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pete.young

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Posts posted by pete.young

  1. [quote name='therealting' post='36575' date='Jul 24 2007, 09:14 PM']End result - the bass sounds much better than it did! In parallel mode, it sounds just like it did before, except now I have full control over the volume without fumbling or hum. The series mode has a little more volume and has a nice midrangey quality which works well for fingerstyle. I think everyone who owns one of these OLP passive basses should consider this mod... it costs practically nothing and makes the bass much, much more versatile![/quote]

    What a good idea. I've had problems getting rid of the 'hum' too. Do you have a circuit diagram?

    If you have any spare switches I'll take off your hands - PM me and let me know how much you want for it.

    Kind regards,

    Pete

  2. Can anyone tell me where I can find dots and/or tab for Pino Palladino's bass part to Paul Young's version of 'I'm Gonna Tear Your Playhouse Down' ?
    I've got most of it from a video on youtube, but there are still a few details I can't quite get my head round.

    Google tells me that there's a Hal Leonard book about Fretless Bass which includes an arrangement, but I don't know if it's Pino's, or how accurate it is.

  3. Thanks Phatmonkey. According to the bug reports, it is intended behaviour! Riight.

    I think it's actually showing the time of the server, so I guess it could be argued that
    it's the server which isn't doing the right thing DST wise. Oh well.

    Reminds me of the happy hours spent trying to work out why 'BST' was always 9
    hours ahead, until I discovered that that particular (US) vendor assumed it stood for
    'Bangladeshi Standard Time'.

  4. [quote name='phatmonkey' post='5040' date='May 23 2007, 11:19 AM']I'll have a look at this in the evening when I have some. So I can make comparisons, can everybody please post here saying whether they are having troubles with the time or not when it is set to the correct time zone in board settings (GMT for most of us) and auto DST is switched on. Thanks.[/quote]

    I have GMT set and auto DST switched on.

    When I log in, the time is correct (BST).

    When I log out, the time is one hour behind (GMT). No way I'm going to
    be posting to Basschat before 7.00 am!

    Kind regards,

    Pete

  5. [quote name='Oxblood' post='22588' date='Jun 24 2007, 10:27 AM']HOWEVER, if a fellow Londoner with a big enough vehicle feels like calling by my place and sharing the petrol costs (hint...hint :) ), the list could consist of:[/quote]

    Hmm, whereabouts in East London? I'm thinking about it and it's kind-of on my way
    (A12/M25) .

    If Kiwi isn't bringing a Burman I could bring mine.

    Pete

  6. [quote name='silverfoxnik' post='25642' date='Jul 1 2007, 04:39 PM']So no 2x12 advocates then??[/quote]

    Hell yes! I'm more than happy with the EBS 2x12 I bought from Warwickhunt, but it
    isn't any smaller than a 4x10.

    Borrow an 8x10 and put it on its side. Tell em it's what Iggy Pop uses. I guarantee
    they'll be glad to see the 4x10 back again :-)

  7. Some happy memories here. A couple to add to the growing pile:

    Dancin in the Moonlight - Thin Lizzy

    I'm gonna tear your playhouse down - Pino on Paul Young's version

    Come on, come over - Jaco at his most metronomic

    Two Tribes - Frankie Goes To Hollywood. Would I be right in thinking that this was the great Norman Watt-Roy again?

  8. Some lovely contributions here particularly from Argh, who has definitely missed his vocation as a writer.

    Beedster, the more I think about it the more I think I'm going to have to kill you for letting that Black Rose go!

    I started on upright bass, which was so totally uncool that I dreamed and schemed at every opportunity until I finally persuaded my old man to buy me a bass guitar, a Hofner Senator. Violin Basses being the first choice but an unfeasible 25 quid. Then, it cost 15 quid and all worked, despite some rather dodgy-looking cracks in the finish around the (achilles) heel of the neck join. Now, probably worth 4-500 quid on Ebay. Then, sold to a school chum for 15 quid, to be replaced by ...

