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Everything posted by EliasMooseblaster
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EB-3 (Epi SG bass) bridge pickup mod...mad idea?
EliasMooseblaster replied to EliasMooseblaster's topic in Bass Guitars
It is a damn fine looking bass - can't deny I'm quite envious of the twin P-pickups, quite apart from anything else! This is why I'm in equal parts curious and doubtful: I know it won't sound like a Rick - so I need to tell myself I won't get that characteristic "clank" just by sticking an extra cap in the circuit! That said, your report of "hollow twang to the top end but still retains the mids" sounds encouraging. I like the idea of being able to some optional extra "bite" to a bass which is notoriously scant on higher frequencies. And I guess, in the worst case, I'm down maybe ten quid and half an hour of soldering for some underwhelming results. -
I've already done the obvious mod on my Epiphone EB-3 - replace the stock mudbucker with a DiMarzio DP120. Later wired up a push/pull volume pot so I could switch series/parallel for a more single-coil-esque sound. So far, so good. I've been reading about the "Rick sound" and that tiny (4.7nF?) cap they have in the back pickup which acts as a bass choke. I'm wondering whether I could get a similar (obviously not identical) effect by putting one of those caps on a push/pull in the bridge tone control. Before I order parts and open up the bass again: has anyone done anything similar? Is it a great idea or a terrible one? Should I aim for a different capacitance to compensate for the (presumably) greater impedance of the EB-3 bridge HB?
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Is it worth getting an external camera mic?
EliasMooseblaster replied to Al Krow's topic in Recording
Quite interested in this thread - been looking at options for this myself! Seems the video on a lot of modern phones is pretty impressive, but the sound is...ropey. I see there are lots of options for USB mics that can be plugged in to deal with this, but info is a bit scarce (most articles seem to cover mics for conferences or podcasts). Anybody know what options are like for an external smartphone mic that cope with live music? E.g., I see the Shure MV88 is quite well regarded, but it's not entirely clear what applications it was tested on - I don't want to accidentally sink a couple of hundred quid on a fancy podcasting mic... -
Mix bus processing vs Master bus processing
EliasMooseblaster replied to EliasMooseblaster's topic in Recording
No, I think you've understood me quite correctly - and I take your point re group channels as well. I've found those make life much easier when I've pointed multiple mics at a piano or drumkit, for example! As far as "global" effects go, so far I've put them on the Master - I figured that whatever goes through a separate "Mix bus" would end up going out to the Master anyway. (And if there are other things which bypasses that Mix bus, is it really a Mix bus / global effect any more?) -
Top three attributes of a drummer - your opinion?
EliasMooseblaster replied to Mickeyboro's topic in General Discussion
Glad I'm not alone in this one - I know we've all griped about playing with "shed-builders" in the past, but I've also lost count of the numbers of drummers I've met at jam nights, etc who think "relax; let it swing a bit" means "please play this next one as a lumpy, cack-handed shuffle." -
I recently learned about the potential benefits of some subtle mix bus processing, and it has been quite eye-opening (ear-opening?) However, a big source of disagreement seems to be around where you do this processing: apply effects to the master bus, or create a separate aux channel which then goes out to the master bus? Being the internet, opinion I've seen sits on a scale between the extremes of "it doesn't really matter" to "only someone on a par with Harold Shipman would apply effects directly to the master bus." So, looking to a more level-headed community for advice: is there a good reason to keep effects off the master bus (at least at the mixing stage)? Is there a big benefit to routing everything through a separate bus before sending that onto the master? Or does it mostly come down to personal preference? (Not that I expect it to make much difference, but I'm working in Ardour, in case that informs anyone's response!)
