[i]Either I'm on the right track, or I'm completely delusional. I think its the former. :-)[/i]
Couldn't you be [i]both[/i]?
Seriously, though...
On the helicoptering whirly-pipes: in summer 2003, at a performance by Bang on a Can personnel and students in their summer fest at the Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art (a.k.a. MassMOCA), there was a piece played entirely on self-made instruments.
The most elaborate was a device made by guitarist Mark Stewart, which looked for all the world like a bicycle-powered helicopter with too many, too floppy rotors. It was mesmerizing to watch and listen to: depending on the speed of pedaling, Stewart could create dense Ligeti-style organ clusters, or isolate consonant triads. The 'copter didn't [i]literally[/i] fly, but [i]conceptually[/i]...
Couldn't you be [i]both[/i]?
Seriously, though...
On the helicoptering whirly-pipes: in summer 2003, at a performance by Bang on a Can personnel and students in their summer fest at the Massachusetts Museum of Contemporary Art (a.k.a. MassMOCA), there was a piece played entirely on self-made instruments.
The most elaborate was a device made by guitarist Mark Stewart, which looked for all the world like a bicycle-powered helicopter with too many, too floppy rotors. It was mesmerizing to watch and listen to: depending on the speed of pedaling, Stewart could create dense Ligeti-style organ clusters, or isolate consonant triads. The 'copter didn't [i]literally[/i] fly, but [i]conceptually[/i]...