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Re: Loopstock idea
Oh, yeah, I did miss your post. That sounds like a great idea. This could
even facilitate little or no gap between performances, allowing more
breathing space over all. As much as I like an open style of Loopstock, I
hate being pressured to set up super quickly (which always causes me to
misconnect something)
on 2/18/02 9:23 PM, Hans Lindauer at armatronix@charter.net wrote:
> I like that idea, Mark. I actually proposed something to that effect a
> couple of days ago in response to Andre's keen assessment of the
>situation,
> but it was buried at the bottom of my (long) gig story, so I'm not
>surprised
> if you missed it.
>
> The venue is long and narrow, with the entrance in the middle of one
>side,
> so my idea was to set up either end of the room as a performance area,
>and
> then it would work exactly as you described, with somebody always playing
> while the next act sets up and the previous act breaks down. Acts with
> set-up times potentially longer than 30 minutes can start setting up
>three
> acts in advance.
>
> Instead of running my system the way I had originally intended, I'll
>split
> it in half, which will still leave plenty of power at each end of the
>room.
> A friend has volunteered to loan me his stage monitors and an amp, so
>there
> will be a nice monitoring system at each stage.
>
> Fifteen 30-minute performances with ten minutes between each one, plus a
> thirty-minute break at supper time, only puts us at ten minutes past 12
>at
> the end of the night. If we run long, we won't get evicted.
>
> -Hans
>
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Marklar" <sine@zerocrossing.net>
> To: <Loopers-Delight@loopers-delight.com>
> Sent: Monday, February 18, 2002 8:23 PM
> Subject: Loopstock idea
>
>
>> So, I've been doing some thinking as to how so many acts could go on in
> such
>> a short time period. My idea would be to have two staging areas,
>probably
>> right next to each other. An "on" stage, and an "on deck" stage. That
> way,
>> while act "a" was playing, act "b" could be setting up. The success of
> this
>> would depend on the size and layout of the room. Acts that had their
>own
>> small sound systems, could even set up tertiary mini stages in corners
>of
>> the room. This way, there could be little or no dead air between acts.
> One
>> acts loop could even cross fade across the venue to another acts loop.
>> Lot's of possibilities for collaboration. I, for one, would volunteer
>to
>> have a small PA (Some powered speakers and a Mackie 1202 mixer) which
>I've
>> found to be fine for medium/small rooms.
>>
>> Mark Sottilaro
>>
>