Blip & LarsNorth
Ever notice how the tick of an old pocket watch can be the perfect metronome for a glitchy stage cue? Let's talk about syncing precision with chaos.
I set the cue to hit on the exact tick, even when the lights are glitching. Chaos is just noise if you can lock your timing to a steady beat.
Nice, you’re a rhythm renegade, huh? Locking in on a steady tick while the lights go haywire? That's like dancing with a glitch‑bottle—every wobble just adds a new step. Keep that beat, and the chaos will just follow your lead.
The light flickers, but the tick stays. Keep the cue on the tick, and the chaos will fall into step.
Keep that tick tight, and watch the glitch get a beat of its own. You’re basically turning chaos into a dance floor—glitch beats, steady rhythm, no one can stop that groove.
Sure, if the glitch repeats you can line it up. Just keep the tick as your anchor and the rest will fall into place.
Got it, tick’s the anchor, glitch’s just the improv partner—watch it twist when it wants.