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Boise Experimental Music Festival celebrates obscure soundsI got into jazz, then jazz fusion, then avant-garde, then said, Whats beyond this? Krispen Hartung Additional ImagesAdditional InformationBoise Experimental Music Festival
![]() When: 7-11 p.m., Friday, April 28; noon-10 p.m., Saturday, April 29 Schedule of main performances
![]() Friday, April 28 Chad DrydenEdition Date: 04-25-2006Pick up a copy of Rolling Stone or Spin, and there's bound to be some cookie-cutter rock band talking about "getting experimental" on their new album. For most musicians, whose creative worlds exist galaxies away from quote-unquote experimental music, this usually means not playing in 4/4 time or jamming on a sitar for eight bars hardly "experimental" as defined by performers at the first annual Boise Experimental Music Festival. "'Experimental' is a catch phrase," says Hartung, an improvisational guitarist who performs using real-time looping, a process of creating multiple layers of sound by digitally recording individual parts and playing them back on top of one another. "There's a lot of material out there, but it's not easily marketable. You can't dance to it; you're not hearing it in bars. You have to look in non-traditional places. You have to create your own venue." Most of the BEMF acts fall within the free-improvisational category, with about half of them live loopers like Hartung. One is headliner Rick Walker, a California multi-instrumentalist who has produced more than 20 live looping festivals, including the largest-ever gathering of its kind last year in the Silicon Valley. Walker, like most experimental musicians, does not sell many records, but that's not his motivation for making music anyway. "I got into jazz, then jazz fusion, then avant-garde, then said, 'What's beyond this?'" he says. "Rather than being drawn away from those genres, I was attracted to experimental music. To sit down with my instrument and not know what I'm going to play 20 seconds before I play it is kind of liberating. There are no rules. You start with a blank slate, really. Once you taste that sort of musical freedom, it's hard to go back." |

