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Happy Jack

⭐Supporting Member⭐
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Everything posted by Happy Jack

  1. As an aside, a full colony of bees in their bee hive will routinely count 50,000 bees during the Summer. I currently have 12 hives on the go, building up to full strength after a series of 'splits' (don't ask unless you're genuinely interested), and if they were all to reach that full strength then there will be about 600,000 bees in my wood. I'm confident that I'll at least hit half a million this year.
  2. This one's mine. I bought it because I'm a big Mike Lull fan and, frankly, I liked the colour. Immediately on arrival it elbowed out of the way a number of supposedly better basses (including three other Mike Lulls) and became my go-to Precision for all purposes. Mine is also far and away the lightest Precision I've ever owned. @Clarky would have had it off me had @Silvia Bluejay not instantly vetoed the very idea of me selling it. Not that I would have anyway.
  3. To quote a politician, any politician, "well, yes and no".
  4. 'Twas a lot of fun, especially since it was our first rehearsal in 10 weeks, and also the first time I'd played DB seriously in the same time. Won't be letting the guitarist use a bloody resonator guitar again, though. Those things are as strident as a banjo.
  5. A guitar amp for a 12-year-old sounds like a fair swop. I'd say go with it.
  6. My home studio does have aircon BUT cheap aircon like mine is usually recycing the air in the room rather than pumping in fresh. Our last rehearsal was on BH Monday in a wood above Great Missenden. Seriously.
  7. Catering almost entirely for the local Polish community, but a very well-kept and friendly place. Food is excellent. Managed to get an unplugged gig there some years back, but didn't go down well enough to get re-booked.
  8. Now that I never knew (or noticed) despite living around there for a big chunk of the 80s.
  9. That is SO open to misinterpretation.
  10. By and large, my hands don't sweat much, and my sweat doesn't seem particularly corrosive anyway, so no I don't bother.
  11. Update - a pub where we were booked to play on 4th July believe that they will be allowed to open (with social distancing, natch) that weekend. They want to do an early-evening outdoor event in their large garden with a BBQ, and with us performing unplugged outside. As a band, we'd never actually need to enter the pub if we didn't want to. Two of us have said we're up for that, the third wants 48 hours to think it through. I'll keep you posted.
  12. They couldn't hit an elephant at this dist ...
  13. Yup, three great bands from (essentially) the 70s, though for some reason nobody has yet cited The Glitter Band. And you need VERY good hearing to detect that there are actually two drummers playing at the same time with any of those bands. Basically, there are drums supplying the beat. So if it was so great and sounded so awesome, why has nobody (much) done it for the last 40 years?
  14. Good grief - feel your pain, bro!
  15. Interesting responses here. My head is somewhere else entirely from most on BC by the look of it, and I'll be gigging again the moment venues start putting bands on again. If that's 2021 then it's 2021, if it's next week then it's next week. My choice, no preaching happening here.
  16. The important thing is to place your finger where it produces the note that you wanted. All else is nonsense.
  17. This is an excellent post. My only addition would be that lined fretless is an abomination, and completely pointless at that ... when you're playing a bass, you can't actually see the frets! What you need to see is the ENDS of the frets. Ibanez recognised this 50 years ago and produced this: It's a rubbish photo (sorry) but you get the idea. The bass (Ibanez 2366 FLB) was supplied with these fret end markers in place. I liked them so much that I later had a guitar tech do this: That's a Lakland Skyline Duck Dunn where I switched to a fretless neck. The job of installing those fret ends was (apparently) very simple, and was not at all expensive.
  18. https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-australia-52843846
  19. Then enjoy the fact that you will never (as in NEVER) need to buy another set of strings.
  20. It never died, Tut, it never died!
  21. Ooooh, look what I found! I've seen a few Marina basses over the years, but always in (rather unattractive) solid colours. Now isn't this a lovely piece of wood?
  22. And stuff foam under the strings. Lots of foam. The more foam, the better. You just can't have enough foam if you're playing with a pick.
  23. Bloody Hell! Three months I was quiet, three bloody months ...
  24. In all fairness, it was a piece of artwork in a music studio rather than a musical instrument.
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