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  2. It just crossed my mind... Mainly, because I'm sitting on a train, traveling from Derby to Edinburgh. To pick up a bass from another BassChatter. So, anyone done more than 500 miles in a day for a Bass..?
  3. Still looking at kijiji and some classifieds , when I see a bargain I post it on a local jam page , or PM immediately friends. I haven’t had the urge to buy anything although I would have snagged that Dan Armstrong that was listed for a song. It’s almost income tax return season , so I may sell some extra amps , maybe a bass or two.
  4. GAS has struck again, and I’m not one for letting something sit for weeks and not sell, I’d rather spread the joy a bit and take the hit myself. So it’s now £195 posted - and IMO that is an insanely good price. Don’t all rush at once tho! 😁
  5. This week, the ZeroFive Audio Lowrider and the Sushibox FX Neptunium. Pointless in a different way to my 442 comparison where both pedals were discontinued around 10 years ago, both of these are out of stock (almost constantly), produced in very small batches when they are produced and then subject to import duties and shipping from France or the US. But anyway, maybe this will kill your gas for either of them. Was going to just make a post for this video, but best to have a thread lumping these all together as I think I’ll be making more of them.
  6. Fantastic hard case with soft tray. Cost £53 from Thomann excluding postage. £25 including UK postage See pictures for size info.
  7. Congratulations , from the sounds of things you just might have stumbled upon a keeper. I’ve always been curious about Eich , but they are rare over here.
  8. My Maryszczyk Jake, factory PMM. All-passive, Vol / Vol / Tone. Nice and simple, well balanced, sounds immense. If anything happened to it, I’d get another.
  9. That link has gone bad. Looks like someone got the 'ump?
  10. There’s quite a few vintage washboards on eBay but I don’t really know anything about what they are
  11. kingdom - devin townsend
  12. £340 for a top of the range washboard? Everyday's a school day.
  13. That’s pretty much my old rig Amazing amp but be careful as it’s very light ! I stuck four larger rubber feet on the bottom of mine and it never moved It has a great tone from the off and is very loud too. A good match with VK cabs 👍
  14. That was a really good take. Enjoyed that. Cheers for sharing. If you can stretch to a nearly 55 min video, Adam Neely's PhD thesis-level discussion of miming and authenticity is incredible. It also shows all the tricks of how you can knock up a faked video - it's an eye-opener. I knew about comping, that's been done since the first days of multi-track recording, but this is amazing:
  15. I have an AirTurn pedal. It's fine if you use it with one of the recommended apps. However should you want the pedals do anything else other than step backwards and forwards through the pages on one of the supported apps, the interface is less than intuitive. Also on mine the actual foot switches are no longer as reliable as they should be in that I am now getting phantom double-presses.
  16. i've got a these and i must say they're brilliant (i was using the PJB headphone amp and i got sick of all the cables, it was all just such a 'Faff') this is a different level, whoever buy's will be impressed (and i've only scratched the surface of the possibilities). GLWTS
  17. Thanks Matt. We had looked at those, but just not what she wants.. Finding an original 50's or maybe 60's one is as rare as hen's teeth.
  18. Thos figure are only for artists who have signed away most of their streaming royalties to their record label. Based on my streaming figures, for independent artists who are getting 90-100% of their streaming income, a sale of a single physical copy of a 10-track album on CD at £10 is the same as about 350 people streaming all the tracks.
  19. It wouldn't hurt to learn the Greek names of the modes and shapes at some point. If you're playing for example in C Major but the bandleader wants you to play the intro as two bars of F Lydian and then two more in D Dorian before vamping on B Locrian and shouts that out to you,your fingers will automatically know where to go and what notes are available within those modes.
