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Re: OT: giant pipes down Portola Avenue in Santa Cruz and other natural reverbs



If you play something really loud (further back is better) at
the broad side of a building covered with vertical corrugated
siding, and then dance wildly back and forth between the
building and the sound source, you get the equivalent of a
physical comb filter/phaser.  If you can find two buildings like
this parallel to each other, it hurts.

Mike

----- Original Message -----
From: "Dave Trenkel" <improv@peak.org>
To: <Loopers-Delight@loopers-delight.com>
Sent: Wednesday, August 22, 2001 2:17 AM
Subject: Re: OT: giant pipes down Portola Avenue in Santa Cruz
and other natural reverbs


> >On Mon, 20 Aug 2001 23:35:07 -0700, "Rick Walker
\(loop.pool\)"
> ><GLOBAL@cruzio.com> wrote:
> >
> >>WHAT KICK ASS SONIC ANOMALIES DO YOU KNOW OF IN YOUR
HOMETOWN........WHAT
> >>WIERD ASSED PIECE OF ARCHITECTURE OR SCULPTURES OR PLUMBING
EXISTS TO BE
> >  >STRUCK OR BLOWN ON OR OTHERWISE PUSHED INTO
RESONANCE........
> >
> Where I grew up, on a farm in Eastern Oregon, there was a
pipeline
> for an irrigation project that came out a few miles away.
Metal pipe,
> 8ft diameter, about 50 miles long. In high school, we used to
take
> instruments, battery-powered amps, tape decks, etc, as far
into the
> pipe as we dared and play/record. We never really knew when
water may
> be run through, so there was always some element of risk.
Great
> acoustics, though.
>
> --
> --------------------------------------------------------------
-----------
> Dave Trenkel                                New and Improv
Music
> http://www.newandimprov.com         improv@peak.org
>                  Now Available: Minus: Dark Lit
> "This is music all-consuming in its beauty and power"
>                                 -Jake TenPas OSU Daily
Barometer
> --------------------------------------------------------------
-----------
>