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thisnameistaken

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Posts posted by thisnameistaken

  1. If you stick to playing everything an octave up on the bass (and transpose it back down at the synth) then yeah a GK-3B and a GR-55 works surprisingly well if you get it set up properly. Latency isn't too bad if you play higher up, and tracking is definitely a lot better than it used to be.

    I've been thinking about getting another MIDI set up, but I can't see myself taking a GR-55 plus all my pedals to rehearsals and gigs, and it won't replace my pedals, and I need my pedals, so that's why I haven't done it. It's purely a matter of luggage.

  2. [quote name='FuNkShUi' timestamp='1408606623' post='2531640']
    IME anytime ive tried to go the originals route, its always been harder to get anything going.
    Whether thats just down to the mentality of people wanting to pay purely originals, i dont know.[/quote]

    It's because instead of picking some songs you want to play from a list of thousands (and yet still somehow ending up with the same songs that every other cover band plays) you have to write them all yourself. If this isn't a slower process then your band is either soaking in talent or isn't very good.

  3. I'd rather this didn't turn into a battle of the fanboys. I've got basses by several manufacturers and my favourite is a Warwick Thumb which f***ing nobody on here likes.

    My mate's Silhouette really surprised me. He took a photo with the pickguard off and the routing really surprised me. You could put a packed lunch in there, they'd just routed the whole lot, one big void. WTF?

  4. [quote name='leroydiamond' timestamp='1408551859' post='2531303']I have had a few 4 string stingrays in my hands and found them to be a bit chunky and heavy for my liking. However the Sterling 4 is much more my cup of tea. Smaller, lighter, 3 way switch and lovely slim neck which suited my relatively small hands.[/quote]

    That Strat-style switch is the only thing I don't like about the Sterling, although I never liked the switch on the Yamaha BBs either but it didn't stop me buying one. :)

    As for the 'Classic 5', I do like the look of those but damn they're expensive.

  5. The online thing can work. I met a couple of guys through bandmix about 5 years ago who I'm still playing with, although having said that we also found our fourth band member that way too and she was a total nightmare...

    Going to open mics is always good but often the people who frequent those things are only really interested in playing solo, but on the plus side they are usually habitual songwriters. Also get to know your local promoters, who will know all the gigging bands in your area and may be able to put you in touch with bands needing a bassist. I spent ages looking for a turntablist here in York, didn't think there were any, then found one through a promoter I know and he's worked out really well.

  6. I like the way they look, apart from the Stingray 5 and the Silhouette guitar, and I often like the way they songs on record, but every time I pick one up it just feels massively underwhelming.

    I had a fretless Stingray a while back which was just meh. I keep looking at Sabres because I love the look but I know I won't find it inspiring to play.

    A friend of mine has a Stingray 5 that he loves and also a Silhouette guitar, and I respect this guy's opinions in general, and he's very sincere about how much he likes this stuff, but I've played both these guitars and they just feel... Playmobil, to me. They feel exceptionally mass-produced to me, almost like plastic. That probably sounds weird.

    Like I said though I am inclined to like these guitars because i think they're pretty and all, but every time i pick one up there's just no spark.

    Are they really that different to other guitars?

  7. Regarding bitcrushers: I've got a Frantabit now, which does both bitcrushing and sample rate reduction, and I imagined it would replace my Bugbrand Bugcrusher which is just a sample rate reducer, but while the bitcrushing side of things is a cool sound it has to be way up front in the mix to get heard and it's so destructive as to make any other effects earlier in the chain pretty much disappear, whereas the Bugcrusher flavours anything and always leaves enough bottom end in the sound.

    So for my 2p, sample rate reducers are much more useful on bass.

  8. I used to only play fretless, for years in the '90s. I had a fretless Stingray a couple of years back but never got on with it. I've got a Jazz body in the loft that's waiting for a fretless neck to turn up but it's been waiting for about a year now...

  9. [quote name='paul_5' timestamp='1405625886' post='2503859']
    Fuzz is an odd one - is always sounds better through a cab, so get it miked up.
    [/quote]

    It's harder with bass though. With guitar you can stick a 57 in front of a speaker and get everything you want, but you'll lose a lot of low end using a dynamic mic to track bass.

    Definitely track a clean channel too. Are you going to have an experienced engineer? Maybe he/she will have some better cab-miking ideas.

  10. Sad to see all this stuff going. Pretty much everything here would be something I'd want if I had the cash. You have excellent taste in pedals, and clearly quite a cavalier yet admirable attitude to the maximum size a pedalboard ought to be. :-)

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