For some reason, at the last Wavetable here in Edinburgh, all three performers chose to play side on (Loula Yorke, Ian Boddy, and myself). I think it worked really nicely. We got to keep the ergonomic benefits of our sloped eurorack rigs, but also felt like there wasn’t a barrier between performer and audience. Particularly for my set, which involved playing notes live into the Push for some sections, it felt really nice to give the audience the possibility of seeing the relationship between my actions and the outcome. Also, because we weren’t facing the audience it felt somehow less like a “hey look at me up here on the stage” kind of asymmetry. I wasn’t expecting to like it, but it felt great - more like when people come and watch someone make something.
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