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Re: Liking/Disliking your own music
I totally agree with your perspective. Along with everyone else's too. I
tend to find that my best work has come from me just hitting the record
button and just going into it. It seems like I end up happier when I don't
try to think up a chord progression before hand. I did a performance at my
birthday party. I had about 20 people at the house to watch, with some
cool strobe light FX. I gave myself about 7 seconds to thing up a quick
drum sequence and then just dove right in. I wish I would have recorded
the direct audio because that was one of my favorites ever. If you guys
want to check it out search gumdrops27 on youtube and I thing its live
loop 8. BTW thanks to all who are responding. I'm getting far far more
responses than I expected and it's my first post ever :)
Sent from my iPod
On Jan 8, 2012, at 12:03 PM, <mike@michaelplishka.com> wrote:
> I love all the responses, thus far. It might be worth asking, "What is
> It
> about this piece that I like?" and then make a conscious effort to
> duplicate
> that the next time you're playing. Ted's response is particularly
> poignant
> and rings true in many ways with . . .
>
> ~peace~
>
>
> Mike
>
>
> www.michaelplishka.com
> www.scribbledmusings.com
>
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Gmail [mailto:k3zz21@gmail.com]
> Sent: Sunday, January 08, 2012 2:28 AM
> To: LD
> Subject: Liking/Disliking your own music
>
> I tend to not like my music during a loop session but after going back
> and
> listening to the recording I end up liking it. How do I get myself to
> enjoy
> looping and make it more interesting?
>