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Captain Bassman

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Posts posted by Captain Bassman

  1. 3 hours ago, BrunoBass said:

    You’re The One That I Want’ in particular has a great bass line and a great tone. Not sure who played it as several bassists are credited across the whole score. Great stuff.

    I read somewhere that it was David Hungate. Sure sounds feasible - P bass with a pick...

    • Like 1
  2. 11 hours ago, hiram.k.hackenbacker said:

    Well, the weather is predictably rubbish today, so no outside shots I'm afraid.

    This bass is 10 years old, but is in mint condition as it's been a Case Queen for all of its life.

    I'm sure it's not to everyone's liking, but I've wanted one for many years and have always stopped short of ordering one from new, so this is the next best thing.

    In fact, it's 99.9% the same thing as it's the exact spec I would have ordered i.e. elongated cone pegged, side LED's only and non-continuous back plates.

    The fit and finish on this is exactly what you would expect from an Alembic. As is the weight, but let's not talk about that because it actually balances quite beautifully.

    Let's just say that in it's case (see photo's for comparison to a normal case) it weighs just under 42lbs 😎!

     

    IMG_8676.jpeg

    Simply stunning mate and truly different. Welcome to the club!

    • Thanks 1
  3. 7 minutes ago, dmccombe7 said:

    Cool pic sir. Amazing bass and rig to die for there.

    Wouldn't mind some details on your bass guessing its an Alembic ?

    Dave

    Thanks Dave (from another David!)

    It was a truly fantastic rig and one I needed when we used to play lots of big corporate and outdoor gigs. Weighed a ton but I had castors for the cabs and a pull-along Gaitor case for the head thank God.

    I still have the DB750 head, will never part with that and plan to use it again soon. I used to run it flat at every gig, the tone and presence was just perfect and I never had to tweak anything. 

    I sold the cabs though when I went to a Class D amp.

    The bass is my one-off Jaydee GA24 that Mrs CB bought me for my 40th. I’m a very lucky chap!

    • Thanks 1
  4. One of my favourites too. It’s now 20 years old but sounds like it could’ve just been recorded yesterday.

    She’s the absolute master of slow groove bass playing. I seem to remember reading an interview where she stated that she deliberately practiced playing simple notes at snail’s pace to perfect her timing and feel. 

    Bittersweet, The Way and Ecclesiastes: Free My Heart are regulars on my iPhone rotation.

     

  5. This is gonna sound real limp against other posts citing punk, metal, etc but my first childhood interest in bass was sparked by.... Merrill Osmond! 😲

    Actually it was his voice first (incredible...) followed by that weird big guitar with only 4 strings that he wore. My older sister had been given The Plan as a present and we played it to death - her for the Osmonds ‘thang’ but for me it was Merrill’s voice.

    When I realised his big guitar was in fact a bass I knew exactly what I’d been hearing leaping out of the speakers at me and what I’d been humming along to in my head.

    From then on it was bass all the way. It was what I heard first in a song and what got played on repeat in my head (along with drum parts).

    I had uncles who were big into blues and Elvis (name that tune...) that got me into guitar in the first place and so I just loved those rock n roll bass parts that Stuart Coman played in the late ‘70s and early ‘80s on his various productions.

    Then came the ‘80s and what a wonderful time to be a budding bass player. But I had to make do with 4 detuned strings on my old Spanish 6 string until I bought my first real bass in ‘85.

    • Like 2
  6. 3 hours ago, BassBunny said:

    Some mates of mine, guitar and bass, fly constantly to and from cruise ships and always take their instruments to the gate and hand them over there. No different to a baby buggy and at least it doesn't go through all the conveyor system and multiple baggage handlers. They retrieve them at the other end straight from the hold.

    This ^... If you don’t want to pay for an extra seat and leave your bass at the mercy of baggage handlers. It should come out at the oversize section of baggage reclaim rather than the usual carousel.

    On a related note I’m currently on hols in Portugal, flew easyJet as usual and brought my new Yammy silent guitar in the cabin as my hand luggage. It’s in a slightly narrower than usual gig bag with a pocket for anything else I need on board and fits in the overhead bin.

    Point I’m making is that the EZY crew couldn’t have been more helpful, offering to keep it up front with them if bin space was too restricted. Fortunately there were a few empty seats so I managed to keep it overhead. I notified EZY in advance on their e-chat thingy that I was going to be carrying an instrument in the cabin and took a screenshot the conversation just in case. Didn’t need it.

    Now all I need is a nice Status Streamline to test whether it works for holiday bass practice! 👍

    • Like 1
  7. Get away from the cheesy stuff that he’s more we’ll known for (amongst the uninitiated) and you’ll find lots of hidden gems and top class sessioneers behind his incredible vocal range.

