-
Posts
21,050 -
Joined
-
Last visited
-
Days Won
12
Content Type
Profiles
Forums
Events
Shop
Articles
Everything posted by BigRedX
-
But that only matters if you, your band and most importantly of all the audience can hear it. What I'm saying is that most of the time only the bass player can, and only if they stand in front of the rig, never move away from that spot and aren't using IEMs. What everyone else will hear, at best, is the sound of the pre-amp valves being delivered by the Class D amps of the FoH and monitors.
-
The thing is that these big impressive looking rigs are doing pretty much nothing on stage other than looking big and impressive. From personal experience with my own big impressive rig, is that the moment I stepped away from being directly in front of it I could hear more bass guitar from the PA foldback than I could from my own rig. The PA feed at best was taken from the line out/DI on the amp so it gets no benefit of the power amp valves or the "sound" of the cab(s) and that's where all the big heavy components are needed. I sold mine, upgraded my effects to a Line6 Helix and bought an FRFR powered cab to use at rehearsals and the smaller gigs where the foldback might struggle to give a decent bass sound (although TBH so long as I can hear I'm in time and tune with the rest of the band I don't care what it sounds like on stage and I'll trust the FoH engineer to deliver an appropriate bass sound to the audience). The result is that my bands don't have a huge bass rig taking up valuable space on stage, in the van and in the rehearsal room. By all means if your band image calls for it have a big impressive backline, although if I was going to be in a band like that I'd have a "prop rig" that was empty. lightweight and folded up for transit.
-
The guitar version great. I have an Eggle-era custom model. I've also tried the original bass version which IIRC had an EB3-style pickup arrangement. That was ridiculously large and horribly unbalanced. It didn't sound brilliant either.
-
When I was in the first year at secondary school (in the early 70s), we were asked if anyone would like to learn a musical instrument, and if so what? For some reason I decided I'd like to learn the trombone. I had a single "try-out" lesson where the teacher tested to see if I could get a note out of the mouth piece (after a bit a trial and error, I could) and then to see if I could reach the full extension of the slide. I couldn't. That was that. I was told I was too small to play the trombone. Nothing else was suggested like a different instrument that I would be able to play, or a suggestion to come back in a year's time and try again.
-
What exactly do you want to do? Use the external cab instead of the built-in speaker? If so why? Use the combo with an additional cab? In which case you need a cab with the same size and number (and ideally type) of speakers as in the combo for the best results. However, you'll need to look on the back of your actual amp as there are several different versions of the GP7 combo and by looking at photos available not all of them have additional speaker outputs. If they do the impedance information for the extension cab should be marked next to the socket.
-
Rattling Truss Rod on a Washburn XB500
BigRedX replied to bass_dinger's topic in Repairs and Technical
For me with a lined fretless it would depend on how "visible" the lines are under stage playing conditions. If they can be easily seen (or as easily as actual frets) then the markers will be fine between the lines as they are on a fretted bass. If the lines are going to be subtle then it would be worth moving the dots to be where the lines are. -
Everything I hate about "boutique" electronics. No proper case to protect the valves and transformer (that'll be why it's lighter than the competition). Un-ergonomic layout of the controls, borderline illegibility of the legends and no markings for the knobs. If this was a one-off a home-brew for the maker to use himself it's probably OK but to expect people to part with large amounts of money for something that looks like a half-finished prototype...
-
1970’s Fender Mustang Bass. Best strings for through body?
BigRedX replied to MungoBass's topic in Bass Guitars
Get Newtone to make you a set. -
You only need to do this with strings that have a round rather than hexagonal core.
-
Newtone will make you strings of whatever length you want. However what is the problem of just cutting the strings to the correct length?
-
Do your neighbours live close enough for a device in their residence to be causing the problems. Remember wireless technology is no respecter of legal boundaries. Any reason why you can't use a wired connection? It would be much more reliable.
