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uk_lefty

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Posts posted by uk_lefty

  1. Yes looks are important. I had a period when my only bass was my very 80s hair metal Kramer fretless... Didn't get the jazz gig I went for and got some odd looks. I couldn't play a single-cut or coffee table bass with my current band. I use a "traditional" looking p bass, have whipped out the headless cricket bat bass which went down ok, and will play the next short gig with a jazz.

  2. Agree on the partnership viewpoint. Having been on both sides of this fence it's frustrating when only one party is making the effort. Nowadays with social media it should be easier to get word out to your own followers but the venue needs to be making equal effort through their Facebook, Twitter, local paper and local radio - but being a late change I'm not sure they can get all of those in place in time.
    Do they usually have Sunday afternoon gigs? It's a nice idea but its not going to be a world beater unless they have an established Sunday afternoon drinking and listening to live bands regime. Can't imagine it would go down well at a carvery.

  3. Yes! When we don't have the biggest and best PA support I use my singers Peavey 115. It's a relatively older model (6-7 years?) But it is loud and clear. At 150watts it gives much better output than my 250watt Ashdown. Have used it at a gig in a "half" marquee where we had an open side and there was a basic PA, was driving it beyond the speaker warning light point at times but it was trying to fill an entire county with bass sound, being outdoors.
    As previously said, reliable workhorse indeed.

  4. [quote name='discreet' timestamp='1469736228' post='3100803']


    String choice is SO important and can radically change the sound and playability of a bass. I think they get overlooked sometimes.
    [/quote]

    Agreed 100%. Decent strings can bring in so much character, one of the most important components in making the sound

  5. Looks like the previous owner of my MIM Jazz used to play with some kind of wrist cuff on and attack hard with a pick. It's left a long dull patch on the body where it has been constantly scraped and scratched. Question is what to do now?
    A. Nothing. But this leaves a dull patch that can catch the light. and this is my experiment bass...
    B. Repair job. Could use t-cut or something similar? This is wine red though...
    C. Relic job. I'd like the idea of speeding up the natural wear and taking this down to undercoat and wood but not sure it wouldn't end up looking completely sh!t and amateur...
    Thoughts and advice most gratefully received

  6. Apologies but this was an item I was helping my guitarist sell. I do not know if it is the same as the one you have taken from gumtree or not but I will be having strong words with him if it is, everyone here who knows me and has dealt with me before would agree that I would not try to profiteer from deals made on or through the site. Item withdrawn from sale.

  7. The basic zoom two pedal multi effect. Used mainly for home practice through headphones but incredibly useful when arriving at a gig that needs a DI. Many useable effect sounds.
    In great nick, selling without power supply and with a paper downloaded copy of the instructions.
    Buyer may collect from St Albans area or can post. Pls pm me if interested.

  8. They are cool no matter what anyone says!! Mine comes out every gig. I've got a hohner b2a and its great with ghs boomer strings. I would prefer a bodied headless so am personally lusting after a status...
    My mate is shifting a hohner the Jack soon with case, I'll let you know when it's available.

  9. My latest band gets bookings for local festivals and parties, there is a varied audience and you don't quite know what they'll react to. We want our audience to sing along and dance (both ideally). We are a bluesey rock band by nature but we are finding we need to play a diverse range of crowd pleasers but with a bluesey rock flavour to keep people happy. We made set list adjustments on the fly last gig because we had five hundred people staring blankly at us playing songs we love, but going mental for songs we didn't think woukd work.. strange thing is I only enjoy playing the song live if the audience enjoy it, regardless of what I would want to listen to alone in my car or noodle my bass along to at home. I want a set where our audience sings and dances along to every song, that's what I enjoy most. It's no big ambition and not very sophisticated but it suits my band and our audience.

  10. [quote name='Paul S' timestamp='1468924722' post='3094300']
    ^^This^^

    I found the same. When I first hurt my back badly I wandered in the class D head wilderness for a few years, tried all sorts of manufacturers and ratings, never quite got there. To my knackered old ears a TC RH750 got close but not close enough.

    I bought on here an AH300-12 SMX that had been rack-mounted into an ABS case, making it 12kg. A nice balanced one hand carry when I have my Barefaced Supercompact in the other hand. Couldn't be happier.
    [/quote]

    Sounds like an option I could explore of trace head plus lightweight cab. Just interested in how much of the tone comes from the cab itself...

  11. I sold my trace rig some months back because I live in a second floor flat and it was just so unbelievably heavy, too heavy to cart around and I have had back trouble before. Ok, my Ashdown combo does its job well but last night I played through a trace GP7 head and trace 4x10 cab. Wow. My drummer and I LOVED it. Playing a jazz with bartolinis through this combo, hartke vxl for a touch of eq, stainless roundwound strings, it was tone heaven.

    Is there anything that comes remotely close to trace Elliot sound but in a lightweight unit? Has anyone paired a trace head with a lightweight cab successfully?

  12. I've got to gig one tomorrow that is a capo4... You can work it out until you find the internet sourced chords are not matching what your guitarist actually plays...

    Played to fill in with a band of sixteen yr olds who gave me 24hrs notice of three songs to play and six hrs notice that they played in flat tuning. Made me think about what I was doing, good learning experience with zero pressure.

  13. On the rare occasions I use a pick I go for a great big dorito shaped Fender .71mm I have had for well over ten years. I find it does everything I would want a pick for such as a clicky harsher attack or a rattling speed line too fast for fingers.

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