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  2. I concur with all of the above. My own design onboard pres have individual buffers for each PU. Swap active and passive in your comment to better reflect how I feel about the two topologies.
  3. IMO rehearsals are not for learning songs, but getting the arrangements right and topping and tailing the songs. If you're paying for a studio the band has to turn up knowing the material. Play with guys who don't need to be told.
  4. Going Underground - The Jam
  5. Today
  6. Sums up 80s bass playing for me 😂 Oh, and some guy called Mark King
  7. Yesterday
  8. I have a Blackstar amplug, and with the gain up high it has a really heavy distortion that sounds great to me (in the right context) I haven't found an affordable distortion/overdrive that is comparable. It does seem to be heading for Darkglass territory but I don't want to spend that kind of money for maybe one or three songs. If anyone knows this sound and can suggest a pedal...
  9. It helps to remember that there are no right or wrong answers here. Each to their own. I have both active and passive basses, and I enjoy playing all of them.
  10. Bury the hatched. NMA
  11. Well done Richard! I'm in as long as I get back in time to eat and then set up for my gig. Probably need to leave about 3pm to avoid stress
  12. In order: Yes. Depends... is is a new material rehearsal or moshly a revision session with one or two new songs. If we can't get it right after 2 or 3 attempts it's "go home and learn it properly before the next time". What'sApp Not in any structured way.
  13. Ooooo a streamer Stage 2. Is that the P-pickup one?!
  14. Because it was a custom build made for a specific person (Jesse F. Keeler) who requested it that way and rick built it for him. He was happy for it and they made a few other ones for people. Then people requested a reissue, that is what this is. This is what some people wanted, and they will all sell just fine - it is the rickenbacker way!.
  15. My passive basses are much easier to get a good tone than my active ones. It's like having to solve a puzzle where >90% of the settings are poor and you have to find something in the usable range, then tweak it to what you want.
  16. Several reasons to stay active: 1. Buffering ..it's not just a long lead that eats sound. Some amps have a relatively low input impedance and when matched to high impedance ( lots of windings) pickups plus resistive volume and tone controls a lot of high frequency content is lost. Also if you have two pickups or humbuckers the individual windings load eachother. Now if you like that warmer sound passive is good ..but it's easier to cut high frequencies than put them back. 2. On bass EQ... I don't really see the point, the amp can do it, but sometimes the builder puts in eq that's specially matched to the bass. 3. Active filtering....is a better tone control than a resistor and a capacitor; you can make the roll off steeper and/or add a little boost at some frequencies. 4. Low output pickups ( fewer windings) have lower inductance and less intertwinding capacitance so can have a wider frequency response ...if you want those high frequencies..but then need a signal boost. 5. Possibility of separate filtering for separate pickups...you can't do that on an amp ( not without stereo wiring and two channels) I agree tho that passive is nice and simple and that you sometimes get a sound you like without needing any of the above 🙂 . Eg The classic fender jazz sound relies on that inter pickup loading I think
  17. Funeral For My Future Children — Anna Von Hausswolff
  18. You're correct, I now have both models and the mnt port is longer.
  19. Frankly, no banana yellow Auerswald, no deal. None of the basses on sale are any that you would care about. Great, a bunch of horribly ugly Warwicks bought when he was changing basses every song on tour. Hold me back from selling my kids into copper mine slavery.
  20. King King, they remind me very much of Free and Bad Company.
  21. Bury A Friend - Billie Eilish
  22. Yes, I've looked at it several times. Oops, just did it again! 🤦‍♂️
  23. We did a ticketed charity gig last night at a local music venue. It was our gig, our singer organised it all (the venue also helped masses). As we're still a newish band, this was our 6th gig, it was a bit squeaky butt timeas to how many would turn up. In the end we were absolutely chuffed to get a decent number there. And a great crowd they were as well. It was a really cracking night and we raised several hundred £s in the end. We had support from a former band mate of mine, who did a great solo set and went down a storm. We're all still buzzing I think.
  24. That's fascinating - I had a similar issue with the pickup placement on the original Jason Smith designed Fender Rascal. The pickups were too far over to the left of your playing position, making the bass virtually unplayable on a strap. Rickenbacker have made some very odd choices here...
  25. In my two gigging bands we had set formats, either rehearsing a set for a gig, or rehearsing to prepare for recording. If the latter the songwriters would bring the gist of the song in and then we would work on it together to get it in its final form. In my non-gigging band we often suggest a new song and learn it, only for the guitarist to turn up having forgotten to do just that. In his defence he is like this throughout life, not just with regards to the band.
  26. FWIW, I think this is currently the best bargain on Basschat. What a lovely bass, and if it's an Overwater it'll be top quality.
  27. We rehearse at a volume whereby we can hear ourselves properly. We're not a loud band anyway, but it's important to actually hear what's going on. We also set up in such a way that we can all hear each other. In the round, generally. We usually run the sets and then do new songs. We don't add new songs constantly. I guess the number of years we've been doing this also helps. No superfluous noodling or tapping, just straight to work. Sometimes a curry afterwards.
  28. ….and often mistaken for fretless, testimony to his lovely fluid playing
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