-
Advice on mixing cabs with different ohmage
BigRedX replied to silverfoxnik's topic in Amps and Cabs
Just get two identical cabs. Mixing different cabs is of no benefit to anyone other than the person standing in the "sweet spot". Everyone else will experience a different (probably worse) sound to varying degrees. If you are relying on your rig to provide bass guitar sound for the whole venue, that means the sound and volume of the bass will be different depending on where in the audience you are stood. If the bass goes through the PA then your cabs make zero contribution to what the audience hears. -
Heel access truss rod which way does what
BigRedX replied to shoulderpet's topic in Repairs and Technical
I would agree with @barkin about the qualifier need for left/right as opposed to clockwise/anticlockwise. I always thought this was a side effect of the fact that I am slightly dyslexic, but I think that it might be more to do with the fact that often I need to be adjusting screws at weird angles. I've found the simplest way is to use a ratchet screwdriver with the direction correctly set so that turning in the wrong direction does nothing. -
Advice on mixing cabs with different ohmage
BigRedX replied to silverfoxnik's topic in Amps and Cabs
I haven't worn trousers with enough spare material to flap since 1977... -
Mine has a Made In Korea sticker on the back of the headstock.
-
The strings are two years old. Unless they are flat wounds or the bass has been barely played, they will be knackered and more than ready for replacement.
- 13 replies
-
- 1
-
-
- maintenance
- tuning
-
(and 2 more)
Tagged with:
-
Gibson - an enigma (1974 EB-3 content)
BigRedX replied to Andyjr1515's topic in Repairs and Technical
I take it you used the circuit diagrams on Fly Guitars to get the wiring right? When I added a varitone circuit to my guitar IIRC it worked as a bass cut control (my circuit was based on those in the Gibson 345 and LS6 guitars). Does it work in the same way on the EB3 to take a bit of "mud" out of the mudbucker? -
£1400 for a bolt-on neck and slab body with parts bin hardware? I don't think so.
-
However unless you are using PA equipment for you bass rig, there is no "flat" setting. All bass amps and speakers have a noticeable baked-in sound, that why you pick one over the others, you go with something that has a basic sound you like.
-
It would be fine. 🙂 You'd need a ridiculously loud bass rig for it to make any noticeable contribution to FoH sound at this sort of venue, and as I said previously if that was the case, the sound engineer would be asking you to turn down. They'd just put a DI on the bass and feed you through the FoH and foldback, so that you, the rest of your band and the audience could hear you.
-
What would be your bass gig of choice from all of history?
BigRedX replied to Bilbo's topic in General Discussion
Because I see myself as composer first rather than a "musician", I'd always prefer it for one of my bands playing my songs to be successful. However saying that, the only band I have ever REALLY wanted to be in was a Nottingham band in the early 80s called "None So Blind". They had great songs and a brilliant bass player, whose bass parts I really admired. I settled for being a fan and going to see them play as often as possible. A couple years later when their drummer, and subsequently their bass player left, I really hoped that I would be asked to be their new bassist. Unfortunately they picked someone else and TBH I simply wasn't a good enough player at the time have done the songs justice (even now there are some songs of theirs I'd struggle to play properly), and no matter how much I'd have enjoyed being in the band, the real magic of the music was in the interaction of the original band members and with two of them gone, it was never the same. I got my "revenge" for not being offered the bass player role by nicking their keyboard player for my synth band. -
I think they are arranged like that so when you switch them on in the down position the sound is more like the unaffected one, so the change in tone is minimised?
-
Except that back in the late 70s it would have been a lot more expensive to release. Even if you had gone the ultra-budget Desperate Bicycles route, it would have still cost you at least £150 to record and press 500 copies (the minimum a pressing plant would consider) and back then that was a significant amount of money. And unless John Peel had picked it up for radio play and Rough Trade had distributed them you'd probably still be left with 450.
-
Buy some new strings. That'll almost definitely be the problem with the tuning stability. The truss rod has nothing to do with tuning so leave it alone.
- 13 replies
-
- 1
-
-
- maintenance
- tuning
-
(and 2 more)
Tagged with:
-
Depends what your pedal board is for. For most of the last 35 years my amp has simply been a means of getting my bass guitar signal loud enough for the audience to hear and therefore the only control on it has been volume. All my tone shaping is done from my effects.