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paul_c2

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Posts posted by paul_c2

  1. I did a gig once and a bass player in the audience came up to me and asked why I used 2 basses, since they were both Precisions. They were both Fender JAZZ basses, one was a lined fretless and the other a fretted. He said he couldn’t tell the difference, so I said I’m not sure if that’s a compliment or not!!

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  2. 1 hour ago, OliverBlackman said:

    Well last night a neighbour (about 6 houses away but it’s a small cul-de-sac) had a Eurovision party until 3am that was very loud. I will therefore be swapping my 300w combo for a 1000w rig and playing at full volume until further notice. 

     

    I'd say that's fair enough (the Eurovision party). Partying at the weekend is reasonable; and 3am is reasonable for a decent party. 

     

    Any pics? Did you dress up for the party? Or stay at home, being miserable???

  3. 1 minute ago, TimR said:

    According to the link I posted above they must. And the link says the notice must contain a level that the noise must not exceed and the period for which it must not exceed it and that if they do exceed it they MAY be guilty of an offence. 

     

    According to the link they don't have to measure it before serving the notice, only after if the complaints continue. And that they have 7 days before issuing the notice to try and come to some agreement. 

     

    Great way to get YouTube views and subscribers to your chanel though...

     

    I don't buy it, more to it. Why move out and sofa surf? Why not just go round your friend's house to practice? 

     

    You've oversimplified it. They don't HAVE to serve a notice, merely on the word of a complaining neighbour.  They need to themselves be satisfied it is a "statuatory nuisance". Here is the actual text from your link:

     

    Councils must look into complaints about noise that could be a ‘statutory nuisance’ (covered by the Environmental Protection Act 1990).

    For the noise to count as a statutory nuisance it must do one of the following:

    unreasonably and substantially interfere with the use or enjoyment of a home or other premises

    injure health or be likely to injure health

    If they agree that a statutory nuisance is happening or will happen in the future, councils must serve an abatement notice. 

  4. 14 minutes ago, Waddo Soqable said:

    Scooter.. Good plan,  I like your thinking.. no shop assistant in the world's going to catch up with you.. Plus you can nip down a pedestrian underpass or something if the old bill come after you in a motor.. 👍

     

    Just use Google Maps and time it so you can do a quick sprint then hop on a bus............oh hang on, I can see a flaw.......

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  5. 5 hours ago, Rayman said:

    …… there’s a gig tonight, and you can’t access your gear. There’s an amp at the venue, but you need a bass.

     

    It has to be new, from a store, today and there’s no time to modify it.

     

    What are you going to buy?

     

    **** it, I've changed my mind. I'll buy the cheapest bass in the shop which meets the criteria:

     

    image.png.b4917c99e873edbbdd69961ce60e0388.png

     

    Do the gig, then at the end smash it into the (not mine) amp they've supplied, and/or the drum kit, AND DEFINITELY the guitarist's kit too (will try to get the pedals in a golf club sweeping motion also).

     

    Because its less than half the £300 allocated, upon the howls of derision and "that could have made a perfectly good bass for a child to learn and enjoy music on", I STILL HAVE £190.01 to buy them a bass AND A CHEAP AMP!

     

    Win-win all round. Except for the guitarist. And maybe the drummer.

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  6. "Squier Classic Vibe" would be the obvious choice, except I can't find one under about £329 NEW. Sure, secondhand is no bother, nor is getting an Affinity model. If anyone can find a Classic Vibe under £300 they're doing well.

     

    I'd probably just try whatever the shop had in 4 string basses from Yamaha, Ibanez or Squier (Affinity) and go for the one which felt the best to play. I've never played a Yamaha and only once an Ibanez so I really don't know what they're like.

  7. In days gone by, I would have jumped at this and had a pre-prepared list. As I've gotten older, money (and by extension, personal possessions) mean less and less; its more about finding a balance of contentedness with other people, relationships, animals, location, environment etc. If you gave £1000 to a dog, it wouldn't make it happy.

     

    Maybe the best things in life are free?

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  8. "Lovingly displayed on a wall hanger, never been played" - it only fell off once, maybe twice.

     

    "Lovingly stored in its case, never been played" - tried a wall hanger but it fell off 17 times, the final straw being when it fell into the fish tank.

     

    "Lovingly displayed on a stand" - we used to have a dog, its only fallen over 317 times. The dog died recently. The bass might/might not have been involved in its death.

     

    "Great for metal" - this bass belongs on a metal grate, of a solid fuel stove, once its been cut up into small pieces.

     

     

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  9. How about the Fender _______________?

     

    This was after Halfords successfully made a claim on the words "caster", after a successful lawsuit where they thought about prominently promoting the feature that their larger toolboxes were on casters, to allow them to be moved around a workshop. Halfords were all ready to change the name of their premium line of toolboxes, but at the 11th hour decided not to go ahead, so never actually used it in public. It had been copyrighted though. Of course, with the historical "NoCaster" in the line up, Fender were then obligated to alter historical records and called it the "No No", but they were sued AGAIN by Dawn Penn, who of course sang "You Don't Love Me, No No No". The irony being, this was actually a cover they did.

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  10. I think I'd get confused with too many different instruments in different tunings. I keep it simple for gigs - either normal tuning, or drop D. And if the tune uses drop D (it was always reading sheet music) I'd write clearly on it to tune to D. Then on the NEXT tune, write a note to retune!

  11. Capo should reduce the pressure on the fingers because instead of holding 6 strings down (with a bar chord) you’re holding 2 or 3 or maybe 4. Also you have the benefit of “open” capo’d strings ringing out a bit more. That’s why acoustic guitarists use them.

     

    Your fingers just look like you don’t practise that much?

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  12. 1 hour ago, TimR said:

    The song is in concert Eb. If there were piano or Brass parts, the pianist would have to be playing in Eb. Any Bb Brass would play in E. 

     

    This is why a lot of motown is in the flat keys. It's easier for the Brass to play. 


    The Bb brass would play in F to sound Eb

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