Home Forums Tips, Tricks, Clips, and Pics looping that grows in intensity/tonal variation (mr. ruppert i think you would like this?)

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  • #82514
    SuperAE
    Member

    This is a sort of odd question with a video for reference:

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U6UcX7a4yc8

    This is a song recorded in 1972 by an experimental musician named Charlemagne Palestine. As far as I know, he recorded it with an acoustic piano at Cal Arts in Valencia, CA. I have no idea how the effects heard here were created, but they are impressive to say the least.

    The composition quickly turns into a free form haze, but I am only interested in the intro, which is the first two and half minutes of the song. A simple piano loop is presented, which grows in intensity, but using the same carefully chosen cluster of notes. Beautiful echoed accents can be heard at 1:28, 1:55 and elsewhere, and at 2:02, an incredible flange (?) effect is heard, in which the notes seems to blend together in a psychedelic goo. At 2:35 a climax can be heard in which the power of the various layers combined can be appreciated. To really appreciate the way it grows like a tree, it’s best to listen from the beginning. All of these sonic moments last only for a few seconds, but I think they are really interesting.

    I am just trying to understand the inner logic and chronological sequencing of the layering presented here, and how something similar could be created using a guitar and EHX loop pedal/effects in a live setting.

    #118021
    kev77
    Member

    That would be something like a 16 second delay/looper! Doesn’t sound like delay rather that playing the same motif over and the looper/musician getting slightly out of sync.
    The meter of the song isn’t quantised and that’s the key
    Modern loopers are all synced and built around the click,
    Cool track track cheers

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