Ken Restivo wrote: > Never ceases to amaze me how the stuff I dash off in 20 minutes as an > experiment or test, is often more well-liked and effective than the > stuff I furrow my brow over and scratch my head over for weeks. It's called flow :-) Seriously, you're an improvising musician, and shouldn't be surprised that the more you compose under the same premises (no going back, first idea makes it), the more it's gonna feel natural to the listener. I try to compose as fast as possible. Then I listen to the result, sometimes for weeks, mostly just the next day, and rework parts that for some reason doesn't work. I also have no problem with throwing an entire composition away, I'd rather do that than sit and stare at the paper. There's always another composition to work on. What you (and I, so I should say "we") should really wonder, is which piece of audio software under linux *really* supports this way of working. Besides freewheelin (which only works with certain types of music), I can't really think of any :-( -- Atte http://atte.dk http://modlys.dk _______________________________________________ Linux-audio-user mailing list Linux-audio-user@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.linuxaudio.org/mailman/listinfo/linux-audio-user