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Norm

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Everything posted by Norm

  1. [quote name='Sawtooth' post='1193221' date='Apr 8 2011, 07:50 PM']Be warned that most don't make it to the end of the first track though, so make sure you edit your best performance first. [/quote] Edit is a good point, our covers gig getting cd was an edit of 6 twenty second snippets of a variety of songs. Always backed up with a personal meet with landlord/booker & seemed to work best in that combination. Cheers, Norm.
  2. [quote name='dbass' post='1177060' date='Mar 26 2011, 11:32 AM']Damn you Dood... Was about to post exactly the same thing. Some of our best ever gigs have been to no-one but the best received gigs have always been sh*t for us on stage with lots of mistakes and a bad sound on stage. Utterly bizarre. Nowadays I'm happy for the ground in the middle! ;-)[/quote] Me too! Gig 1 - sounded good, played well to complete & utter disintrest. Gig 2 - sounded awful, played crap, went down a storm. Weird but true Cheers, Norm.
  3. [quote name='Fat Rich' post='1147452' date='Mar 2 2011, 06:36 PM']You could print this out and give it to him: Major = Minor = Sounds like it'd double his musical knowledge![/quote] Happy, sad, that is superb!
  4. [quote name='scalpy' post='1150999' date='Mar 5 2011, 10:26 PM']I've had a mountain of reports to do today, and after getting distracted by Basschat again, and having read Lo.'s excellent post on Motown listening I tried an experiment. I started with Jackie Wilson's Beautiful Day on youtube, with the aim of reaching any Donnie Hathaway track but only via the suggested videos that come up on the right. I've accidentally discovered all sorts of stuff today, Marvin Gaye I've not heard, Northern Soul, ahem, Barry White, Stylistics, Al Green. Still no Donnie Hathaway, but then I didn't finish the paperwork so tomorrow looks sorted![/quote] Yes, its great fun, you can find some very interesting stuff. Recently went on a bit of a doom stoner journey toward the more non-metallic post rock end (not something I would normally listen to but..) & found some great stuff, Om & Boris particularly floated my boat. Also started with the Stooges, went forward & backwards by picking influenced by & influence taken from. Did a early heavy one too, Iron butterfly, blue cheer, Black Oak Arkansas etc & found the James Gang with a pre-eagles Joe Walsh on guitar, ace! Cheers, Norm.
  5. Read somewhere on here that it is a problem especially common to 'Rays. A more experienced BC'er than me will be able to enlighten I'm sure. The weak G is deffo suffered by my 'Ray but then again it is in need of a pro set up. I daren't touch it for fear of f*cking it right up! Cheers, Norm.
  6. [quote name='daz' post='1142507' date='Feb 26 2011, 04:59 PM']Yep I saw a Pixies songbook the other day for Guitar, vocals and [b]piano.[/b] F#kin piano!!!! when the hell has a piano ever been anywhere near a Pixies song? (or a Thin Lizzy one for that matter?) I mean why on earth bother with a piano arrangement ? Why not put kim deal's bass on there it'd be a lot easier for a start. Hey why not go all the way and arrange for Tasmanian nose flute or Kentucky arse trumpet ? Some publishers want shooting. Or at the very least a cuffing around the back of the head with a plank so their false teeth shoot out, like in the Beano or something. Honestly. thick as a brick. I mean piano!! Bleedin Piano ffs ............................... [size=6]Arghhhhhhhhhhh[/size] Rant rave gnash gnash Grrrr[/quote] The Kentucky arse trumpet is a very difficult instrument to master!
  7. [quote name='daz' post='1142320' date='Feb 26 2011, 01:40 PM']Well thats keyboard players for ya. They make drummers look normal by comparison. [size=4][b]*[/b][/size]Dave Green played huge Organs[i] not [/i]keyboards[/quote] +1. Mostly eccentric, often strange, very strange.
