At 11:13 AM 4/9/02 -0400, Greg::Malcolm . wrote:
quoted 2 lines having two ppl really opens things up in the sense that the other person
>having two ppl really opens things up in the sense that the other person
>will do things that you never thought to do and vice versa etc.
.. and as for why a duo specifically, it's enough to create added interest
without too much conflict about where things should be going. Also unless
you've all got some gear and you're all going to improvise it's not like a
live band, where you can all jam away at once. So you can wind up with four
people waiting impatiently for the fifth to edit a drum program, get the
exact sound they wanted on that synth, or whatever. Sometimes just that
sense of lots of people waiting around can be a real frustration, whereas
when there's just one of you watching the other it's easier to be attentive
and so on.
All in my experience... none of it HAS to be that way, it just often is.
Michael
-
http://www.ampcast.com/jetjaguar
http://www.involverecords.com
---------------------------------------------------------------------
To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org
For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org