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  2. I can arrange this. Please let me know where are you located.
  3. Now 540 GBP delivered to any door in Europe! Here is my Fender Precision 57 RI Made in Japan. N serial-FujiGen made around 1993. 42.3mm width at the nut, 4.095 kg. Punchy and powerful sound. Shipping to Europe included. Any question please ask. Cheers!
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  4. Here’s the dimensions straight from the Aguilar website. I think it’s in inches. Hope this helps! Cheers!
  5. I really appreciate this post @Linus27. Sometimes in the posts on here I come across instances where I'm tempted to leave Basschat but it's posts like this that keep me sticking around ☺️ Ah I just read he was a part of Brand X with Phil Collins.I wasn't aware even though I've heard and enjoyed several of their tracks.
  6. We Are Family - Sister Sledge
  7. Hey mate- what is the neck like on these? Is it standard Stingray width? Chunky or slim? Cheers.
  8. Today
  9. Muse-> musk ruined them, just like Elon would
  10. Re-uploading this with better pictures. This is the same pedal as the now famous Taylor Shift but with a different visual design. It includes a low pass filter which sounds great and the octave circuit is one of the best OC-2 clones out there. Can either ship or happy to meet anywhere in London.
  11. Hi Bass peeps, I'm trying to determine whether my Spyder 550 head has a specific issue or if this behavior is just part of its design. I'm playing a P-Bass equipped with hot DiMarzio Model P pickups. I typically run the Gain on the amp close to or at maximum to get a rich, warm tone. However, when I really dig in on the lowest notes, the volume suddenly drops—almost like a strong compression effect kicks in. I'm wondering if this is a built-in protection feature of the amp, or if there's something wrong with it. Has anyone else experienced this with the Spyder 550? Edit: this doesn't happen with my ABM 500
  12. Thank you - They're great ole reliable amps, but I'm finishing up with bass playing after 20 years, so this is my final amp. The 30 is a similar size to the Roland Cube 30, but can get much louder (if you need it to). £50 is buttons for something this solid.
  13. The two headless 5s are beautiful, and the white one sounds great in the earlier clip.
  14. My Perfect Cousin - The Undertones
  15. I just put one in the shopping basket and it adds $300 shipping. I wonder if that includes the UK VAT at 20%. Did he say?? $799 for a short scale. So $300 for shipping alone seems quite a lot! Import duty itself is only 2% I think.
  16. Yesterday
  17. Myself and the other band members use SetlistPro. You can enter in the song details directly or, as we do, import .pdf files.
  18. Hello, sharing some of my DTC basess.
  19. Ditch the tort-ure scratchplate? Seriously though if my credit cards weren't giving me daily manxiety i would snatch you arm off, it's a stunning bass.
  20. Have no idea.🤷🏽‍♂️ Not really prepared to mess with anything. A quick clean sale is preferable….
  21. Indeed. Imagine our shock recently when we returned busted Camera boards to Panasonic UK to be repaired only to find our boards( confirmed by serial number check) contained fake CAPS in them. Apparently they’d sub contracted out our boards to a third party to service and when they came back the Panasonic caps were not real Panasonic parts…they lasted three months
  22. The used one is now sold but the unopened, boxed one is still for sale
  23. I went over to in ears in Church yesterday morning. All the singers were astonished and loved it. Super frustrating that yours is intransigent. I also took my new Eich Bass Board. Deep, deep joy.
  24. He sure was, I believe he and Rob used to buy lots of things off Ebay and make basses. I tried about 3 or 4 of his basses at The Gallery but nothing that I really wanted. I would love to have owned his black Fender Japan Power Jazz bass he played on some of the Simple Minds stuff. I would love to know what happened to it along with his natural Stingray. This is what Rob posted on Facebook back when John passed. "I’m sorry to say my dad passed away on May 14th 2023. He was an amazing man - genuine, charming and an utterly uplifting presence and it’s really heartbreaking that we won’t get to hang again. He burned brightly and departed elegantly, leaving a deep impression on all he met. John Giblin was also an incredible bassist and I wanted to use this post to pay a small tribute as he played an enormous part in influencing my playing, but his compassion and his character overshadow his music. He spent a lot of time looking after his good friend John Martyn in his final years. Kate Bush has some lovely words to say about John - “Everyone loved John. He was a really beautiful man in every sense of the word. Everybody wanted to work with him because he was such a great talent and everyone wanted to be his friend because he was such a wonderful person. I loved John so very much. He was one of my very dearest and closest friends for over forty years. We were always there for each other. He was very special. I loved working with him, not just because he was such an extraordinary musician but because he was always huge amounts of fun. We would often laugh so much that we had to just give in to it and sit and roar with laughter for a while. He loved to be pushed in a musical context, and it was really exciting to feel him cross that line and find incredibly gorgeous musical phrases that were only there for him. He would really sing. It was such a joy and an inspiration to see where he could take it. We’ve all lost a great man, an unmatchable musician and I’ve lost my very special friend. My world will never be the same again without him.” I only met John in later life but we instantly hit it off. Our views on music and all else were strangely aligned. He remains the only person I totally trusted on matters of bass tone and we enjoyed rummaging through ebay instruments even on our last chat. His style was rooted in soul and pop and he always had impeccable time and a real melodic ear, taking influence from Eberhard Weber as much as Jamerson and Jaco, he acheived the holy grail of establishing a unique voice whilst nailing all the attributes of a tasteful, grounding bass role. Phil Collins would rely on him to make a solid soulful rhythm section, while John Martyn would bring out a fluid and bluesy style coming more from his jazz influences. Peter Gabriel allowed John to stretch out melodically and Babooshka would never have been the masterpiece that it is without the beautiful fretless parts he imparted. Meanwhile check out the unique way he uses a delay pedal to bring a rhythmic excitement on Ghostdancing (live) with Simple Minds or his distinctive tone with british fusion pioneers Brand X. I made a little playlist of some of my favourite tracks. It’s by no means exhaustive, as he was a first call sessioneer for so many top artists. He wasn’t inclined to fill out a PPL form either so many of his works are quite difficult to identify! https://tinyurl.com/29a5d7xy I’m sure I missed some gems, so do let me know... Miss you dad"
  25. The guitar demos tend to go from subtle shimmer, to all out madness when you blend the two sides together. I’m very interested in how that relates to bass!
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