  8. [quote name='bartelby' post='1138935' date='Feb 23 2011, 06:01 PM']I had a dream the other day that I'd formed a Steam-Punk band. The band were dressed in the peak of Victorian fashion and played punk and metal covers on old instruments, including a Harmonium. The next day one of my mates, who was in the band in the dream, said he was thinking of buying a harmonium! I had an awseome looking bass though, Carl Thompson-ish style with all darks woods and brass.[/quote] With big tall stove pipe hats? & massive mutton chop sideburns? Thats ace, what a brilliant dream! Wish I had dreams like that, last one I had was gutting huge fish on a windy beach!?! I don't really want to know what it means. Oh yeah & stranglers songbook, £15 down the pan. [u]Random Strangler legend.[/u] A mates bro in law used to roadie for the "Strugglers" (as he calls them) in the old days, he told me their keyboard player has a bag that he carries all the time & nobody ever knew what was in it, he never let it out of his sight. Nobody ever managed to see inside it. Cheers, Norm
  9. [quote name='garethfriend' post='1095823' date='Jan 19 2011, 11:51 PM']Completely agree about the eq, but it's never bothered me as I play through a cab that doesn't really colour the sound very much and I have decent eq on my basses, can understand why this might bother people with passive basses though.[/quote] Garethfriend, the pic of your set up looks like my ideal set up too. I'm gassing for valves (Orange AD200, Matamp or Trace V) but cost is the main issue so OBT is the way forward. I favour 15's over 10's so the Barefaced Vintage is top of my cab shopping list. & IMO your rig looks the mutts nutts, tell me I wont be dissapointed if I get one? Cheers, Norm
  10. Always wanted one 'cos of Bruce Foxton, then Geddy Lee & the fact they look (IMO) the mutts nuts but have ever never played one. Cost was always an issue but now reading about all these potential problems has put me right off. Still on second thoughts trying to find a good 'un would be fun & the fact they are a difficult beast makes them stand out a bit. To the OP, best of luck & let us know how you get on. Cheers, Norm
  11. John Bonham Dave Grohl Taylor Hawkins ( first saw him in alanis Morrisette's band) & the big bloke who used to play for Skunk Anansie & then Feeder
  12. [quote name='BurritoBass' post='1105375' date='Jan 27 2011, 06:26 PM']I was so into I Should Coco when it came out. I found In It For the Money a bit of a let down but still enjoyed it. However I saw them on that tour in Cambridge and they were blown off stage by Spacehog, a band who's album I thought was weak but put on one of the best live shows I have ever seen. Supergrass by comparison looked like they didn't want to be there. I've still bought the albums and liked some of the songs. I think my expectations of them live really took a knocking that night[/quote] Hey, BurritoBass it must be just you & me that got that Spacehog album! I still like it. I can't find many people who have ever heard of them. Never saw them live though, sounds like I missed out. I only saw Supergrass twice & they were great both times, but it was early days 1st & 2nd album time. Norm.
  13. +1 Great band. Mentioned them t'other day in the best support band thread. Mickeys basslines are always ace & great fun to play, he also did fantastic high harmony backing vox when I saw them live. His blog was a good read too, haven't looked for a while, it was called children of the monkey basket or something similar. I used to do Richard III & Lose it in a covers band, never tired of playing them. Cheers, Norm.
