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  2. ***PRICE DROP NOW £1300*** 2010 US Stingray, 2EQ, CAR with rosewood board. One of the limited edition 133 basses, full fat ‘ray but with a soft gig bag case instead of a hard shell job. This is in excellent condition with one very minor ding on the top edge, and the pickguard is quite marked but obviously easily replaceable. Comes with a Hipshot D-tuner (long key though instead of short… doh), if you want the original tuner key I’ll chuck it in. I’ve also replaced the pickup with a Nordstrand MM4.2, which sounds flippin’ great. She’s quite heavy (10lb) but with a decent wide strap it feels ok. ***EDIT*** now comes with the option of a Warwick Rockbass semi-rigid case - photos added. Loathe to post this but can at buyer’s (insured) expense, or can meet in person at either Portsmouth, Southsea, Southampton or Lymington (I’m on the I.O.W.)
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  3. Beat me to it! Definitely a Vox Symphonic https://equipboard.com/items/vox-symphonic-bass
  4. Looks like a Vox Symphonic Bass to me. https://www.vintageguitarandbass.com/vox/bass/
  5. This is especially true for we left-handed players. Finding a lefty instrument in a shop was pure luck and they often weren't interesting (and almost always painted black for some reason). The internet made what seemed impossible, a decent selection of all kinds of lefty instruments, possible for the first time.
  6. JohnR

    Darkglass Anagram

    All probably returns. 😂
  7. In which case - there's also an earlier Beta for sale (not £125). Keep your eyes on the market place - there's loads of good stuff there most of the time and also loads of great folks to deal with.
  8. Just picked this up, thanks I havent really pushed it to be honest but will give that a try
  9. Impending retirement means that I need to de-clutter, beginning with some of my beloved basses. A Beautiful bass bought from here in 24, with a great sound, which I am just not using much. It is the real deal with gorgeous looks and construction in my honest opinion. Someone out there will love it. It is also loud enough to practice with without an amp IMHO! Happy to post as it comes with a generic hard case that fits archtop basses "The Gretsch G5442BDC Electromatic Hollow Body Short Scale bass guitar has a comfortably short scale at 30.25", and is armed with two powerful "Black Top" Filter'Tron™ bass pickups, giving it an electrifying deep-end voice and identity. The double-cutaway hollow and bound body offers full bass tone and balance, and is finished in Transparent Red." Note: I have been asked about neck dive, just in case you are worried about that this is my answer. "I can't say that it has bothered me,. Being an true hollow body/archtop It is very light and hangs horizontally, but it feels normal to rest my right arm on the body, which pushes the neck upwards to a comfortable, natural playing position. It also feels good sitting down. I imagine that the longer scale Gretsch hollows may have serious neck dive". G5442BDC Spec sheet.pdf
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  10. Yeah, I’m about to retire (from work, not playing bass!) and thinking of buying it. 🤔😂
  11. I bet AI could answer that if you input the photo and use the question you asked us as your prompt.
  12. Steve - we are the Otis Jay Blues Band. I have your email so I’ll send you our dates. I must try and get over to Portsmouth and buy you a drink one of these days - sure it would yield a lot of good info!
  13. Can anybody identify the bass that this Walker Brother is playing? Looks sorta Fendery but the scratchplate is all wrong.
  14. Why is it you don’t hear much about these amps ? Have they been a flop ?
  15. I would also add that having some video and an online presence helps. Don't underestimate live stuff on YouTube. A promoter I know that used to book bands for the non-main stage pub circuit at big blues festivals makes sure that he watches the first video that comes up on YouTube. He says all he wants to know if the band can play, can get an audience and can play to that audience!
  16. 🍒Good price for a great bass🍒/ I bet it's on the light side of 4 kg (🍒)
  17. The actual build of this bass (together with one other bass) was done during my summer vacation of 4 weeks. But the finishing process (of endless building up and sanding) took another 4 weeks. So all in all 8 weeks. I have three more bass guitars planned to build this year. And I am working on the finish of the other bass that I built this summer. I hope to close that off in two weeks from now.
