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I think I got scared off by people saying you shouldn's mix speaker sizes, and given I prefer the sound of 2 or 4x10s over 1x15, kind of went down that route for the last ten years or so. But then when I hooked a 15 up again a few months back I realised that actually regardless of what people say online, the combination of speaker sizes do sound really good. As such I am returning to the 20th century view of a stack with one big 15/18 and some 10s regardless of cancellation or whatever else scaremongers might say...
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I'll hazard a guess that the "resonant boominess" that you get is a room resonance. That's unless you are getting it at the same time in the same song at every gig. Obviously that resonance is being set up by something and that can be by the guitar and bass producing the same frequencies. You do hear it in recordings sometimes so it can be a deliberate effect.. I see HPF as being something on the mixer which cuts hard at 24db/octave a real shutting down of power compared with a tone setting which will normally be around 3-6db/octave. Most tone controls will work at a max of 12-15db/octave but you don't usually turn them up to full boost or cut. 150Hz is too high to cut off the guitar that sharply. You can't really use the same calculations for guitar or vocals as you do for bass or kick. Our ears are nearly completely insensitive to quiet sounds at 50Hz so you don't miss them. You can clearly hear 150hz where our ears are much more sensitive and the guitar or vocal will lose all the 'body' from the sound. I HPF guitars at 80Hz, maybe a touch higher if I have an acoustic guitar giving me bass feedback issues. What you can do is try to locate the frequencies that are giving you concern and try to filter them using a parametric eq. Find the centre of the troublesome frequency, cut that a few db and then try widening or narrowing the width of the filter to make the cut as unobtrusive as possible. If it is only happening in some venues then you would probably be better doing this on the output stages. Also be aware that the boominess might just be on-stage if you aren't all using in-ears. The sound might be good out front. Check if you can as you don't want to be cutting the bass if the mix is just right FOH.
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warwickhunt started following Can anyone identify this Japanese Bass?
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My money is on @Bassassin!
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Pea Turgh started following Can anyone identify this Japanese Bass?
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Cool bass! I love an old Japanese mystery. That scratch plate doesn’t look original - would look 10 times better if you made a new one that followed the contours of the body.
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Rick McKay started following Can anyone identify this Japanese Bass?
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Hi I’ve had this bass for a while and I’m currently restoring it for my daughter to play. She has a Squier P-Bass, but she fell in love with this old thing when she saw it. I have a feeling it might be an old Jedson, or one of the other brands these guitars used. there are a couple of holes in the headstock that seem to have metal in them, as though a logo got broken off. many further help would be appreciated. Thanks, Rick
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cars - Gary Numan
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Alanko started following Odd fret buzz on 4003....
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Unless the strings are damaged, or they are La Bella low tension flats, then any other string will buzz if you are using regular high tension La Bellas. I owned a 2008 4003 for a while. I am convinced it was slowly folding around the neck pickup route. Rickenbacker removed out a lot of wood for the relatively small footprint of the neck pickup in quite a critical structural location for many years of production. I gather they revised the routing at some point, so this might not be the case in a 2013 instrument. Final thought is the trussrods. I didn't find I could use them independently and get more relief on one side of the neck by running one rod looser. I dialled out the relief with one rod but had to tighten the other just enough to stop it rattling. I think the rods themselves were tone thieves to some degree depending on how they were adjusted due to sympathetic vibrations, etc. Again, Rickenbacker take a lot of wood out the core of the neck to fit two rods to do a barely adequate job that is usually accomplished better with one rod. Good that RIC have recently seen sense and dropped down to a single rod. My 4003 always buzzed, but part of the charm of a Rick is that husky semi musical fret buzz, so I lived with it.
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Leonard Smalls started following On Stage Projections
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There is of course the easy 60s option, an oil wheel projector... Though LED is an option too https://optikinetics.co.uk/product/aura-projector/
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Mustang Sally - Wilson Pickett
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Marshall cabs - old school - reduced to £150
AndyTravis replied to bassman1003's topic in Amps and Cabs For Sale
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Rick McKay changed their profile photo
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KyleeKlein started following Repair advice.
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For tricky bass gear repairs, sometimes unconventional parts or mods can do the trick.
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Last Year's Race Horse (Can't Run This Year's Race) - Little Richard
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Anyone recommended an attenuator for the DI on an Orange Bass Terror? I believe the one i need is -40db to fix the 'Hot DI' isues?
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Rick McKay joined the community
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Ibanez Soundgear sr30th4p £750*reduced to £700
Daveybm replied to Daveybm's topic in Basses For Sale
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matbard started following Alembic Rogue 4 string bass
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Squier 40th Anniversary Jazz Vintage White and Gold
bubinga5 replied to Sean's topic in Basses For Sale
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Marvin started following Carol Kaye. . .
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Just scanning over a limited discography of her work, it's phenomenal. She has been overlooked for far too long.
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Every 1's A Winner - Hot Chocolate
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Pride - U2
- Today
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So for some songs the click is just for setting the tempo and nothing else. Do these songs always have the same structure and length? If not that will lead to synchronisation issues with the video. If you are only playing places with in-house PA and lights then you'll find that most of the venues that could support video projection will already have some sort of system installed that is appropriate for the size of the venue. You may find that some of the older set-ups will result in people on stage casting shows and obscuring parts of the screen, and you'll have to decide if this is an acceptable compromise for your performance or if at those venues you would be better off with no back projections. Unless you can find someone to produce all the imagery and videos it's probably going to take several months to implement, so I'd start by asking all the venues that you are playing in the meantime how their projection system works and what inputs are available and what formats they support. That will give you an idea on how to proceed. You could test the water by getting the venues to project your band logo while you play. We have one that is included in our technical rider in various formats, and if it gets lost, our singer has copies on his phone that can be emailed, texted or AirDropped to the lighting engineer while we are setting up. Here's a couple of shots of my band with our logo projected onto a screen behind us. This first one is from a fairly small venue and as you can see we are obscuring part of the screen and projection: Of course that's not a problem if you play somewhere big:
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The Best - Tina Turner
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I think I’ve seen a thread about “Aion’s non working mid control” on talkbass refer to this thread. a good case study for how a post asking a question becomes an internet “fact”! Apparently the Aion kit is like the real thing and matches the original schematic, apparently it works and sounds good - so if you want the Traynor sound crack on and get building. if you want to start modding the circuit and changing the tone stack like Bremen is suggesting… it’s DIY so try it out and enjoy yourself…