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Showing content with the highest reputation on 30/01/19 in all areas

  1. Absolutely gorgeous G&L SB1 in genuine 'Road worn' condition. No belt sanders were used in the creation of this bass! In my oppinion this is the ultimate vintage P style bass, it was after all Leo's final go at perfecting the 'Precision' template. The neck is dated August 1987, the body Jul '87. I had the input jack replaced with a Switchcraft unit and the tone pot replaced with a vintage spec CTS, as both originals had become a little cranky. Other than that it's all original. It has the wonderful played-in feel of a vintage instrument that has been played for 1000s of hours, and is a real joy to use. The frets are in fantastic condition, the truss rod works perfectly and it's currently strung with some chunky flats. I'm after £795 collected from Margate, and can include a plush leather Warwick gig bag. If postage is required, I can include a hard case instead.
    8 points
  2. He is giving the money to charity, as he did when he sold a house in London a few years ago. He is a man to be admired.
    6 points
  3. Beta V3 is complete. Hopefully I can finalise the design today and I'll be able to print a batch this weekend. If anybody wants one, send an email to [email protected] with "future impact Housing" in the subject. Let me know where you are so I can calculate postage. Updates include: lettering/labels - added, but not totally happy with the definition. im working on it Internal screen protect - not sure yet if i'm going to fit a screen protector for shipping as its an easy fit if you want to put one on. I actually prefer it off as the numbers are brighter. small internal feature changes for better fit - No more fiddly wiggly assembly.
    6 points
  4. Marked up the neck to put the side dots in. I remembered to do it this time before shaping the fretboard and neck (unlike last time which made it hard work!!). Marked up neck ready to drill holes for the side dots: Plastic dot strips glued in place prior to trimming: Plenty of little things to sort before I venture into the cold of the garage.
    5 points
  5. I think some people are misunderstanding my point. Or at least bending the rules. We all know that songs sung in English are more popular, certainly in the Western World. Also English is one of the best languages for rhyming. Yes, there may be languages that are more common, like Mandarin or possibly Spanish. That is not in dispute. My point was that there are plenty of good songs out there that are sung in different languages and if you ignore them because they are sung in a foreign language, you are depriving yourself of a plethora of excellent tunes.
    5 points
  6. Beta V4 is on the board! I've spent too long on the text already, i think this is about as good as i can get it. only a few small tweaks to some features and i'm calling it complete. Watch out for emails in the next few days telling you all how to get one.
    4 points
  7. 4 points
  8. Ozzy tribute act? Part of the rider? Hope you had a flight case for it anyway
    4 points
  9. I don’t have names for my basses but Mrs Skinny does. We started with Scary Bass, Sporty Bass, Posh Bass, Ginger Bass (which is actually a ‘burst finish) and Baby Bass. The more recent additions have been called, in order, Nora Bloody-Notherone and Annie Moranamoff.
    4 points
  10. Preface: I’ve always wanted a mustang bass in a pale blue / green. When they announced that they would be producing it in Sonic Blue my heart lept and with memories of the Sonic Blue Jagstang in mind, I went as quick as my hatchback could take me to the music shop to try it out. The spotty Saturday child proudly handed me the bass, proclaiming “Sonic Blue” in his squeaky voice. “Sorry Son, this might be your first day, but this is Olympic White”. He then handed me the Olympic White one, or was that the blue? They looked the same, far too pale. My tail drooped and I left the shop. My Dream Bass: 2018 arrives and I notice Fender release an overpriced Seafoam Green Mustang. It’s not the green / blue I wanted, so I start getting quotes to buy a new one and have it refinished in the colour I had in mind. While surfing the web for colour codes I spot it…my dream colour. And hang on….it’s on a mustang bass, and it’s for sale from an actual shop! Seconds later, it’s added to the cart and I hit check out. So end of story? No. The retailer says that they aren’t willing to ship the item outside of the U.S as they “won’t be to promise their usual high level of customer service”. I mail them, offering them whatever costs they need to send it, with the promise I won’t cause a fuss. They still refuse. Even more angering is the fact that this is an exclusive deal with Fender – They are the only shop in the world allowed to sell this bass and they wont ship it to me. I’m not willing to fly to Indiana. So the story ends. Against All Odds: A glass of wine or seven later (that’s only one in dog glasses) I have an idea and fire up Google maps. I find where Sweetwater are based and start looking for pawn shops / secondhand music shops in the area on the slim chance someone has part exchanged one. Highly unlikely as they have only been out a few months - Then the unthinkable happens…I spot one. I mail them asking about it, they respond within minutes explaining that it had a ding in the back, and the shop selling them could no way put that on the shop floor as an exclusive, so let him have it. He attached a photo of the tiny ding. For the princely sum of £120 he would courier it 3,875 miles to my front door. Done and Done. Customs: Five days later I get a phone call “Hello Mr Smith, it’s Customs and Excise here”. They had my guitar at the airport, it’s now only 30 miles away from me. They’re concerned that the fretboard is Rosewood (its not), and that it will need certification. They ask me to put it in writing that it is not rosewood, and that if I lie it’s a criminal offence etc. As she hangs up I swear her mutter something about Leroy getting a new twink for his cell. Hours later the same number pops up on my phone, the lady is a bit more chirpy and thanks me for my confirmation. “And it’s just the extra tax to pay before we can release it”. What? Why did no one mention the 20% import tax! I finish reading out my credit card number through gritted teeth. “Thank you Mr Smith, now I just need to take our admin fee for that transaction”. Arrival: The next day I hear the postman whistling as he walks down the path, I run to the door, tail wagging. Instead of something the size of a bass he hands me a box about the size of a pizza box. Minutes later I get a call from the customs lady, “We’ve tested your neck, and it’s not rosewood, we can now release it”. Oh FFS! “We just need to take the import fee for this oh and our admin fee”. For the next 24 hours I made suggestions about what she should do with the neck, that I won’t repeat here. Then I hear the whistling from the path… Like some sort of weird sommelier the postman is holding the neck like a posh bottle of wine, or the world cup. I bolt everything together, string it (hybrids) strap lock it (new Schaller S types) and it plays like a dream. Would I do it again? Not sure. But I now have my dream bass.
