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Movin' On Up - M People
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Mickeyboro started following New! Cat Stevens autobiography
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What are your irrational prejudices? I have some bonkers ones...
Terry M. replied to kwmlondon's topic in General Discussion
It does indeed. Yet another reason it followed me home 👍 -
Zoom Ultra Fuzz UF-01: Had one years ago and had some nostalgic curiosity. Just as good as I remember and not super keen to get rid, but there's other things I want and with 85 DIY pedals on the shelves, I have a strict one in one out policy on branded pedals... For those who don't know, the ultra fuzz was something of a hidden gem - often very wrongly considered a fuzz factory clone, it's absolutely anything but. Can do noisy squeals but also does very rich dense heavy distortion. This one is in absolutely immaculate condition, with box. Price is £125 and includes postage with adequate insurance. Pickup available from Sheffield or Leeds also an option Zoom MS-70CDR+ Multistomp Now the other end of the Zoom spectrum, the new version of the Chorus, Delay, Reverb multistomp pedal. Just not using it enough to keep, it's genuinely amazing but I've just got my sounds settled with other pedals. Had from new and never left the desk, absolutely immaculate with box. £90 posted with adequate insurance.
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Fits a 2EQ or 3EQ Stingray with truss rod wheel, so approx 1990-2018. Made by the people in California that produced the original EBMM matte black pickguards back in the 90s / 00’s, this is one I custom ordered a few years ago. But my bass is now HH so I have a similar replacement. It’s got some scratches, as pictured, but you don’t want a shiny new pickguard on your 30 year old instrument right? 😊 £35 posted
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Mykesbass started following Finding your sound
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Can't answer this, and can give a reason why I can't. We record, on the guitarist's phone, every rehearsal. The recordings are very useful for learning/improving our original material. The bass tone sounds to me like my bass tone. Last rehearsal we were in a smaller room, so I used the studio Laney with its 15" cab. Sounded pretty close to my sound in the room. On the recording it was just this horrible, indistinct mush. There seems to be so many variables to bass tone I think we need to accept just a close approximation of this holy grail!
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Cultural appropriation and covers
Leonard Smalls replied to DF Shortscale's topic in General Discussion
The problem with Mike Read is he's a massive tool... -
neepheid started following I met Becky Baldwin!
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Geez, don't give Moog any ideas...
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Westone "The Rail" Bass - DOA - Now a minimal bass
rwillett replied to rwillett's topic in Bass Guitars
Very good -
Lozz196 started following Finding your sound
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I know how I want to sound for each of my bands, although all slightly different invariably it`s a permutation of scooping mids and adding highs so nothing drastic. What I have found is that when I get an onstage sound I like with an unfamiliar amp I then back off the bass/lows a notch on the dial, it might not make the onstage sound as pleasing but I find it then fits in the mix better.
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Mike Read isn't though. Warning - do not play, political content.
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Cultural appropriation and covers
DF Shortscale replied to DF Shortscale's topic in General Discussion
I feel like genres like ska and even jazz are much less problematic. (I personally find reggae a little more tricky but it depends on context). -
Genuinely fascinating! Wonder what they chat about?
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Greco 4001/4003 types ran from the early 70s through into the 90s/00s, so it depends! At the point in the 70s where the Chushin Fakers were available, Greco's versions were Fujigen Gakki's 2388B & 2388B/DX models, the DX being through-neck & the most comparable. I don't think there's much in it - all of the Japanese factories active in this era were capable of extremely high quality & any through-neck MIJ Rick copy is a high-end instrument within its range. I own a Chushin Faker and it's a solid, well-made & very playable bass - however I've never owned a Fujigen-made one so I can't make a direct comparison.
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Those heavy old things? GR Bass AT212, 11.5kg.
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I'd suggest a bipolar electrolytic capacitor, 100uF, between the volume control wiper (centre terminal) and the jack socket. https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/135605376775?_trksid=p2332490.c101875.m1851&itmprp=cksum%3A135605376775cef0a91da54e454782348804eec8ffed|enc%3AAQAKAAABAGqm9FAFUYsD%2Bg2P7amRF5PbrMKBN936TfFmdyEufDvNNKlouoyOXUVGTPycutqBFaPaOz%2BQqnhN8qhZ%2BG5l%2BL7DDJt8BGa%2FL%2FwS2wEfKZPNxF6YW3%2BOx%2F7ihlnjbvlvBdhOpkkf4UKXyGM%2BbVkoLJB52mgrxZb48efu8b%2FhufVM8MgbVsMtNLBULIZNQOKjZc5QWzm1qqCJ6%2FxIL4Bf7IPNWqZCHUiTIXx8mqkMApNuDghAJGD4Cl0x4rpQFzfYOmJWkS7uv9s19vuRnPSWKX6%2F7kol5CacR7y0rSDod%2F1DYURL1WsxQVrGELLor6eq4lvgL5Ifzlg%2Bthp6HhqDbZA%3D|ampid%3APL_CLK|clp%3A2332490&itmmeta=01K5V1RHF038YS2JAVXMHRP6AW&var=434962815180 - the 100uF and axial (one lead each end) would probably be easier to fit than radial (both leads at one end). Depends how urgent this is. If you've got a little time, it's going to be worth getting the sticky foam off the component side of the preamp circuit board. There's going to be a capacitor connected to the orange wire just by the red wire in the upper connection block on that diagram, and that's most likely the guilty party. It may well be a case of replacing the entire board though. I think there's another work round, which is to briefly switch to passive when switching a pedal, although that's not ideal either.
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Those are for speaker crossovers, so no they're not the right ones. If you rip off the charcoal padding on the blue PCB in the circuit diagram you should see a physically much smaller capacitor, and with luck there will be the rated capacitance written on it. On the circuit diagram above, it is not shown, but would be on the blue thing in the centre, on the other side of the board.
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Mooovin' and Groovin' - Redds and the Boys
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I've completely given up trying to get synth/filter sounds out of the bass. Even if I had devices capable of the sounds the extra amount of practice I'd need to put in in order to trigger them reliably in a repeatable fashion simply isn't worth it, when I can either play it myself on a keyboard where it will sound right every time, or hand it off to our synth player or to the backing track, who can play it even better than I can. I'm lucky in that I now play Bass VI, so if I really want a synth sounding bass I can give it to an instrument better suited to it, and play something in the guitar register instead. If I was in a band with a more traditional line-up I'd probably bring a keyboard synth for any songs that absolutely had to have synth bass parts. IMO getting the sounds right for a song is as important at rehearsal as finding the right notes to play. My band spend at least as much time in the practice room fine tuning our synth and effects sounds and the balance between the different ones we use as we do working out what to play on a song. Both are equally important, and it is essential that the sound changes are right and properly balanced and the rest of the band need to appreciate that. I find that I can get close to the right sounds on my own at home, but I know that everything will need adjusting once the rest of the band is playing and we factor that in when getting a new song ready for performing to an audience.
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I would. But then, I'm subject to occasional rash & impulsive decisions!