  20. Thomann have a few options at different prices, we bought one of the cheaper ones for our drummer as a gift, mostly as a joke but i'd expect it to make an appearance live at some point. Washboards at Thomann Matt
  21. Today
  22. It's actually closer to 6 years since the previous post, and having read through what I posted back then, things IMO have changed very little. 1. Unless you already have a large and fanatical following or a video that has gone viral on YouTube, you or your band needs to be actively gigging in order to sell any physical product containing your music. My previous bands that were doing really well with sales of CDs and vinyl sell almost nothing now that we are no longer performing live. Each song gets a few hundred streams a year and occasionally I'll get some PRS songwriter royalties from radio play but that's it. As an example, I don't think I've sold any physical copies of anything by The Terrortones since 2022 and before that it was only a few sales each year before that since the band stopped gigging. 2. What you can sell at gigs will depend very much on the genre of your music and the age of your audience. You need to look at what the bands you are playing with are selling in order to make an informed choice as to what format(s) will be best for you. In my band's genre - post-punk/goth, CDs still sell decent quantities, vinyl doesn't appear to do as well. 3. On the other hand IME you do need to have some physical product available to sell at gigs even if it's just a CD single. From experience as punter, if I enjoy a band's gig I'm likely to buy at least one of their CDs (which is my preferred format) at the end of the evening. If they don't have any music for sale in a physical format then at best they might get a couple of Apple Music or Spotify streams when I add their tracks to one of my playlists, and that's assuming I still like what I am hearing sometime in the next few days when I get around to it. Also as a band you need to stick around until the end of evening and be prepared to sign copies in order to maximise your sales. From experience a lot of sales don't happen until all the bands have played when the audience will decide what they are going to spend their money on. Some more hard facts: Since it was released 6 months ago, my band have sold almost 50 copies of our CD single, all at gigs. That's compared with 10 Bandcamp download purchases and almost 7000 Spotify streams. However we need to sell 75 CD singles to break even on the manufacturing cost. For on-line the single has just made back it's aggregator fees, and overall for all our releases we are just about in profit, but that's only because the less popular on-line only releases are being propped up by CD sales and streaming income for the tracks that are getting 40+ streams a day. Even then, that's only because the recording and packaging artwork are all done by ourselves. If we were having to include studio time, mastering and sleeve design in the costs we might never reach break even. We are currently working on an album for release later in the year when we have enough completed tracks to justify it. Whilst IMO it is possible to get away with small runs on CDR for single, an album needs to be properly manufactured in order get the longevity required (CDRs get less reliable as time goes on and you'll be lucky if they are still playable 10 years after you bought them). As a baseline the manufacturing costs for an album on CD in a Digipack with no booklet will be in the region of £700 for 300 copies which is generally the minimum run for replication with glass mastering. You can save about £100 for the same quantity in a Jewel case with a 4-page booklet. That's a unit cost of £2.00 to £2.50 which means each copy should make at least 100% profit. Things are less viable for small bands when you look at vinyl. 300 copies of your album on vinyl is going to be at the very best at least twice the price of the same number of CDs, and if you want either a gatefold sleeve or printed inner sleeve then you are looking at closer to three times the cost, which bumps up the sale price for a similar profit margin. Even if the profit margin is acceptable, and you think your audience will pay more for vinyl, £2k to stump up in advance may well be beyond what a lot of bands can afford. And again that's assuming that there are no recording/mastering/graphic design costs or that the you are simply going to write them off. On top of that vinyl takes 3-4 times as long to produce as CDs and there are various compromises that need to be made in terms of audio production, album running time and track order, to get the optimum audio quality for the medium.
  23. Not sure I understood ... Im am referring to the Trace Elliot V8? Best Scott
  24. My wife's percussion instrument of choice is her washboard. Started playing it when we were in a skiffle band but we've since discovered that it fits in with most songs we cover now we have diversified. Seriously...! For the slower stuff she has a variety of things in her bag that she can hit, shake or rattle. But after 12 years or so the washboard is beginning to show its age and is getting a bit thin in the middle. Unlike me.. ! So we've been looking for a replacement but can't find anything authentic. There are lots of examples on eBay and the like but all are just cheap toys. A washboard similar to that used by Steve Ferrone on the Clapton Unplugged album is available, but she'd really like a traditional wooden framed one. Does anyone have suggestions as where we can find one...? Or maybe you actually have one stored away somewhere...!
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