  14. Ah, the old "new songs" routine to cover up the fact the lazy twat hasn't even attempted to learn any of the songs that were scheduled. Had a few of them types in the past. An honest chat about what band members will try to do for the next rehearsal & set some not too challenging targets should be first. If that ends up in a blazing band ending row, find a new guitarist. At least our current guitard is honest & up front when he hasn't learnt or done what he said he would. Refreshing but still frustrating. Best of luck, Norm
  15. [quote name='waynepunkdude' post='1098743' date='Jan 22 2011, 03:37 PM']It's alright I turned my back on Paul Simon due to his music being sh*te with or without bass.[/quote] Just spat me tea all over the keyboard!! Cracked me right up WPD! Cheers, Norm
  16. OP I hope you get it back. & I hope your mate is mortified & contrite until several years after it's safe return! He owes you big time whatever the outcome! Cheers, Norm
  17. [quote name='BurritoBass' post='1097941' date='Jan 21 2011, 06:51 PM']Keep it simple means "keep it simple". It doesn't mean "Only play root notes" and it is not a mandate to be boring. I'm increasingly amazed by fantastic basslines which inspire me to work them out... resulting in me thinking "is that all he was doing?" D'oh![/quote] +1 This ace comment from BurritoBass & the keep it musical one earlier nail it for me! Play what the song needs & not what you can. Save the fret w*nks for home practice or to warm up yer fingers! cheers, Norm
  18. 2 'tings. You never stop learning. & Look up & smile at the crowd. (Even if its only 2 blokes & a Jack Russell, if you look like you are enjoying it so will they, especially the dog!) Ooh, that last song tip is so true. Never be at home to Mr Cockup on the last song! Cheers, Norm
  19. [quote name='WalMan' post='1090624' date='Jan 15 2011, 04:52 PM']Indeed. I have to learn to use the off switch more Loving getting back into the EBS I acquired before Christmas, just seemed looking in for sale that everyone is getting rid at the mo. P'raps not[/quote] Must agree with the less is more bit, it is tempting to leave it on all the time. I'm using a MXR Bass octave deluxe & love it. Sure it (like the competitors) doesn't track well below an A, but can cope with a short note duration down to an F sharp but sounds horrible when it starts to warble. Makes up for it with its great sub growl & a pinging slap sound. My basic sound is always gained-up dirty & it add a further texture of dirt, a skim of extra filth if you like. Awesome too when in conjunction with distortion. The mid boost button rev's it up too. I use it on 2 songs only at the moment, one was written totally around that octave sound. Cheers, Norm.
  20. Norm

    Mick Karn

    Cheers for that vid bh2, I'd forgotten he was in the Princes Trust House Band. Great player with an individual style & voice, he will be sadly missed. RIP Mick. Was listening to Ghosts only the other day, one of my all time favourite tracks. Cheers, Norm
  21. Each to their own cup of tea. Beautiful workmanship, he's obviously a craftsman & doing something different but.....no offence to any proud owners, just my opinion, they make my sh*t itch, hideous looking things! Leopardy grain top half, stripy bottom half??? Whats that about? Looks like he just ran out of wood half way through! for that many euro's I wouldn't want to see the join. They might play like a dream too but I still wouldn't part with my hard earned wedge on one. What am I talking about I will never be able to afford one anyway. Too rich & curly for a grizzled old cheapskate like me. Cheers, Norm
  22. 1. Jim Lea (Slade as seen on 70's TOTP, I thought sounds great looks great, I want to do a bit of that) 2. Steve Priest (The Sweet also as seen on 70's TOTP, a bruiser in eye shadow, ace) 3. John Paul Jones (picked up on the basslines from a mates older brothers Zep albums) 4. Cliff Williams (AC/DC - Live at the Colston Hall, front row, Let there be Rock tour, attitude pure attitude, relentlessly pumped it out & let angus do all the running about) 5. Phil Lynott (not for his playing, just cos he looked cool as f***!) That was sort of in order of earliest influences, today it would be a different list & next week probably different again! Cheers, Norm
  23. +1 to the "play it loud". Play it like you mean it, you wrote it, make it belong to you. Practice until it becomes automatic & effortless. Also, to your other point of what inspires? Anybody who gets up & does their stuff inspires me, as a mate of mine (guitarist, i don't hold it against him!) says "its too easy not to do it" so take the harder road, keep doing it, keep learning, trust your gut instincts (they're usually right). All the best, Norm.
  24. I'm in agreement with Lozz196, a lot of stuff can be technically excellent but to me after half the song, when the "wow, he/she's got some chops" has gone, sound really dull & lifeless. Its a hard one feel, as it can come & go. Depends on lots of factors, who you are playing with, what you are playing, etc etc. Was your dads comment about your playing or your songs? Cheers, Norm
  25. Predominantly a finger style player these days but use picks occasionally for punkier numbers (downstrokes only, real punk!!). got a tin of 'em in gig bag, mostly dunlops gauges from 0.73 up to 2mm. Heavier song = heavier pick in my book. Churrs, Norm
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