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RE: the impermanence of looping



Title: Message
I'm for this approach too. I understand and appreciate the "let it go" philosophy, but for me recording my performances and experiments in the basement is analogous to keeping a written journal of my thoughts and feelings. Once in a while, something comes out of me that is magical....rarely is it ever reproducable...which is why I like having a record of it.  Listening to it can promt those initial creative thoughts and feelings I had, which sparked the performance in the first place.   Of course, I don't record mself when I'm learning or experiementing with some new gear or techniques.
 
Kris
 
 
-----Original Message-----
From: Dan Soltzberg [mailto:d.ans@rcn.com]
Sent: Thursday, January 27, 2005 9:22 AM
To: Loopers Delight
Subject: Re: the impermanence of looping

In contrast, for me looping opened up recording again, as I was feeling really sick of the finicky nature of traditional studio multitrack recording. Now, I just play, and my recordings are documents of those moments. Kind of like the Japanese enso character—perfect in their imperfection.

D


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on 1/26/05 9:59 PM, mark sottilaro at marksottilaro@sbcglobal.net wrote:

I love that aspect of looping.  To me it's so much
about the process and the moment that recording it has
a Heisenburg like effect on the loopage and it's never
quite as good.  Build your sandcastle and let the tide
take it.  Build another tomorrow.

Mark

--- ejyuhas <ejyuhas@earthlink.net> wrote:

> Hello Dennis and all loopsters,
>
> On certain days when I am inspired and a good groove
> becomes a loop, then a
> masterpiece in my practice room :), I often wished I
> had run the 4-track to
> capture the moment. But lately I've learned to "let
> it all fade to feedback
> and decay"...\