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  2. Hard shoes to fill Jack πŸ‘
  3. It’s tuned H to N
  4. Hi Andy where is the gold one from please? I’m interested for my p bass. Many thanks
  5. I would be surprised if there weren't previous transcriptions of this but, in celebration of the album's 50th anniversary, this is the complete Mike Rutherford bass part for the title track of the Genesis masterpiece, 'The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway'. Tougher than would would expect and all done with a pick. https://bilbosbassbites.co.uk/the-lamb-lies-down-on-broadway-genesis/
  6. Last saw one of these being played at the Mos Eisley Cantina.
  7. You are not alone @binky_bass... πŸ˜‰ Instead of speaking of boutique basses, I prefer the term luthier basses, because this is what are my basses and if I've gone that path, it's because I couldn't find what I was looking for in mass produced instruments when I started playing fretless bass 40+ years ago, yes I really started with a fretless as it's the bass tone I hear in my head. Before the first fretless I had an awful Maya EB-2, then a way better Ibanez SoundGear SDGR 800, but I was simply noodling, and then came the first fretless, a now long gone Aria Diamond Violin that had been defretted by Christophe Leduc to my request and fitted with EMG pickups including a piezo pickup: It sounded ace and made me want to take lessons to learn music, but I was attracted by the fretless ERB, hence these luthier made basses that started my love for these instruments, because I had no other option available back then. That said, I like some vintage instruments too for what they are, and even if I'm a vintage Fender expert (some mates here can confirm this), I don't own any Fender vintage instruments anymore, because they don't meet my requirements at all. It's all about tone, nothing more, and, yes, I fancy coffee table fretless basses as well as ultra well thought instruments designed around efficiency and tone. So, please, accept that we don't all like the same stuff. πŸ˜‰
  8. Been there... Many times. 🀣
  9. Take The Long Way Home - Supertramp
  10. Perfect summation πŸ˜‰ Are you a mind reader? 🀣
  11. Drummer: We are sounding pretty tight even with this dep guy. Guitarist: Listen to my playing, I'm on fire! ...as usual. Singer: Something is off somewhere, just can't quite hit the notes. Punters: This band sounds great. Bass player: Must keep smiling, Must keep smiling. 🀣
  12. Looks like a (compromise) version of my onboard patch management idea may make it into the next public release too. The compromise is actually a bonus as it will run in the global menu, which means it won’t eat up memory from the main app, which in turn will leave space for other later improvements. Some real quality-of-life improvements coming in the next update that address most (if not all) of the things people are saying give the MXR Bass Synth an advantage.
  13. Especially if he had brought his own bass
  14. Not really the intermodulation thing that Doom does. You can set up complex distortions that react dynamically or to pitch though.
  15. Great write up - felt I was there πŸ˜‰ . For some reason I thought you were going to be on grass/mud! That's a nicely positioned drain. Well done for going home and improvising solutions to the keeping things dry problem. That's a ton of songs to learn, I feel your joy and pain. I like your "creative lapses" phrase and promise to give it back once I've used it!
  16. Goodbye Yellow Brick Road - Elton John
  17. We graced a huge sports bar last night. Palpable sense of menace in the air, drunken, broken nosed, tattooed football fans wandering into the playing area to chat with the singer during songs, people asking for Pink Floyd tunes (we're an Irish band, whistles, mandolins, cajon etc) and one guy offered to take over as our bassist. I nearly let him.
  18. Today
  19. Hehe, yeah, though Boston at night wasn't that bad - I've experienced worse! It cost me more in travel than the fee (my car is very pricy to run and was bought before gigs were back on the table!). The dep aspects are here...
  20. more concerning is a lack of muting below the 0th fret
  21. Usual process for me is to cut the songs out in the morning from the recording of the night before that I make when there's a reason to (a new band, set or drummer etc) and I have to say I'm cringing at my playing on the 2nd set opening song, Happy Hour - I'm playing it a semi-tone out, the first 3/4 🫣πŸ˜₯πŸ₯΄. My mind was convinced that the MD had given us all the correct band key (A) on the setlist, when in fact they all were ignoring it (except the new dep) because they always play it in Bb. Looking at the setlist later I realised that the MD had written down the band key was A, the original was B and the difference was -1. A clue. At the time I knew it was off within the 1st bar, but kept going, wierdly my ears half adjusted to the discordance, but I knew that something was wrong and tried to figure out the right key whilst keeping the pattern. Stopping for a few moments would have been better. Painful lesson. Note to self: trust my ears, not what I was told and find the right damn key PDQ!
  22. Where the Streets Have No Name - U2
  23. All the way to Boston for a dep gig. I applaud your commitment. 😜 All credit and respect to you for stepping in like that. Its not an easy thing to do. Dave
  24. Superb Daryl. Love those kind of venues and a decent crowd too. And using a proper bass rig this time too. Happy days sir. Dave
  25. Maybe a Zoom B1-4? Can typically be had in good condition for < Β£60. As well as being a neat multifx, it includes a very useful tuner, drum machine, looper and headphone out.
  26. I've got this FrankenFender up for sale on the selling page if anyone's interested. Cheers
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