Some people will never be happy...
It made me think of my early forays into electronic music. This would have been around 1972/3.
Armed only with a Stylophone 305s http://www.stylophone-sales.fsnet.co.uk/350s.html (the large delux model), and two Sony TC377 tape decks http://www.goldieoldie.com/TAPERECORDERS.htm and a couple of mics.
The tape decks had 3 heads for off tape monitoring - this meant you could feed back the monitor to the recording head and get a delay. But for better effect we used to put the 2 tape decks at each end of the room and have one spool of tape go from one to the other. Running it at 3 1/2" per second we could introduce a delay of 10's of seconds.
So I would play a line into the first deck from the stylophone, and then this would start repeating say 30 seconds later, so I would then layer another line on top of that. The 350s had different sounds too.
Meanwhile my friend would change the levels, so the repeats faded in and out, got distorted, etc., and physically slide one of the tape decks back and forth across the room to vary the delay. We would also physically slow down the reels with our hands.
For effect we would then make vocal noises (hmms and things) to add to the mix - which would gradually get distorted through the delay and end up creating some wonderful pads. plus the obligatory hanging the mics out the window to record traffic noise. Then add the wobble of having the machines so far apart, the inherant tape noise and distortion of the technology of that time, but having this repeat actually added to the rhythmic and melodic nature of the sound.
We would sit there trance like for the entire evening just letting a composition meander on like this.
Funny enough just about this time Terry Riley's Rainbow in Curved Air came out and sounded just like us

Anyway, point was we were making great music (other people actually liked it too) with a stylophone and an old tape deck. And nowadays, a Fantom FX isn't enough to please some people...
Loz