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bassbiscuits

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Everything posted by bassbiscuits

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  2. Thanks to everyone who organised this - I had a great time meeting everyone and trying out some cool gear you don't see everyday! Especially loved the Sadowskys, Norris's Rick and T Bird, and Len Derby's Yamaha, plus loads of other good stuff. Top marks on the cakes too! Cheers folks and see you next year hopefully.
  3. I'm selling my Boss SD1 super distortion pedal. I've just completed a new pedal board which doesn't include it and could use some money to cover the cost of the new bits! I bought it about 12 years ago but it's only done about half a dozen gigs ever, so is very good nick, with only a few very, very small marks. It is Made in Taiwan. The silver label underneath is a bit crinkly on the corner but that never hurt anyone! I haven't got its box or manual but I have lots of bubble wrap to keep it safe in transit. How does £23 posted sound? I'm due to be at the Midlands Bass Bash on Saturday so can always bring it along for a local buyer (and knock a couple of quid off for collection...) Cheers
  4. Started "Stand By Me" in A (correctly i felt) and got through half the intro before the singer i was depping for shouted "in C!" across the stage at me. Words were exchanged...!
  5. Columbus were only ever a cheap and cheerful maker, and this isn't worth anything like £200... Don't think he's really understood the whole lawsuit thing - I understood that to be a writ against other Jap manufacturers like Ibanez, Tokai etc from using headstock and logo designs that were too similar to Fenders and Gibsons of the day. The quality of this is nothing like a regular Fender Jazz. Never mind eh...
  6. http://basschat.co.uk/topic/259363-the-end-of-the-creative-fender-japan-range/page__p__2742486__hl__japan__fromsearch__1#entry2742486 This was the original thread from a few weeks back. Sadly it does sound like something is afoot.
  7. I'm happy to leave my cab and head at home, if anyone has something they'd rather bring. It was mainly for me to sit on with a cup of tea if we were short of chairs! I can bring a little Roland Cube with headphones if its more helpful.
  8. Brilliant - that should be a great evening. He's excellent
  9. If you're worried about your pick/finger sounds being too different, I find that rolling off the tone control a bit when using a pick helps take out some of the thinnness and clacky rasp that sometimes happens with a pick. Then again on some songs that's exactly the sound you want. Horses for courses etc
  10. Mine's a dead simple set up. A USA Fender precision or jazz (with round wounds) into a Markbass LittleMark head and into a Schroeder 1210 cabinet. The only thing in my signal chain is a Korg Pitchblack tuner which is possibly true bypass, tho i'm not sure. I have my eq fairly flat except for some added bass (especially needed with the jazz). I play in a trio or four-piece at most, so I have to cover a fair bit of ground in the band. My playing has always sounded quite thumpy and clanky regardless of what gear I've used over the years, mainly cos i dig in with my fingers quite a lot. At least this rig handles it well and also makes it sound rich and full. Fingers/pick/thumb and judicious use of my bass's tone control provides the rest of the light and shade. I dip into flat wound territory now and again, but that seems to take a lot of the balls out of my sound. I do like the sound and feel of flats tho, especially for recording. Live, i just seem to go for the growl of rounds every time. I should add - my bass sound is a classic example of sounding fairly nondescript by itself, but in the mix with a band it sits in there great and projects really well, which is really why I'm there I'm suppose...
  11. [quote name='anaxcrosswords' timestamp='1428836671' post='2744982'] Oh yes, oh yes! That is one of my stock responses, probably the most frequent one I use. [/quote] Yeah mine usually involves something like "I can't really hear it up here so I'm glad it sounds good in the audience blah blah" I really want to be gracious, witty and humble if someone has taken the time to give a compliment - certainly don't want to appear as an aloof, socially inept tool.(Bit late for that now tho...😀)
  12. Two years ago I did a Halloween function and had spent most of day feeling like utter crap but i didn't realise quite how bad until it was too late to get a dep. The gig was a 90 min drive away during which I had to stop twice to get out and try to barf in the gutter. Like Raslee's post, I gave basic reduced service only in that gig even tho I had to sing half the set. I was white as a sheet and sweating but at least at a hallowe'en party one more zombie didn't look out of place. Shocking evening tho.
