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Re: The Fuck Face MEETS -"Dragging Instruments Around" meets "laptop live"...
Wow Jimmy!, thanks a bunch for the way cool review! -lol! -told ya we
needed more sex on this list!... lol!
I'll need to keep this short (A Quickie, as it were) lol! -for the
moment, since I'm in the midst of being swamped with a very important
recording project, but will write more soon this week. Talk with y'all
soon, K?
Be Loopful and MULTIPLY!,
C-Quinn
At 10:29 PM 3/20/03 -0700, you wrote:
>sweet diatribe jessie. sorry for the late response folks! been bombarded
>lately...
>
>i am a fan first. a fan in the gut/ear before i ever 'saw' a show before.
>my 1st was who's next, boston #1, elo's double live. at 9 i was hooked
>hard.
>they were these big black round disks that rolled out of this designed
>sleeve that was usually pretty sweet... those were the daze...
>
>then i went and 'saw' blue oyster cult live.
>
>i require as a fan to be effected. as a listener as a watcher. i also
>require some kind of innovation. when i saw the alan parsons tour a few
>years back i left at half time. it was identical to the record they broke
>rules 20 years before. i was disappointed.
>
>i had the awesome privilege of seeing the fine cara Q last saturday at the
>sweet rockin coffee house here in denver. what a great show. i was
>intrigued
>beyond my normal, "well that's neat" just to watch her perform let alone
>hear her. ive been around the block a few times at 36 and have never heard
>some of the sounds that she commandeered. somewhat like what André
>recently
>posted from his new disk. cq takes it somewhere new for me. it left me
>wanting more (need to get a cd from you grrrl!)
>
>cq played for 30 minutes with a solid and diverse set. because of her
>sight
>limitations she does not move much. she does not need to though, she is
>very
>talented and sexy and interesting none the less. what a crazy style!
>dangerous music!! YES!
>
>the fuck face to me simply represents honesty as a player. if you and i
>are
>having sex at some point i want to see/feel/smell you sweat no matter how
>proficient you might be as a technical lover. same goes with music. break
>a
>sweat, break a string break a rule or two while your at it. i believe in
>educating the audience. i cant please them all nor do i want to. people
>are
>quick to judge what is new even if they strive to want something
>different.
>new has to make its way in until it is a bit more familiar for most music
>lovers. they usually do come around though.
>
>the essence of looping is not unlike life to me. it is the same thing over
>and over and up to me to make it interesting, challenging and innovative
>and
>fun or not. i do do this for a living and have for 12 some years steady
>and
>even though i cant please them all i still want most of them!
>
>snork!
>
>jimmy george
>http://www.jimmygeorgearts.com
>
>
>
>----- Original Message -----
>From: Jesse Ray Lucas <jlucas@neoprimitive.net>
>To: <Loopers-Delight@loopers-delight.com>
>Sent: Monday, March 17, 2003 1:38 AM
>Subject: "Dragging Instruments Around" meets "laptop live"...
>
>
>> So, here's an idea, folks: Hook up your laptop screen to a projector
>are
>> project what you are seeing -- or, at the very least, get some kind of
>audio
>> visualizer program and project the output of that on a big screen behind
>> you. If you intend to connect with the widest possible audience, you
>must
>> include some kind of visual element in your performance. Tim Reynolds
>> projects slides behind himself when he plays.
>>
>> And stand up. How much energy can you be putting into your
>performance
>> if you're sitting down? I know I would rather sit down and play all the
>> time, and I probably play better sitting down (because I always practice
>> sitting down), but you will get over more often if you stand up. Ah,
>the
>> harsh realities of presenting to the public.
>>
>>
>> ***DANGER***: HERE FOLLOWS AN EXTENSIVE RANT ABOUT JOE AVERAGE'S
>PERCEPTION
>> OF MUSIC.
>>
>> It seems to me that most people who aren't musicians don't actually
>> *listen* to music. They *watch* music. If music is on at home or in
>the
>> car, they are usually not aware of anything other than the words. If
>the
>> music is such that it asserts itself into the forefront of the
>environment,
>> demanding attention, (e.g. Meshuggah, Squarepusher, or basically
>anything
>> with above-average musical density in any respect [harmonically,
>> rhythmically, melodically]) the average joe or joan will feel uneasy
>> (translates into "dislike"). The negative effects of higher-than-normal
>> compositional density seem to be circumventable by adding plenty of
>humor
>> (e.g. Frank Zappa), or at the very least lots of very easily
>understandable
>> lyrics presented in familiar melodic patterns (e.g. Dave Matthews).