    3 points
  11. Don't worry about it, the Matamp lives on top of mine. It's not light.
    3 points
  12. Newly arrived 1988 5-string, added to the family.
    3 points
  13. I've actually been quite positive about Ashdown in this thread, the horrible video was the equally the fault of Andertons, the NAMM environment and Ashdown. With that said, lots of people on here seem to just wish Ashdown was the brand we all want it to be. They're the spiritual successor to TE and (even factoring in rose-tinted hindsight) they don't seem to quite live up to that. They have so much potential! They had the first class-d head that most people saw, and the first neo cabinets. They were hardly the first to have a hybrid head but they were probably the most visible. They still make lead sleds (even rackmounted ones!) for olde worlde types. They have some amazing signature artists. Their list of brilliance goes on and on but to me it's almost like bad sex. It's good, but you walk away with the nagging feeling it could have been a little better. @ped you're right about us being unduly harsh but (from my point of view at least) it's the same as all those men who sit and scream at the TV every Saturday afternoon, I'm invested in Ashdown, I want them to do well. Having said this, none of it matters. Basschat is a tiny percentage of bassists. More than that, it's skewed to the tiny percentage of bassists nerdy enough to sit online and talk about bass playing so it's FAR from representative. As nearly every rehearsal studio, every teenage 'my first band' and many many hard working professional players will attest, Ashdown is doing just fine. I bet they could retire everything apart from whatever the MAG line is called now and they could probably all live quite comfortably. God knows they've sold more bass amps that I ever will.
    3 points
  14. I gassed for a Pino for ages. Then back last year I got this Squier Classic Vibe and it all went away!
    3 points
  15. Just think how much more successful this would have been if it was in English.
    3 points
  16. Yes, the question was is it good. Your main argument seems to be about commercial success, which is something else entirely.
    3 points
  17. And "Don't just walk off showing me the old pencil sharpener, damn you!" 😁 Was it Mark Twain who said: If your cat could speak, he probably wouldn't speak to you. 😥
    3 points
  18. He's got a picture in his attic, you know.
    3 points
  19. Especially hitchhiker's. Keeping them is definitely frowned upon.
    3 points
  20. At a yearly festival, a guitar stand with my name at it, we got invited back the following year...and there it was on the stage!!!
    3 points
  21. Just took delivery of this little beaut a couple of weeks ago. S2 Classic 5-string headless thru-neck with gold hardware and Bendwell & Paramatrix options. Although we spoke at length with Rob & Dawn about the finish I was going for (and probably gave Rob a headache in the process!) the end result was even more stunning than I'd expected. Literally gave me a sharp intake of breath when I first opened the case.
    3 points
  22. While it's tough to distil Jamerson's genius into a list, here are some things that I love about his line on 'What's Going On' (which is, as an aside, I think one of the greatest recorded parts of all time). Jamerson had complete mastery over the following areas: 1. Chord tones 2. Chromatic approaches (aka 'enclosures'). It's jazz, but not as we know it. 3. 16th-note syncopation 4. Being so drunk during tracking that he had to lie down on the floor (if the legend is to be believed) Out of all of these, I find myself most inclined towards working on number 4 when practice time allows.
    3 points
  23. I suppose so, at the risk of being unpopular. Firstly, until a few months ago, when I discovered Scott Devine's instructional videos on YouTube, I'd never even heard of Jaco, so I had to look him up on YouTube to see what Scott's massive man crush was all about. I have to say I've never heard so much pretentious, noodling noise pollution in my life. I just don't get it, and I don't think I ever will. That's not to deny he's a good (some would say great) bass player. I suppose if it's your kind of thing then that's great. That's what I meant about living on a different planet. If that's your kind of thing I just can't relate to it at all. Someone vocally scatting the bass line certainly does nothing to improve it to my ear. I only managed to stand about 20 seconds of it. Rather than "captivating" as described in the original post, I found it unbearably irritating. I think I'd rather listen to roadworks. Again if that's your kind of thing then great, but again I may as well be on another planet.