  13. [quote name='ezbass' timestamp='1428833759' post='2744925'] It's such a rare, albeit lovely, thing, that I'm often a bit embarrassed at the time. Replies of, "You're too kind," and, "Glad you liked it," and that ilk seem to be the order of the day. However, inside I'm going, "Get in!" [/quote] Ha ha! Exactly! Inside I'm thinking "glad it all sounds good, as I've put a lot of time and effort into it over the years!"
  14. I've got a little sort of neoprene zip up basic laptop bag for my Markbass head and I just sit the head on top of that. I also loop my lead thru the handle on the cab to save it getting pulled over. Works for me
  15. I had this exact experience last night - and I'm so bad at taking compliments. A guy came to tell me how great my bass sound was etc and I just ended up waffling about my gear and awkwardly saying how I never get to hear it from the audience point of view etc. Nice to have some praise I guess. I need to have a better response tho!
  16. As the owner of a genuine one, i can tell you straight off what's wrong: logo truss rod machine heads skunk stripe bridge pickups knobs body contours quality of neck stamp (usually a much murkier faded greeny/blue coded number) in short, its fake.
  17. My most recent gig was recorded by one of the guys depping on it, mainly for reference for the arrangements, backing vocals etc. He sent me the file for a listen and to be honest, my playing was in parts a lot worse than i remembered at the time. Don't get me wrong, i knew there were a couple of really beauties in there in terms of mistakes, but not as many as i heard on the recording. Funny thing was that the vibe of the gig was great, it was nicely full with people up dancing etc (always helps!) and mostly my playing was good (some bits surprisingly so!) so I guess it didn't matter that much. It has made me get my arse in gear to iron out those mistakes for next time, however easily they slipped past the average punter.
  18. Oh no - i didn't realise Brown Sugar was a certified cliched cheesy number! I offered to learn it for an upcoming gig as some of the guys I'll be playing with already know it. It'll save me from dipping into Mustang Sally or Brown eyed Girl, and for that, we should all be thankful.
  19. Packing away after a full-on messy rowdy gig last month, I pulled up the gaffer tape which had been sticking down a couple of PA and mic leads safely at the front of the stage and got tiny splinters of broken glass which had stuck to the tape in my hand from some smashed pint glasses. Managed to get them out fairly easily but really stung. Annoying.
  20. Fender Japan stuff has always been far superior to Chinese Fender stuff, in my experience. I've had a Modern Player Jazz and a 1990s MIJ strat over the years, and there was no comparison in the quality.
  21. I gig a 1970 precision from time to time, tho I now tend to keep it for the more polite gigs due to the "drunken punter" issue mentioned in an earlier post. But it's never let me down electrically/mechanically at all. As long as someone hasn't butchered the electronics at some point old stuff as long as it's well maintained is perfectly gigable
  22. I ended up doing a "first gig" of sorts this weekend - covering for my singer and guitarist for a 2 x 45mins busy pub gig, instead of playing bass. I was pretty tense about the whole thing beforehand but actually reading thru the advice on this very thread ( including my own ) really helped me chill out and just enjoy it for what it was. The result? Better than I ever hoped. It was packed, lot of people I knew turned up and it well down really well. I also got to play with the bassist who normally deps for me, and glad to say he was cool and good player. For all the stress beforehand it ended up being personally really fulfilling and a bit of a milestone for me as a player. All good fun innit?
  23. Bob Harris's late night stuff usually. The drive home by myself in the early hours is one of my favourite chill out times after all the hecticness and noise of a gig.
  24. Police "Every Little Thing She Does is Magic" or Jet "Are you Gonna Be My Girl" always go down well - and I get to sing them both!
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