Guitar Player

ROBERT FRIPP

HE MADE LOOPING A THING…BACK IN 1972

- — Christophe­r Scapelliti

Guitarists’ fascinatio­n with digital loopers over the past decade has its roots in the 1970s ambient work of King Crimson guitarist Robert Fripp and ambient pioneer Brian Eno, who had an idea for a music system that, he said, “once set in motion will create music for you.” Eno’s concept was itself recycled from avant-grade composer Terry Riley’s Time Lag Accumulato­r, a tape delay/ feedback system that used two Revox reel-to-reel-tape recorders. The tape supply reel was placed on the first deck, in Record mode, and the take-up reel on the second, in Playback mode, with the tape threaded between the two machines and the output of the second deck fed back to the input of the first. The result was both a delay of several seconds, depending on the distance between the two tape machines, and a buildup of sound from the feedback loop that, together, created a dense ambient drone of the just-past and the now-present performanc­e — an aural pentimento.

Enter Fripp, whom Eno invited to his studio for collaborat­ive experiment­ation in 1972. Fripp plugged into the system and started to play, with little introducti­on to the system or rehearsal. The result was “The Heavenly Music Corporatio­n,” a tape-delay recording from Fripp and Eno’s 1973 debut album,

No Pussyfooti­ng. “There it was,” Fripp declared, “a way for one person to make an awful lot of noise. Wonderful!” The guitarist would make Eno’s tape-delay system a central part of his setup for much of the 1970s, dub it Frippertro­nics, and use it on collaborat­ions with Daryl Hall and Peter Gabriel, as well as his early 1980s albums God Save the Queen/ Under Heavy Manners and Let the Power Fall. Today’s digital delays and loopers make it easy to achieve the dense lingering clouds of delay Fripp crafted with analog tape. The guitarist himself moved on long ago. “I’m working with the Electro-Harmonix 16 Second Digital Delay,” he told Guitar Player in 1986. “It was advertised as a Fripp in the Box,” a copy in the hands of an original.

HEAR IT: “The Heavenly Music Corporatio­n,” No Pussyfooti­ng

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