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Bassman Steve

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Posts posted by Bassman Steve

  1. I would tend to want to use my rig because it's the best in the Universe (IMO) and am happy for people to use it but have used rigs I am not partial to if there's full pa support because it's ultimately only my stage monitor and having the sound man on your side is very important.

    Not always ideal but it's often not worth the hassle. I did a televised festival a couple of years ago whre I had asked for a valve head and 2x15 and was greeted by some digital Peavey head and a 4x10. You just act professionally and get on with it.

    I'd be a singer if I wanted to be a primadonna. Just sayin' ;-)

  2. Slapping, never ever sussed it out. I have learned a short but spectacular piece (short as in a few seconds) that makes me sound quite good at it so I play that and say 'yeah but I'm not really into it' and move on in the hope that people will just think I can do it but choose not to. The truth is slightly different ..........

  3. I'm keeping the cab but it's coming out of it's case. It's paid for itself many times over so this is a chance to lavish some luxury on your cab for the price of some fuel.

    Made for this cab by BCS flightcases. It's a live in cab with a trapdoor at the back for the jack socket. Just wheel it in and stand it up, take off the front and you're good to go. I am assuming this will fit a1516 because they appear to be the same size.

    It stands on wooden battens similar to those to which the wheels are attached.

    Over £240 when new but now just £1 (negotiable) collected from near Portsmouth.

  4. Hi Dave.

    Will do. My go to bass is the 66 by miles with the 73 not far behind. Very light and lovely B profile necks. They are both semi retired now so I take the two Kent Armstrong reissues. I always bang on about the Japanese basses but they really are excellent.

    This will be my first tour without the 400 and 2x15 with me so it will be interesting.

  5. Indeed. I wasn't in the Inland Revenue (at the time) but my time in Customs and Excise taught me that tax is very much a matter of brownie points. Play fair and they'll bend over backwards to help you but try and take the pi$$ and they won;t rest until they get you.

  6. Over the years I've pretty much done all of those things and still, at the tender age of 56, still get opportunities to do tours. They have to fit in with the job that pays the bills these days but I still do it nevertheless. I am a single parent but the children are grown up enough to allow me some short times away.

    I had a few years as a touring pro but (funnily enough) had a day job at the time I played in the headlining act at the Isle of Wight. Similarly I have been on tour and been let into the hotel after the gig after the manager has crow-barred off the planks that keep people out (it had been condemned).

    The one thing that full time music is (unless you're in a pretty big band) is tiring. The very late nights and the miles really take it out of you. It's not remotely glamorous.

    Obviously, family brings responsibilities (to the responsible) and that prevents doing anything too daft but I see that as a good thing now. I wouldn't want to sleep in a van any more (never really had to often but remember it well) and the financial commitments mean I couldn't just give it all up again. That's also good because it's all very fleeting and one lucrative gig doesn't make for a career.

    I also took the decision that I would never play stuff I didn't want to and so have never done the cruise/holiday camp thing - though I suspect you don't mean that kind of 'headlining'.

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