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Showing content with the highest reputation on 13/12/18 in all areas

  1. So, I acquired a lovely year 2000 US Fender Jazz recently. Took it to a gig with my Stingray and realised that whilst it was a beautiful instrument I am geared up for active basses and found it limp in comparison with my rock covers band. I put it up for sale initially but then did some research on onboard pre-amps and came to the conclusion that the new J-Tone by John East was the way to go. I have had John's kit before and it is beautifully designed and put together. It took minutes too install and has totally transformed the instrument. It is a straight drop in, no routing and no soldering. It has a push/pull pot which switches neatly between passive and active and the pot is also the passive tone control too, simple, clean and effective. The next pot is double stacked bass and treble in active mode and the remaining double stacked pot is volume and blend (this is also available with Vol/Vol too). It is still definitely a jazz and has all the right characteristics but it is now very much enhanced without losing any of the classic tones. This unit has made this instrument eminently usable for me and I will be gigging it tomorrow night with a big smile on my face!
    3 points
  2. 3 points
  3. When I read this about the old headless Hohners beeing kind of rare, I come to think of my own headless bass. It's a Cort Space B2 (I think it's called) With active/passive Electronics. I'm not shure how rare this is, but The Cort webpage states that these where manufactured alongside the Hohners in the Korean Cort factory in the 80's, and share much of the same hardware and Electronics. I do think that the active ones are a litte more difficult to find than the passive ones. Well herre are some pics.
    3 points
  4. All I want for christmas is the cancellation of brexit
    3 points
  5. The usual really. World peace. The end of poverty and inequality. For all humanity to be immune to every disease. Just kidding, I want a p bass with flats.
    3 points
  6. The Millennium Falcon, in the condition it was in when Lando had it. My tinnitus to go away To look like Helena Christensen People to shut up about the beatles.
    3 points
  7. Hello. Unfortunately life forces me to start selling my collection of basses.(not all..:) Emperor stays) All of them are rare custom made.In mint condition, I play at home or in my private studio. I love guitars I could buy or order new one's all the time..:) I begin my sale with this lovely Cazpar made specially for me by Mensinger company I wanted to have short scale bass I could travel with or play at home when I don't have much space, or jam with friends with more comfort. This is the same bass You can spot on their site. It has blue LED's (It was very difficult to made this option in set in headless bass type- and wasn't cheap.. ) Best Delano preamp, headless ABM bridge, Delano pickups, all made in satin finish..You can feel the heart of guitar..:) Everything totally handmade....that's why I love Mensinger . Quality found in boutique guitars. Highly reccomend it. Specs are: Body: ash Neck: Padouk/Wenge Fingerboard: wedge, short scale,22 frets Blue LED with brightness control switch Construction: set in Pickups: Delano Electronics: active - Delano sonar 3 band Finish: matte Hardware: ABM incl. Gigbag
    2 points
  8. Plays as good as it looks, first Ibby tried a few cheaper ones in past and they felt a bit lightweight and a bit like, for want of a better word toys, tried the natural coloured one in Gear4 in york and thought having this, but had to be the Mojito which looks a bit like a chocolate lime sweet. Been playing on it since i got home.
    2 points
  9. Hello people, Probably about time I made a post. I am a young player in my early 20's. Been playing Bass for a little while now, I picked it up on a whim as I needed to record a part and I found out that the low end is where I belong. Music is a big big part of my life, I grew up listening to my Dad's records. He unfortunately passed away just over a month ago. I intend to focus on my musical vision to honour him, it's what he would have wanted and I know it would make him proud. Music and Bass are my way to express and deal with emotions and difficult times, I'm glad I have them as a part of my life. I play prog-rock and metal mostly, but I don't try to emulate the big bands in those genres, I'm trying to create something unique and compelling. My two biggest influences from a song writing point of view are Steven Wilson (Porcupine Tree primarily) and Mariusz Duda (Riverside and his solo stuff from Lunatic Soul), their approach to melody is something that I find very compelling. In terms of technique and general bass playing I'm more influenced by modern players, Amos Williams from Tesseract always inspires me to be creative and mix up my techniques and voicing and Jon Stockman from Karnivool inspires me to be creative when it comes to rhythm, counter-melody and using effects with Bass. John Frusciante is also a huge influence of mine, even though he is a guitar player, he is so expressive with his playing and you can really feel that his instrument is a true extension of himself. I've also played guitar since I was young as I dreamed of being on a stage and I wanted to 'play music' and that seemed like the only option at the time because guitar was where it was at at the time, but honestly as much as I love guitar, bass is just too fun that I never touch my guitars anymore. I would say my biggest musical skill is singing though, I have a huge range and good control but I prefer to sit back in the pocket and play bass. I'm looking to get more competent at singing and playing bass, I can sing pretty effortlessly but I play in a very complex genre that requires so much concentration to play in that it just seems impossible.
