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bass_dinger

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Everything posted by bass_dinger

  1. Interesting - and, for me, not something I have seen before. However, it feels more like the music that I play - the leader gives a rough structure, but we follow him (or her), for added repeats and dynamics that they will call for during the song. As for folk music, if that is the case, I plan to attend my local folk club's open mic session, and suggest that we play the okey cokey. "why did you stop, then start, then stop, then start?" "The leader stuck his left leg in, his left leg out, in, out . . . . . . "
  2. Good point! Just as well I was not in the band - I would be midway through the next chorus while the rest of the band were starting to pack up . . . . It perhaps illustrates that signals work best when everyone knows agrees them.
  3. Looking at this video of James Blunt, he appears to signal to the band "another repeat" (3'01") and then "desist, I don't want this any more" ( 3'02"). I was impressed that they managed to follow that sudden change of mind. So, how do others here signal repeated choruses or verses, extended solos, or quiet sections?
  4. So, did they ask you to do that before Covid19 started . . . ?
  5. "Bass > LONG cable > Tuner > short cable > amp is all I need!" Fixed it . . . I actually have long cables already. Honest!!
  6. TheGreek, you are not helping!! Let me swim in my own tiny fishtank of ignorance about the wider world of bass gear. Bass > cable > Tuner > short cable > amp is all I need!
  7. I'll play. I always thought myself the very model of self control, but ended up replacing a broken acoustic guitar pre-amplifier with an LR Baggs Anthem, and bought an Ashdown Acoustic Radiator too. Oh - and Harley Benton CST 24. Plus both instruments were set up for ease of playing. I now have all that I need. So, this year, I will focus on using what I have, properly.
  8. Thank you. It makes more sense now. I also see that there are only two major chords - D and G. The C chord is missing (perhaps substituted by the Em, which might be considered as an altered C maj 7 chord?). Maybe the C chord would have worked less well with the riff?
  9. Define "impressive"! I think that I want my hifi to sound like the original recording - if I want soft and fuzzy, I can always throw a duvet over the speakers.... For me, the biggest revelation has been the purchase of Atacama speaker stands. The definition is better, more focused - and the music is easier to listen to, and less fatiguing.
  10. Listening to this song, I heard that the chords were changing throughout the song - D, G, Em. However, each chord gets the same bass riff . Is there a musical explanation for why this static one-bar bassline works over three different chords?
  11. I do wonder about the relative prices of the equipment. A good, hifi, turntable seems to be more expensive than a good, hifi, CD player. Less robust too.... With £400 to invest in a turntable and vinyl, and the same £400 to spend on a CD player and CDs, which would get you a better outcome?
  12. Me too. Ebay is a good hunting ground for cheap music on CD, as are artist home pages. http://www.document-records.com/ are great for Blues completists who want recordings of old scratchy 78s. https://www.naxos.com/ are good for classical stuff, perhaps recorded by an obscure eastern European orchestra, which is cheap to licence and re-release. I think that I like the idea of vinyl, more than I like the sound.
  13. I think that what we call a compact cassette, was originally marketed as a dictaphone recording device. Nakamichi managed to get a lot of mileage out of the format, but they were perhaps best suited for in-car entertainment, and for recording Radio 1's chart show - and for doing mix tapes for your mates. I still treasure my Best Of Shalamar, compiled by my mate Roger... "Home Taping Is Killing Music."
  14. I did the same with a 12 year old that wanted to learn. He liked Fly me to the Moon; Flamenco Sketches by Miles Davis; and All of Me by Micheal Buble.... I had to tell his parents that those songs were beyond me!
  15. I recently offloaded my small vinyl collection, because I rarely if ever listened to them. With a cheap Dual CS505 deck, and nowhere to store the records, it was an easy decision to fix my old Marantz CD52 player, and focus on that medium. However, my wife still has some vinyl and cassettes, which I thought that I could easily replace with the CD version. I was stunned to see how expensive CDs can be, especially when it was released as a limited run by an obscure artist. Contrast that to how easily available the vinyl version is. EDIT - everything is easily available, if one has the money...