    A Vox Wyman. Possibly the worst heap of [Fly a Kite] masquerading as a bass guitar that has ever been produced. Why it had both Vox and Wyman on the headstock I cannot imagine. Short scale, neck width that makes a Jazz neck look like Beth Ditto, weighed more than my mate's marble-bodied special due to the 3mm chrome steel pickguard. Now probably worth a minimum of £750 on ebay - it was immaculate. Sold for £15 quid and good riddance to bad rubbish. Replaced by:

    A Futurama (Hagspiel) Coronado IV . Fiesta red, all rocker switches and chrome finger rests. Played like a dream. Amps of the time prevent me from knowing what it really sounded like, but I wish with all my heart that I still had it. Probably the only instrument I've ever parted with that I wish I still had. Oh well. Back to the upright bass until:

    A Columbus Jazz Copy. Ho hum. Replaced by:

    An almost new Yamaha BB800 . This was the early 80's when Yamaha were really trying to make their mark and it showed. A totally quality piece of kit which I still have and use, my go-to bass, the one I fall back on when the going gets tough. New amp technology allows this one to really shine through. I can't imagine being without this bass and it will be the last one to go. The case deserves a mention too, it was across the back
    seats of my car when i got T-boned. The car folded up around the bass case and was written off. The bass was still in tune when i took it out of the case, fearing the worst.

    Augmented by: an Aria Pro II RSB Special fretless. What to do: the neck is so flawless, the body so light, the completely un-choppable pickup
    so naff and gutless. I still have this, but a decent fretless is next on the list.

    And then a lull of several years, while I indulged myself in all means of other bizarre instruments with 6, 8, 12 strings, reeds, the whole bit. and then:

    Fender CIJ not-for-export precision, from Far East Guitars. Natural finish, with a maple board and a jazz neck. The "I always wanted one of these, and now I'm going to have one" bass. It is flawless, sounds wonderful, and is so shiny that I can't imagine gigging it, but a delight to play.

    Shine 6-string. A failed experiment. ERB is not for me and playing it as a normal bass but across-not-down didn't work either. Replaced by:

    OLP MM3 . The famous Mother of Toilet Seat otherwise all Black, owned by several bassworlders before it came my way. Smashing bass but I can't
    really get on with 5 strings, so make me an offer.

    Jim Reed jazz. Bought cheap from a guy in Ipswich via the bay. The gap between the neck and the neck pocket is one of the three man-made items visible from space, along with the Great Wall of China and the panel fit on a Range Rover Classic. Despite that surprisingly OK to play
    and good growly Kent Armstrongs. The kids have this so that they dont' have to upset me by asking to borrow the Precision.

    And, a continually growing heap of Jazz bits which may one day form project Swirly and allow me to get that "must build a bass" vibe out
    of my system. Watch this space, or maybe the 'build' forum.

    Wanted: a Black Rose. Waaaah!!!

  9. I've just bought an amp from Ari and he was a pleasure to deal with. Good communications and when the item arrived it was
    professionally packaged. I recommend him highly too.

  10. This weekend's weather caused me to dig out 'I can't stand the rain' by Ann Peebles.

    I'd forgotten just what a superb bassline that song has, and I realised that I had
    no idea who'd played it. Step forward Leroy Hodges for your moment in the
    basschat spotlight!

    We hear a lot of respect in this forum for the great James Jamerson, and quite right too.
    I think Leroy is right up there with him. Maybe this should have gone in the 'underrated
    heroes' thread, but hey!

  11. [quote name='Oxblood' post='18207' date='Jun 15 2007, 12:29 PM']I'm in full accord with you, Pete, and you've provided some very enlightening info on the way that workplace control-freak systems operate.[/quote]

    Aw shucks.

    Some more enlightened places, including the place where I work, is now switching off and unblocking many categories that were
    previously filtered. This is being done on the grounds that it's not the job of equipment provided to enforce a security policy to
    also enforce various acceptable-use and working policies on behalf of Human Resources or whatever they are called these
    days.

    There's also a lot of time wasted over false positives. My favourite was the for-sale section of the Mini owners
    club website, which got flagged under 'Criminal Skills' . Someone had seen the Italian Job too many times I think.

    A serious suggestion for the mods to consider: lots of forums and blogs have a button at the bottom of posts to report
    anything that you consider offensive. This to my mind will be a better way of alerting the moderators to real problem
    areas or users, though it will probably make more work. Whaddyathink?

  12. So to summarise, we have three different reasons why people use compressors:

    1) As an effect in it's own right
    2) At the end of the signal chain, in order to protect the head from moments of ham-fistedness ;-)
    3) To smooth out the lows and highs in the dynamic range.

    Yes?

    I have a Tech 21 Compactor which I tend to use in the 3rd category. Currently it's at the
    start of my signal chain, after the tuner and before octaver and chorus. Is this the right
    place for it, or should I stick it at the end of the signal chain?

