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Re: the impermanence of looping



Yeah, that's how I tend to think of it too, sometimes,
mostly. I find that when I try to think of audio
recording (or video, for that matter) as another skill
that must be maintained right there along with other
more conventionally musical essential abilities, then
when I go to actually do it, I won't feel like so much
of a lumbering doofus, an incompetent oaf and/or
naively unable to comprehend a learnable technique,
flustered in my lack of practice. Urggghhh.

Plus it gives one a greater source of raw recorded
material to work with, bustling with the energy of its
raw spontaneity; I just need to do it with a bit more
frequency and application of effort. Is it too late
for new new year's resolutions?

-t-

--- Paul Mimlitsch <pmimlitsch@mindspring.com> wrote:

> Isn't that a good reason to always record - so it
> becomes something 
> unobtrusive?  You can't capture the "magic" stuff
> after the fact and it 
> can be a good compositional reference/ reminder. 
> It's easy enough to 
> hit the erase button when you're done if nothing
> "happened".  - Paul


                
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