    Here’s one of my favourites, from the Vox Humana album. Sanborn on sax and Nathan East on his trusty Yammy...

    There’s also a really nice live version of this on his “From the The Redwoods” show featuring Shanice on vocals (who??) and Ready Freddie Washington on acoustic 5 string. Noice...

    • Like 1
  8. 29 minutes ago, Johnny Wishbone said:

    Thank you, kind sir. I'm very much the Jeremy Clarkson of bass playing - all power, no finesse! The Fortress has since been retired from live work but still gets played at home and on recordings. I stick to my Jazz bitsas now because I can throw them around with reckless abandon and it's not the end of the world if they were to get nicked. The Fortress is of far too much sentimental value to risk any more.

    I had one exactly the same, same colour, as that. Bought new from the Bass Centre in ‘95 and traded back in for a Streamer Stage 1 5er in ‘99. Cracking bass that Fortress. Beautiful neck!

  9. She came slidin' down the alleyway like butter drippin' off a hot biscuit
    The aroma, the mean scent, was enough to arouse suspicion in even the
    Oldest of tigers that hung around the hot spot in those days
    The sight was beyond belief
    Many a head snapped for double--even triple--takes as this vivacious
    Feline made her her way into the delta of the alleyway where the most
    Virile of the young tabbies were known to hang out
    They hung in droves
    Such a multitude of masculinity could only be found in one place
    And that was O'Malley's Alley
     
    The air was thick with cat calls (no pun intended)
    But not even a muscle in her neck did twitch as she sauntered up into
    The heart of the alleyway
    She knew what she wanted
    She was lookin' for that stud bull
    She was looking for that he cat
    And that was me
    Tommy the Cat is my name and I say unto thee
     
    Say, baby, do you want to lay down with me?
    Say, baby, do you want to lay down by my side?
    Ah baby, do you want to lay down with me?
    Say, baby?
    Say, baby?
    • Like 1
  10. 4 hours ago, bubinga5 said:

    Just goes to show. Andrew is not a beast of a bass player but he plays perfectly for BNH and thats all i wanted to hear.. He sounded great and punchy. 

    And he still looks sooo cool!

    Interesting that BNH and MF Robots were on the same bill. Jan Kincaid (BNH co-founder and drummer) left them a couple of years ago and set up MFR. Obviously no hard feelings there with his old band mates.

    Great that you got to meet Bluey. A giant talent and absolute gent.

  11. Interesting choice of cover but they managed to pull it off quite well after a slightly nervous start from Mike!

    Nathan is such a tasty rythmn guitarist, nice sound here too. Equally as talented as his big bro in many respects.

  12. I’ve been curious about Rics for ages but never taken the plunge, mainly because my pick playing is pretty sh*te by gig standards.

    Anyway this thread got me interested again so at the weekend I popped into Guitar Guitar to have a nosey. They have 5 brand new 4003s in the Epsom store - a walnut with binding, a mapleglow with binding, 2 matte blacks - one with and one without binding - and a lefty fireglow. All 5 look absolutely stunning.

    I didn’t plug any in but noodled briefly on all 4 rightys acoustically but I was mainly interested in the build quality. All appeared really well built and finished (the matte black is particularly stunning) but on closer inspection...

    Of the 3 basses with binding, the walnut and matte black had clear ‘steps’ in the level between the plastic binding and the wood edge where they hadn’t been sanded completely smooth. This was mainly apparent on the top edge but also around the lower horn. The best of the bunch binding-wise was the mapleglow which was nigh-on perfect.

    In terms of general finish all 4 looked very good except for the fingerboard of the mapleglow which had some dust specks evident in gloss lacquer. The worst was the walnut where the finish around the edge of the top horn wasn’t actually finished. There were still what looked like sanding marks in the wood.

    Given that the basses range in price from £1,899 (matte black no binding) to £2,499 (matte black with binding) after GG discounts I would expect QC on instruments at this price point to be top notch but it’s apparent that flaws are getting through. The ‘small company’ excuse can’t really be used in justification when you have much smaller one man band luthiers turning out near flawlessly finished instruments.

    I would still love one but iconic looks and sound cannot make up for such poor QC on basses commanding 2 grand and over. I guess as others have said, you have to keep shopping until you find that good ‘in. My opinion only, of course.

    • Thanks 2
  13. Aahh sh*t...

    Sublimely tasteful, skilled guitarist - never flashy - and an extraordinary lyricist to boot. Something so often overlooked.

    Sleep well Boon. Thanks for your music, such a massive part of my life.

     

    • Like 1
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