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Bergantino CN212 with padded case - *SOLD*
EliasMooseblaster replied to EliasMooseblaster's topic in Amps and Cabs For Sale
Hi all, So sorry about the lousy comms recently - as Merton rightly surmised, I've had Covid in the last couple of weeks (plus a fair amount of additional chaos, but I'll spare you the details...). The cab has now been sold - Russ swooped in a couple of weeks ago, and I've just not had the time or presence of mind to update this thread. So my apologies to anybody who was still hoping to come see it / make offers on it. I need to run the cat down to the vet now, but I'll try and respond to your PMs a little later. Thank you all for your understanding. -
Hands down, the Ibanez TS-9B, aka "Bass Tubescreamer" I shopped around a few different bass overdrives before settling on this one, and whilst most of them sounded quite nice, I felt like they were designed very much for comping. Sure, they all distorted the signal, fattened up the low end, but they all made the bass sit quite politely underneath everything else. I had been looking for something to help me push the bass forward in the mix for the songs in which I was soloing. Of course, the original Tubescreamer is a much-cloned and ubiquitous pedal among Blues guitarists, famous for providing a warm and mellow overdrive with a distinctive mid-range hump that helps to push the soloist through the mix. It also interacts nicely with the guitar's volume pot - crank it up for more aggressive overdrive, back it off for a smoother tone. So it made perfect sense that a bass version should do the same for me. There's not much I can say, other than it did exactly what I was hoping it would. It's a bit more elaborate than the guitar version: the vol/tone/drive controls are replaced with vol/drive/blend/bass/treble. The blend and EQ controls make it very versatile - if you want a more polite overdrive for comping, it can do that too. But then, I bought it for soloing, and it does that perfectly. So I say: bassists of the world, rise up (through the mix)! You have nothing to lose except your bandmates' patience!
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Time to start splitting some hairs: not whole basses, but I have switched allegiance as far as pickups were concerned. I've always favoured quite a midrange-heavy tone (think classic Precision with the tone control up at 9 or 10), so I developed a dislike of bridge pickups, probably on account of the cheap, solid-state amps I was using for so long. Too burpy on their own, too scoopy when blended. I always defaulted to soloing the front pickup on whichever bass I was using. Enter a regular salary, and a line of vaguely affordable valve amps from Ashdown. With a bit of warm, valve saturation, I gradually started to come around to some of those mixed-pickup tones. Then enter a Gibson Thunderbird, which I had to admit had quite a pleasant-sounding humbucker in the bridge, and a delightful growl when brought up just behind the neck pickup. Or a splendidly aggressive twang when fully on, with the neck backed off a bit. I never run them at matched output though...too scoopy for my tastes, still!
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***UPDATE: SOLD to Russ (@RJB280) a couple of weeks ago; sorry I've not got round to updating the thread sooner. (More info below)*** It breaks my heart to sell this, but I haven't gigged it in years, and that's not about to change any time soon. A Berg 2x12, 700 W @ 4 Ohms, with adjustable tweeter; 4 parallel inputs (2 jack, 2 speakon); comes with branded padded case. 79 x 46 x 38 cm, 20 kg. Two sturdy side handles. Above all else: incredible tone. Apart from a few very minor scuffs, it's in excellent condition. The case is a little crumpled, though that probably has as much to do with the cat trying to climb up it. Any questions, please don't hesitate to ask. Would prefer collection from KT1, as I don't have a car - though if you want to discuss courier options, drop me a line.
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Debut stinker followed by a stonker
EliasMooseblaster replied to Barking Spiders's topic in General Discussion
Have you ever come across this blog before? https://albumsthatneverwere.blogspot.com/2014/02/nirvana-sheep.html In short, the guy digs around the various bootlegs and rarities to re-create albums that never were, or nearly were, or how they could have been. If I've understood correctly, this hypothetical reconstruction of Sheep is supposed to recreate how Nirvana's second album might have sounded if they'd stayed on Sub Pop. (Plus all the background info makes for interesting reading!) -
Debut stinker followed by a stonker
EliasMooseblaster replied to Barking Spiders's topic in General Discussion
Ritchie Blackmore's Rainbow, anyone? Rising is superb - arguably their best album. But the self-titled début? Maybe not a stinker, but I feel like every other track is rather underwhelming. -
Nicely done with that right-hand "gallop!" And that Precision does sound very nice.
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- iron maiden
- steve harris
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Posted a CD to Germany yesterday, for the first time since the new arrangements came in. If the buyer's game, I'll be very interested to hear when it turns up! (Sent another one to Illinois at the same time, so I'm half-tempted to race them...)