  16. Ah yes - if they had been invented 5 years ago, they would have called it "heat-activated low density biodegradable packaging granules", but we know them as a bag of popping corn. I find that it works best if it can be separated from the item being sent - nobody wants food-stuff in the slots of their tube power amp! I used ziplocked bags full of popcorn. "10 out of 10, delicious. Would buy again." I see that the wood grain on the packaging is better than that on some guitars I have owned! If it is 6mm ply, it is expensive to buy (but cheaper than a damaged instrument). So, I have been known to resort to a bit of skip diving . . .
  17. At our church, we use four fixed cameras, with HDMI-out, into a video mixer - the visuals team select the shot that they want (whole band; worship leader close up; preacher close up; preacher wide shot). The main mixing desk is set up in two layers - one for the room, which is rarely used (all the microphones and instruments are on gates which only open when the band plays, or people speak). The second (virtual) layer on the main desk goes to a second software-based desk in the studio, via an Ethernet connection. That second desk can remotely control the broadcast sound, and allows the "live" room to have a different mix to the broadcast. There is a third desk on the stage, to allow the band to control our foldback - an old analogue machine that previously served as the main church desk. We also have three separately controllable screens: In the church building one with the words to the songs facing the band. The other screen is for the congregation to see words to songs, and links to external broadcasts (Zoom calls to missionaries abroad; BBC broadcast of the Cenotaph memorial service; pre-recorded videos). There is also a transmission screen - that's what is shared with people watching the service online. We did try doing all of the sound from one digital desk, but quickly realised that the way of optimising the sound was to treat each zone differently, and have specialists in control of each zone. That level of commitment was tied in with the decision to move to a fully broadcast service, as well as the "live" room. I can share more detail if people want it - make of camera, make of desk, kit and software used to do the visuals and streaming. However, I realise that not every church will want to install a broadcast studio. For now, here is a link to the service - complete with a prerecorded interview, adverts, too-loud harmonies, and the bassist turning up late because I needed the loo and did not realise that the studio had started broadcasting the rehearsal early!
  18. There are very good! There is a whole concert of their stuff - great fun for those of us who want to hear the oompah version of Ghostbusters.
  19. Because the majority of white worship musicians are so uninspiring . . . I decided long ago that, in order to improve my musicianship, I needed to listen to and play material outside of CCW - so, less Christian Contemporary Worship, and more Credence Clearwater Wevival. Less CCW and more CCS. Adam Neely has something to say on the subject -
  20. So excited that you still remember it!
  21. At my church, A, G, D and C are the Keys of Worship - often the same song, tried in each key until the singers are comfortable. However, there are never any flat keys, oddly. As for Don't Overplay, spot on. Recordings and videos of professional arrangements are often very sparsely arranged.
  22. But now, with Facebook and YouTube broadcasts, 300 looks small! Somehow, my own church services reach 1,000 views in the month following the service, from a live congregation of 250. You are right - a venue full of real people singing, is better than the current set up (100 people in masks, forbidden to sing).
  23. Ah yes . . . So, we previously had lots of people playing and singing, with each "seat" being rotated. Each week would have a different combination of musicians - see Luke FRC's comment below, for the range of abilities! However, since we returned to the church, we no longer have a mix of musicians. Instead, the band members are largely fixed. So, we no longer have different bands, but one core group. That's sad for those who are excluded, but the move seems to have been accepted, in the main.
  24. An update on my own playing in church. Since 9th August, we have been playing as a band, in the church building. With a new leader, it has proven more challenging than I expected, even though everyone in the band is experienced and capable. I think that's because the new leader wants a proper arrangement, rather than as before when the leader would play and have us follow him for rhythm and changes in volume and mood. I am enjoying the challenge, but felt the need to take lessons {Thanks to dudewheresmybass }, simply to keep up with the other musicians' level of ability. The more I play, the more I realise that I don't know....
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