    2 points
  10. here to primarily sell and buy equipment. love a bit of banter also. thx
    2 points
  11. Some people will do anything to avoid playing in hull...
    2 points
  12. 2 points
  13. Thanks Charlie! This is very much the same process that we use when designing amplifiers, developing the combination of load profile, driving signal and thermal conditions, integrating these factors over time. This was even more the case when designing linear amps when we had to worry (a lot) more about SOA (safe operating area). Class D amps are more forgiving in this area than linear amps due to cut-off/saturation operation. While this is correct for voltage, it is NOT correct for power as you would be ignoring the squared factor in the power equation (P=V^^2/R) When RMS is used in describing power, all it means is that the voltage and current are based on RMS units, not that the power itself is in RMS units. It's a short-hand notation that's understood by most professionals in the industry and has been used for years.
    2 points
  14. Oh it is. And yes we do. I still remember when "All Day Breakfast" supported "All You Can Eat For £3.50". There was nearly a riot of hungry pensioners. That's a good band name actually - "Riot of Hungry Pensioners" 👍
    2 points
  15. There - fixed dum diddle um diddle um diddle um diddle um diddle um diddle um diddle um.
    2 points
  16. If I was to do a demo of an amp I would use a looper. Play a phrase and let that go round and round with the camera pointed at the controls of the amp. Fiddle with all the buttons and knobs. Then go around the amp and get up and close to the outputs and inputs etc. I don’t care for what the bass player is doing. I don’t need to see that. I need to see the amp. I’d mic it up and do a DI comparison etc but that’s a lot of work and a good enough reason not to make YouTube video demos.
    2 points
  17. Fun gig with the seven piece "little big band" yesterday at an elementary school. We played a few songs including some Christmas music and then got to sit in with the school band and play along with about twenty-five kids aged 13 and 14. The best part was watching the kindergarten kids(age 5) up on the stage as they sang through Rudolph, Jingle Bells and We Wish You A Merry Christmas complete with actions.Brought a tear to my eye as I recalled seeing my son and his classmates doing the same thing some thirty-five years ago, quite a magic moment and the little concert put me in a better mood for the Christmas season.
    2 points
  18. Interesting, I'd only just seen this thread. I'm a long time user and fan of Boss/Roland stuff - GT-10b, GR-55, VB-99, GT-6b, ME-8b, BE-5b, zillions of Boss compacts. I would have also highly recommended the GT-1b for your needs and budget. Its basically a stripped down GT-10b and I think it actually has a few advantages sound wise over its bigger brother. Where it does fall down is the menu/GUI navigation which can be a bit confusing. I get around this by using the Boss Tone Studio software, which makes editing easy. Its also a little awkward to jump up and down multiple patches on the fly. I get round this by grouping patches together or adding a default patch either side of any more radical ones. To comment on your summary above. 1/ It did take me some considerable tweaking to finally settle on a transparent default patch at something close to unity gain. The pre loaded patches all seemed very hot and so I started from scratch constantly bypassing the GT-1b to check. Once this was done I designed all my patches using the default patch as starting point and again bypassing and checking levels etc. repeatedly. 2/ The Chorus has a Low and High pass filter built in. If you set the The 'Lowcut' to anything above 125Hz you should retain all the low end as It'll be unprocessed. I actually find the Chorus in the GT-1b more extreme than either my CE-2b or CEB-3. I mostly use it for a subtle wash though rather than full on sea-sick wobbliness. I'd strongly advise to to spend some serious time getting to know the sound and capabilities of the unit before you dismiss it. Every multi effects I've ever used has its own idiosyncratic nature. There are usually some things that each multi does well its just a matter of learning how to use the unit and find the sweet spots. The GT-1b is a great multi and is a very powerful bit of kit, I've programmed (and use regularly) Everything form Face melting Fuzz patches, through gentle grind, some rudimentary synth patches, It has a brilliant OC-2 emulation, the T-wah is one of my faves (including boutique stuff and my Mu-Tron III), I've even managed Royal Blood type splits and crazy Hammond organ patches. Stick with it , I'm sure it'll be accompanying you on a gig soon.
    2 points
  19. Not sure if this counts but, I took the kids to see the musical Matilda (eldest daughter is called Matilda, unless you actually try and call her that. She only answers to Tilly) in Cardiff last night. I have to say, despite it not being my sort of thing I was impressed.
    2 points
  20. Well done, trooper, for not 'bottling' it. 'What doesn't kill you makes you stronger' and all that..?
    2 points
  21. The update. Just got back from the "mime" gig. I had previously said, "what could possibly go wrong?" Four days ago, I think I broke my left little finger. Still bloody painful. So, I took a back up normal fretless. Got to the sax player's house, to find he'd now taken the bass off of the tracks, suggesting that I can now "play along" with the numbers!! Great, a random 15 numbers from a list of 30 numbers I didn't know. Fabulous venue and food, corporate gig for 70 high-flyers. I get told that I can share the guitarist's real book charts. Fab, a busted finger, an upright bass I've had for 5 weeks and songs I don't know and now, have to take my eyes off the fingerboard😂 Lasted five numbers on the upright and changed to normal fretless. Less painful and at least I knew where the notes were. Got through it, but stressful, got paid and the unexpected key changes in a couple of numbers were a bit of a car crash. All experience though I guess.