    3 points
  24. Filthy vintagy bass porn shot of her with my fliptop just to temp 😂
    2 points
  25. 2 points
  26. 2 points
  27. Vertical. Horizontal narrows the midrange dispersion angle by over half, creates comb filtering in the highs, and makes it much more difficult for the player to hear the mids and highs. There is no loss of low end, as the drivers are all fully mutually coupled and acting as a single driver in the long wavelengths which benefit from the boundary reinforcement the floor gives. It may seem that there's a loss of lows, but that's not the case, it's just that you can hear the mids and highs with a vertical stack far better than with a horizontal cluster.
    2 points
  28. I couldn't resist doing a quick mockup..... 😀
    2 points
  29. After a traumatic few days while DPD c0cked up the delivery, I picked it up from the depot today, the culmination of its journey from Italy. The photo is of it in its arrived state - since then, the frets have been cleaned, fretboard lemon-oiled, neck and body waxed with genuine Warwick surface finisher (more lemony goodness), strings changed, and set-up done. I'm surprised at the tonal change from moving the blend between the pickups, as they're very closer together.
    2 points
  30. With an ABM or one of the newer Rootmasters? Eude
    2 points
  31. Yeah good points. I hope to have sex one day so I can compare 😂
    2 points
  32. He is indeed. He's also my favourite guitarist, my favourite male singer, and was part of the band who created my all-time favourite album, Wish You Were Here, which completely changed my life. So you can imagine my surprise when I saw him walking towards me at Euston station in October last year. I had a mouthful of veg burrito at the time, so didn't get chance to say anything, which was probably a good thing in some ways. As he got near to me he obviously noticed recognition dawning on my face, turned his head away and walked swiftly past me. A shame though as I would have liked to have simply said "thanks".
    2 points
  33. Clipping isn't a cut-out, it's distortion; as the Wikipedia section you quote says: The extra signal which is beyond the capability of the amplifier is simply cut off, resulting in a sine wave becoming a distorted square-wave-type waveform. In other words what you hear with clipping is your max level signal with the top cut off the wave-form, which, depending on the amp/speaker can either sound terrible, damage the speaker or, in the case of valves etc, can sound like overdrive... The square wave is effectively the sum of many harmonics of the original tone - all that extra high-frequency harmonic content is what causes the damage. Personally I prefer any overdrive to be produced by something that's designed to produce overdrive!
    2 points
  34. must say I can't agree, it's such a distinctive part of the song, some attempt should be made, if not don't bother at all
    2 points
  35. If folk want shielding, then a roll of copper tape, with a sticky side is cheap and readily available for anyone to do themselves as their own aftermarke job, on an aftermarket job
    2 points
  36. At my age, I struggle to stay awake through any film I watch.😀
    2 points
  37. Anything from £5 plus a drink to £500 plus expenses. A lot more information required - Type of band, Type of gig, Size of venue, Size of band, Playing level of band, (keen amateur, dad rock, semi pro, pro) How much you would guess they're being paid, How far away it is, How long you'll actually have to spend hanging around at the venue (can be a problem with weddings and functions) How much rehearsal time (if any) required, How much you'd like to do the gig (prestige, possibility of permanent position, other musos in the audience looking for a bass player) That'll do for a start... 🙂
    2 points
  38. There is probably no response to that which would not attract the well-earned approbation of #metoo. That was not an easy sentence to compose after large quantities of Scotch.
    2 points
  39. I remember what the other thing I was thinking of was - ask each of them which three songs would they suggest to add to the set list.
    2 points
  40. I do not need another Super P5. I do not need another Super P5. I do not need another Super P5. I do not need another Super P5.
    2 points
  41. All of my basses have come with names on them, I sometimes add a little to make them more distinctive, so we have had 'the black Precision'. 'the white Precision' 'the new Ibanez', 'the Ibanez I bought last month', etc.
    2 points
  42. No. Nor do I refer to cars or basses as “she”.
    2 points
  43. Also Nellie the Elephant. The original, not the Toy Dolls version, otherwise they'll finish up with tachycardia.
    2 points
  44. Well, that is a thing when people say that punk encouraged them to pick up an instrument and play. What bit of it? Some of the punk stuff could be done by people with absolutely no musical talent, some was every bit as hard as some of the prog around at the time, so it is hard to know what people mean when they were talking about punk in that context. Also read quite a good paper on the revisionist history of musical genres, noting that at no point in the areas that were known as the time of a specific genres (punk, metal, disco, rock'n'roll etc) did the average chart exceed 25% of that genre. Borne out if you look at top albums of 77 - Queen, abba, Slim Whitman, Shadows, Sinatra, The Beatles, The muppets, Johnny Mathis, Yes, Connie Francis, Elvis Presley, Diana Ross, Cliff Richard, Sex Pistols, Bread, a compilation disco album and a OST for star is born. Frankly, no year can claim to be innovative when it had a Johnny Mathis album in the charts!
    2 points
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