    I also find that when I'm using a valve head the effect of compression is a lot less
    noticeable/useful than when I was using a borrowed transister head. Hm.

  13. [quote name='slaphappygarry' post='17208' date='Jun 13 2007, 09:07 PM']Do you not see the funny side of this?![/quote]

    I think it's hysterically funny that someone thinks it's a good idea to filter
    the substring 'ass' in a forum called basschat.

    [quote name='dood']Thats interesting, it hadn't occurred to me that if we have a site full of foul language it can be picked up by 'parental control' type software and web surfing URL blacklisters.[/quote]


    There's no doubt that it will get onto the blacklists though. The most obvious reason will be the
    'chat' in 'basschat' , which will get flagged as a chat forum. The second reason will be that most
    sites which allow messages to be sent and recieved are blocked because they circumvent
    corporate email policies. The effect of the odd expletive is neither here nor there.

    Like other posters, I'm not in favour of the smartarse replacement strings. As Joe so elegantly pointed
    out, this has the potential to give more offence than the offending bon mot. If this filter has to
    stay, the censoring mechanism needs to make it absolutely plain that the changes were made by
    a filter.

  14. [quote name='slaphappygarry' post='16577' date='Jun 12 2007, 10:42 PM']We are helping a user out (i suspect a handful actually) so i dont see why its got such a bad reaction...[/quote]

    Leaving aside the fact that I don't regard it as a 'bad' reaction, I'll give the following reasons:

    1) It won't fix the problem. Virtually all web content filtering systems do not work the way that
    your anonymous correspondent thinks they work. I'm prepared to be corrected, but all the
    systems I'm familiar with do not do any intelligent filtering or decision making. They work on
    blacklists of URLs, which are compiled and placed into categories by people surfing the web
    in dark rooms. Some companies modify these based on observing the traffic flow from their
    systems, and some companies monitor outgoing search strings, but they don't normally have
    the resources to read content on individual pages. So the decision whether to tag 'basschat'
    as a forum isn't based on dynamic profane content.

    2) I would have preferred the moderators to take the approach of discussing the problem
    and filtering as a possible solution on the forum, before introducing filtering. This might have
    helped avoid some of the problems with false positives.

    3) There are still going to be loads of false positives which get in the way of communication
    and cause other problems. When the filter mangled my posting in the 'Wanted' forum,
    changing 'bass' to 'be*ss' , I shut down my system and changed my keyboard, thinking
    mine had somehow developed a fault. Call me selfish, but this is at least as inconvenient
    to me as someone else being denied access at work.

  15. [quote name='Lfalex v1.1' post='16664' date='Jun 13 2007, 08:24 AM']However... had you considered sizing it up a bit on the small side, and practising on some old off-cut of MDF? Then offer up the pick-up cover, and see if it fits.
    If it does, great. If it doesn't, enlarge your template and have another bash.[/quote]

    Good suggestion. I'm certainly going to practise on an old plank or two
    before tackling the real thing!

  16. [quote name='Crazykiwi' post='16283' date='Jun 12 2007, 03:08 PM']No Pete, I don't want to do that. We'll deal with subjects concerning moderation offline thank you, as per the guidelines.[/quote]

    I'm not sure what you've got to hide here, but it looks bad.

    This subject concerns more than just moderation.

    This is a discussion about censorship.

    It's also a discussion about not presenting the right terms and conditions at sign-up. I contend that if you're going to
    introduce a profanitiy filter you need add it to the terms and conditions, you need to require everyone to re-subscribe,
    and you need to describe an acceptable use policy for people who circumvent the filter.

    Personally I would prefer to see the existing conditions for acceptable use being enforced by the
    moderators, as they volunteered to do when they signed up to be moderators. I think that a few warnings to
    people that they need to be civil and respectful, and the eviction of persistent offenders should be the way
    that the problem should be handled.

  17. [quote name='pete.young' post='16264' date='Jun 12 2007, 02:49 PM']Post the list of offending words. Do you really think that anyone on a UK list is going to
    be offended by the use of '[Myleen Klass]' ?[/quote]

    Good Ghod. I thought people were having a laugh, I didn't realise that the software was
    doing this.

    I hope the appeal is going well, because when Myleen's lawyers find out that her name is
    being used as a synonym for "[Tiajuana brass]" they will have a field day.

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