the same as micing machines, but here the
>microphone
becomes
> involved in the sound production in a more instrumental fashion.
>
> also. another good one. discovered one night in boston while listening
>to
porter
> ricks very loud after lots of cheap wine.
> play minimal techno/beat oriented music very loud in a cluttered
>room.
then
> wander around and listen closely to all of the objects on your walls,
tables, etc.
> as they vibrate in different ways. and then (this is the hard part)
>attempt
to mic
> these little vibrations in such a way as to maximize their dynamics and
minimize
> the actual music's presence on your recording. trying to record
>vibrations
like
> this usually (for me) ends up producing very fluid, natural rhythms that
>are
more
> complex than basic thumpings.
> sorry, these ideas are really quite silly and mundane, but i felt like
typing a bit
> and therefore decided to subject you all to my ramblings.
> --sven
>
>