>But,
>in
>> general, the whole idea of music without words doesn't make sense to the
>> vast majority of people who grow up on MTV and commercial radio.
>>
>> I see this all the time when I play an opening instrumental set
>with a
>> jazz quartet, then a singer joins us for the second set. All of a
>sudden
>> people look up and start to pay attention because there is someone
>singing
>> words. The minute she sits down and we play an instrumental, eyes are
>back
>> to the beer glasses and soup bowls and the talking resumes. And it's
>not
>> because the singers I play with are really great and we suck. No words
>=
>no
>> music. It's just the way some [the majority?] people are.
>>
>> I guess it comes down to giving people something that they can
>relate
>> to. People can relate to someone singing, because everyone has tried it
>at
>> some point. People can relate to someone who looks like they're working
>> really hard (the "fuck face" as Jimmy George put it -- hahahahah),
>because
>> most people have worked hard at something before. Most people can't
>relate
>> to John Coltrane's playing on Interstellar Space, because it doesn't
>> obviously relate to tonal music, which is the extent of most people's
>> experience of music. Most people can't relate to a guy standing there
>with
>> a laptop "making" music, because, if anything, maybe they've picked up a
>> guitar, or banged on a drum one or twice in their lives, so this is how
>they
>> understand music is made (hence the benefit of dragging around and
>playing
>a
>> bunch of instruments). Only someone who knows something about what is
>> involved in the creation of music on a computer will be interested in
>what's
>> happening. But, as we only see the plastic shell of the laptop and not
>the
>> screen there's not really much point to getting really interested,
>because
>> you will never get the pay off.
>>
>> But, it all depends on who your target audience is. Music geeks
>have
>a
>> higher tolerance for musical density, and lack of "show." Just like
>> authors, when reading, have a higher tolerance for literary references
>and
>> focus on character development, rather than plot development and action.
>>
>> -J
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> ----- Original Message -----
>> From: "Mark Sottilaro" <sine@zerocrossing.net>
>> To: <Loopers-Delight@loopers-delight.com>
>> Sent: Sunday, March 16, 2003 9:47 PM
>> Subject: Re: Dragging Instruments Around
>>
>>
>> > Another aspect of the Laptop is the performance issue. BORING. I
>once
>> > went to a big new music fest and my wife and I walked out when a guy
>> > sat down with a laptop and began to produce what seemed like slightly
>> > edgy techno. (IDM). We looked at each other and said, "Would it
>> > matter if that was all coming from the CD player in is Laptop?" The
>> > answer was: NO.
>> >
>> > Look at Hans. That wall of gear is part of the show. So fun to watch
>> > him tame COLUSSUS: THE FORBIN PROJECT. Coupled with a sequence of
>> > wardrobe changes that would make Cher jealous, you've got one hell of
>a
>> > show... even if all his gear fails! (Sorry to rub it in Hans, I love
>> > you and your music!)
>> >
>> > However, I feel that often I'm not that far away from the laptop guy.
>> > At the ascension show we were in the dark in a corner. I'm positive
>> > that most people weren't aware the music was live. Didn't really
>> > matter on some level. A lot of people were there and seemed to be
>> > having fun. We were the "ambient" reception music, so that's OK.
>BUT:
>> > What if I had recorded a really killer set in Digital Performer the
>> > night before, burned it to discs and showed up with a DJ setup. One of
>> > those Pioneer CD players an iBook and a mixer. Would there have been
>> > any difference? I'm not sure I think so. Should I become a DJ of my
>> > own music? I think people are doing this. Anyone here doing this?
>> > Could be a good way to go for this type of event. (where dancing and
>> > socializing are the focus) When it's more of a show (like Loopstock)
>> > then you go for performance mode. What do people think?
>> >
>> > I saw Bjork live where she had someone who looked like he was
>> > "performing" ProTools while she sung. OK, there was a string
>orchestra
>> > too. Anyway, it worked for me.
>> >
>> > Mark Sottilaro
>> >
>> > On Sunday, March 16, 2003, at 01:41 AM, Rick Walker/Loop.pooL wrote:
>> > >
>> > > I'm still not completely sold on buying a laptop.
>> > >
>> >
>>
>>
>
>
---
"The only things I really think are important, are love, and eachother.
-Then, anything is possible..."
http://home.earthlink.net/~thefates
Please visit BadFiction and The Guitar Cafe.
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