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Upgrading my audio interface...with caveats
EliasMooseblaster replied to EliasMooseblaster's topic in Recording
I must admit, the style of music I'm making doesn't necessarily require 24/192 KHz, but I do know that I like the sound of Focusrite's mic preamps. Having four of those in one box is the main attraction. On the other hand, Behringer do offer some native support for Linux, which Focusrite do not. This hasn't been an issue so far, as I can control the 2i2 entirely from its physical controls, and Ardour talks to it quite happily. I'm concerned this may not be as true with the 8i8, which could be a strong plus point for the XR18. -
With one recording project complete, I'm obviously thinking about the next one. I've been quite pleased with what I can get out of a Focusrite Scarlett 2i2 going into Ardour on Ubuntu, but for the next project I want something with a couple more mic inputs. The 8i8 therefore looks appealing, however, I understand that the more advanced Focusrite interfaces are controlled in part via proprietary software. Crucially, I hear, this includes switching between the preamp and line level inputs on the XLR sockets. Has anyone else tried running one of these in Linux? Or can anyone recommend a decent competitor? (I see Tascam offer the 208i at a similar price, and that looks like it's fully hardware controlled - thoughts?)
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Sonicake - anyone familiar with them?
EliasMooseblaster replied to EliasMooseblaster's topic in Effects
I've not tried one of their own devices, but I did buy a Hotone B Station from them in the end - and I've been delighted with that! A very preamp/DI for its price point. I get the impression they're in a similar boat to Joyo, Caline, etc - surprisingly good for the money, and cheap enough that you could take a gamble on them without breaking the bank. -
Thanks for sharing that. I'd only ever seen the edited clip from the Kids Are Alright film previously - which includes the infamous explosion, but not the performance of Miles, nor the footage of the hosts trying meekly to recoup after The Who's performance! (The former, particularly entertaining for Entwistle's slightly sinister grin when he realises the camera's pointing at him.)
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There's a wonderful extra layer of comedy to that story: the Smothers Brothers' team knew well in advance about the group's destructive reputation, so their techs took them in hand and made sure they could destroy their instruments without bringing the TV studio down in the process. The rigged up the kick drum with what they deemed to be an "acceptable" charge and test-fired it to show the band, who were singularly unimpressed (by Daltrey's account: "it was more like a wet fart"). So Moon took the techs to one side - sweet-talking and bribery are variously mentioned by different sources - and persuaded them to look the other way while he loaded up the kick drum himself. It's not clear whether he was just unfamiliar with the material available in this foreign studio, or whether he deliberately overcompensated, but not even The Who were quite prepared for the size of the explosion that resulted. Townshend apparently insists to this day that it was this incident which caused the most lasting damage to his knackered hearing...and not the decades standing in front of stacked Hiwatt 4x12s.
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Oof! "...and the Florida-based luthier received the famous instrument in a box slightly larger than a shoebox" I'd heard the instrument was broken - I hadn't realised the damage was quite so extensive!
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Taking this to its logical extreme: I'm sure Ritchie Blackmore won't have been the only pro guitarist who asked his tech to pass him a cheap Strat copy for the last song on various Deep Purple gigs, so that he could "Townshend" it for the finale.
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The bit highlighted in bold pricked up the ears of my inner guitarist, and as any six-string-toting-fule kno, if you have a tube amp about to crack, and you want to push it into overdrive, then you plug in a Tubescreamer (or a similarly mid-focused, low-gain OD pedal). Fortunately, Ibanez also make a bass version (look up the TS-9B), with a more bass-friendly centre to the midrange boost, and I can't praise mine highly enough. Because it focuses on the mids, rather than the lows, you retain definition in a way that I've really found lacking in a lot of other bass ODs and distortions. Whether it will get heavy enough for you is another question - and to be honest, I use my own TS-9B more as a boost for solos. If the song calls for fuzz bass then I turn to a bass fuzz: EHX's Bass Big Muff might not seem like a particularly exotic or 'boutique' optionm but it does this really well. The trick is to turn the Tone control to the left - it's basically a pre-shape, so if you turn to the left, it gives a flatter response; to the right, it starts to scoop the mids, and can get very muddy.