  18. Thanks. For the heck of it I just emailed Ashdown to see what Dave says. I'm really more concerned about the seller not taking it back if turns out to be an issue. I did mention that valve no valve or EQ changes affect it. Whatever Ahsdown says may likely confirm your thought about the valve, or provide basis that it may be more than that (as much as can be known without listening to it), and assure the seller something is a bit off.
  19. I saw Men I Trust in London in 2024 - the bass really stood out in the live mix.
  20. Hi IEM pals, been losing myself in this thread and various YouTube rabbit holes so wanted to ask for some help. Apologies in advance if this is the wrong thread! Context: - 4 piece loud heavy metal band (Vox, guitar, bass&vox, drums) - 3 of us on IEMs (Vox, bass, drummer), guitarist is a refusenik (doesn't like the isolation and I think hasn't experienced what they can be like when mixed and fitted well) - no click or backing track but we do have a few drummer-triggered samples - We play a mix of pub gigs, toilet venues and the occasional bigger 'proper' venue as support. Big variance on what there'll be in terms of PA and I don't trust many of the engineers we're working with briefly to do a great job on monitoring vs. FoH - have had some pretty shit experiences to date. Gear: We currently have 3 LD Systems MEi-1000s running on their own frequencies in a 4u rack. At shows with sound checks we ask the FoH engineer to run through our individual mixes. This has had mixed results depending on the engineer and ability to get a decent soundcheck. I have been loaned an RCF M18 mixer to experiment with from a successful band who've outgrown their setup. The Problem: 1. Our singer INSISTS on IEMs for his vocals and doesn't really need much else in their ears so doesn't care about their personal mix much. Also a luddite so the prospect of mixers etc. as part of our load-out really stresses them out. Doesn't understand how we'd do our own mixes and control them ourselves. one look at the RCF was met with 'what the f**k are supposed to do with all of those inputs'. 2. I don't like using mine because it's been really hard to get a decent mix in that brief sound check window that we sometimes get, same for drummer really. This is a source of tension and I think as a rhythm section we're trying to choose between not hearing stuff well vs. hearing the wrong things in a weird mix. 3. Changeovers are 15-20 minutes and we're often mid-bill so having extra things to set up beyond our own instruments is stressful, often with just a line-check. The Solution: I'm aware we need some kind of patchbay and splitter setup to work with to add to the mixer, but I'm at a loss as to where to start and how to get it all working properly so we could use it at a gig. I've watched a few videos where the cost has been prohibitive, the rack is huge and full of Kempers etc. and I just glaze over a bit. We're an amps band still with a pretty loud stage - a lot of the venues we play don't work for quieter stages and we've seen other bands try and do this and it hasn't worked. Not to say I don't want to get there eventually but getting the monitoring issue solved is first priority before we start heading down the silent(er) stage route. Any examples would be hugely appreciated on how you've solved this issue and come up with something that's made the sound people happy as well as band members without a ton of over-engineering would be brilliant. The longer we put off solving it the less we'll enjoy performing and the bigger venue stuff especially could be way cooler if we know what we're doing. I'm keen to upskill in this area anyway since it's changed so much since the earlier 2000s when I was gigging a lot and we were all futzing around with wedges and being deaf. Thanks pals!
  21. I actually saw it. I’m still think about it. I think the seller wants 125 which makes a new genzler 75 more. Man I hate decisions lol
  22. Today
  23. I didn’t even realise you sent this. My apologies. I don’t know what a COT-50 is. I’ll look into it and the earthquake devices blames. Man trying to find a genzler 4 on the floor used is near impossible lol.
  24. @Mickeyboro I am ashamed to say I don't know the name of your band. I'd love to come and see you guys play. I should also have pointed out that we do about 50% original material in our set.
  25. Yep there’s a careful technique getting them out ( a pick sometimes works ) I gave some spares I think, Ashdown sent them and they are happy for users to swop valves etc and it doesn’t affect your warranty
  26. Thanks. Yes, I'm wondering about that. It would make for an easy fix. I have newer JJ in my 500 and an Eden in a box. I may try the Eden (which was quite), before contacting seller or Ashdown to rule it out. Yet as I think about it, I don't want any indication of me opening the head up as they may not take it back if I choose due to the hiss becoming more than I want to listen to. Those screw covers may not look perfect after prying them out.
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