    2 points
  22. on my list? for people to say, "lets call it quits, I won't get you a present and you don't get me one", it's the present buying/giving I don't like about Christmas, it's nearly as bad trying to think of things for people to buy me as trying to think of things to buy other people, bah Humbug.
    2 points
  23. Any retirement package that looks better than "Death in Service"...
    2 points
  24. **SOLD** Now £1450 £1400 £1350 Musicman Stingray 5 Classic. Natural with maple fingerboard and East MMSR 3 band pre-amp. Totally amazed to be selling this, but now I have a Wal it's just sitting there, with a sad look on it's face, and needs to be played! Excellent condition. Original case included. List price is around £2200 now, and around £150 for the preamp. Pickup from Cambridge, or met up within reasonable distance. Cheers, Andy
    1 point
  25. Final Price Drop. Now on sale for £2200, selling without the flight case and tear drop case. Here’s one you don’t see too often, in fabulous condition, extremely rare ‘84 Musicman Cutlass I, pre Ernie Ball, two band EQ, Serial number BO17701, Modulus Graphite Neck with Ebony Fingerboard, Stingray Body, Neck dates ‘84, Body dates ‘79. Beautiful bass to play, lovely action, frets have plenty of life left in them. Definitely a body refin, as for a nearly 40 year old bass there’s not a blemish on it. Will be shipped (or collected) with gig bag and serious packaging! Based in Ireland, collection preferred, but willing to ship overseas at buyers expense. Thanks for looking.
    1 point
  26. Brubaker Extreme 5 String Model: KXB-5 Xtreme Scale: 34" Frets: 24 Body: Swamp Ash Top Wood: Buckeye Burl Neck: Hard Maple with Paduk Fret Board: Paduk with Buckeye Hardware: Hipshot A Style Bridge with Ultralite Tuners Pickups: Bartolini MM5 CBC (Bridge) and XXP25 (Neck) Controls: 4.6 Bartolini NTMB Ships from US
    1 point
  27. I can show you how if you like...
    1 point
  28. It's very nice to see you on here, agedhorse. I hope you'll stick around.
    1 point
  29. Thanks mate will have another go!
    1 point
  30. I've had a set of Olympia flats on my Ric' for 10-odd years (the skinny 40-95 versions), and they're fine! Thanks to the links on this thread - I've ordered at set of Olympias in the 45-100 gauge: eBay item number: 332486029353 Made an offer of "£10", it was automatically accepted. So that's 10.99 inc postage. Bargain. 👍 I can't put them on my P bass project, because that going to be wearing Roto Funkmasters. 😎 So now I need a Jazz.... 😥
    1 point
  31. Someone to finish my bloody kitchen properly so I can get back to bass stuff.... Or more realistically, world peace.
    1 point
  32. In case Santa or @Jabba_the_gut is listening... ...and on a less selfish note either a complete reversal of Brexit or Scotland gains independence and rejoins the EU on its own. I'd join the migrants heading North and discover just what it is like to be a refugee.
    1 point
  33. There are likely two allen key locks (either side of the bridge). With both loosened, position/adjust your saddles to a comfortable height and set the intonation moving saddles forward/back accordingly. When happy, re-tighten the allen screws either side of the bridge. :) Tonepump Jr is a less dramatically eq-changing/boosting/cutting preamp than it's bigger brother - the Tonepump.
    1 point
  34. I thought that too but just looked it up and he'd just turned 20 at Woodstock. Maybe he was 16 or 17 when he joined? Still very young and mega talented though!
    1 point
  35. Lonely as I am.. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pJPFEJnjkw4
    1 point
  36. all want is for people to stop bringing politics into every thread
    1 point
  37. The WD-800 has a great feature set which in theory would allow one to maximise the efficiency of both the head and cab between the hpf and damping. Its the old thing that people would complain that an amp doesn’t have a feature such as ‘tunable’ HPF and when a company adds that feature along with additional control for a damping thus offering the user a complete ‘solution’ it’s criticised as being superfluous with no actual real world use or experience of it. 😀🤣 Forums eh!!
    1 point
  38. Sounds like my ideal gig, well paid, food, not using my own car and I don’t have to actually remember anything.
    1 point
  39. about 3 times, once the output transisters failed in my elderly Trace Elliot, twice when signal to the sound engineer mysterious disappeared, no fault found with the amp later but I always have a spare available, but as I said I'm using elderly Trace amps. Another amp failure story, our guitarist orange amp wouldn't switch on, he finished up using my spare Trace Elliot (sounded ok according to the crowd but he was not happy). When he took it in for repair it was just the warning light bulb that had blown, the amp was working ok all the time
    1 point
  40. [quote name='jonsmith' timestamp='1361531820' post='1986980'] Like these guys: [url="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hatfield_and_the_North"]http://en.wikipedia....d_and_the_North[/url] [size=4][/quote][/size] [size=4]I suspect Bert was having a little joke with us. [/size]
    1 point
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