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Rabbie

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Posts posted by Rabbie

  1. I have had Shadow and Underwood in the past which were great, but now I use either a Rev Solo or a Blast Cult pickup and I find them both excellent. I have tried fancy ones like Ehrlund and DPA mic and I found them terrible for my uses, yet I have seen quieter guys/girls getting great sounds with the fancy ones too.

  2. [s]1) VELVET GARBO LIGHT E and A strings only
    One day old!
    Honestly I don't know why I try anything but guts when I already know I'm not gonna end up liking them....
    Save yourselves some cash on brand new Garbo light tension E and A strings. £100 posted to UK.[/s]

    2) PRESTO ULTRALIGHT D string only
    used for 2 hours on my Chadwick: not my cup of tea. £15 posted

    [s]3) BLAST CULT LOW LIFES
    I love Blast Cult products and I figured I could use their low tension steels on my Chadwick, but I am too much of a gut guy and I ended up taking them off after a couple of days. Please note that the silks of these strings are very inexpensively applied and they 'fluffed' apart when I took them back out of the tuning pegs. However, the strings are in perfect condition. £50 posted. (Blast Cult sold)[/s]

  3. To slap you need high action. As a matter of fact real low action does not suit the double bass at all, in any style. Bear in mind that the action at the fingerboard is only of very relative significance and it all depends on hight at nut, string type, string tension, bridge curvature, in short general bass set-up as well as your technique and stamina. To over-simplify and answer your question: some people can slap steel strings with low action around 7-8mm. This low action would not suit wackers or guts as you will have no acoustic volume. Personally I use gut strings and action around 1.2-1.3cm. Very high for most people, but I like it and I can be heard even without an amplifier (up to a point of course). That's how the old players did it, since you asked about classic slap tone. Some modern psychobilly guys have different setups which rely on amps a lot more, but I really don't know about that. Gee that's a long answer sorry my friend.

  4. Hi Andy, I think I may slightly change my hand to a wee bit of a "sideways hook" when doing fast runs, I never really thought about it to be fair, I just do it. I think that most people just do feels natural to them; as you quite correctly say, there is no rule as long as you achieve a clean big sound. The most important things in my opinion are to make sure your hand is relax and your action is high enough, so your fingers will be able to grab the strings easily, even at fast tempos.

  5. King Moretone Basses are vintage pearls of the 50s.. They are no longer made and they have street cred +++++. You are not likely to find one easily.
    King double basses were rockabilly basses made in the US a few years back. They are also no longer made but the guy who made them, Jason Burns, now makes Blast Cult basses, similar concept but improved design: excellent basses. Both options will be very expensive as well as very good. I think Blast Cults retail for around $4500 plus lot of dosh to import them from the US. If you find a used King (of either kind) buy it!... But it ain't gonna be cheap.

  6. As it stands I think that Lenzner are the cheapest good quality ones. You can buy them singularly from Bassico.
    Efrano are also great. Never tried the cheap ones on eBay, but they might be ok.
    I am gonna take the plunge on some Gamut soon, which are £££ but everyone says they are worth it. Anyone got a used set?
    Even for a straight rockabilly player, the unwrapped E and A may be too thuddy, not to mention expensive! The wrapped fall apart with slapping (apparently, never really tried them long enough to know), so you may have to find a compromise for especially the E. people use anything from solo steels detuned to velvet garbo lights to innovation etc...

  7. My main bass is also kept in the corner of our living room and my wife never complained about gut strings smell in our house. I was also raised in a farming village and yet I am not that familiar with the smell of donkey's bahoochy. Makes me wonder about the person on doublebasschat.....

  8. Good stuff. Yes mixing sets is indeed often the key of a happy DB sound. Good on you for finding a mix that suits your bass early on, it will save you £££.
    But....If you ever get dissatisfied with your choice, i have one message from the "gut preservation society": try gut D and G. Or failing that try to get a set of Lamberts (vastly better than all other slap strings IMO).

  9. [quote name='Beedster' timestamp='1384184960' post='2273678']


    Seems to pop up all over the place, and not cheaply. Problem I found - as did Clarky above - is that AI doesn't have the grunt for nice clean DB tone in a noisy room (and I had a combo and extension cab also). I found exactly the same problem with PJB rigs.
    [/quote]
    They have excellent wattage but lack the bigger size speakers to move air and produce bass IMO.

  10. [quote name='keeponehandloose' timestamp='1384175137' post='2273504']
    IMO using a Fishman Pro Platinum preamp will alow you to get a more than decent sound from almost any amp , my search stopped when I realised this..
    [/quote]
    True. A preamp such as this is the first thing you should put in your gig bag, especially if you play in big places where your amp, no matter how big, is not enough. To Arisan above I'd say you don't really need one when using a GB shuttle, but if you prefer it, it's up to you.
    Like many here, I have tried a lot of amps in a lot of situations and basically it's so variable that I don't think a holy graal exists. For me, Genz Benz shuttle plus one or 2 cabs allow me to get loud and still sound like a DB, whilst being light to carry.

  11. That's right, as I said I have never played the rockabilly version but the hibrid 3/4 model, now known as 1950, was my first bass. I also had to put the spike very high and it was a flimsy wee endpin too if I remember well. If memory serves me well, I couldn't really complain about the sound per se, but as soon as I started gigging I found that the bass was falling apart around me: the tuners were unreliable, the black paint stripped off the fingerboard, the bridge was flimsy, the tailpiece was wobbly, I couldn't help feedback and it was so shiny the audience had to wear shades (not really of course)....
    In saying that, if I remember well I paid £400 for it back then and it served its purpose well in making me understand I had found my instrument and needed to get something better in order to make the jump.

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