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Happy Jack

⭐Supporting Member⭐
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Everything posted by Happy Jack

  1. Are you back on Astronomy? There are holes in the sky where the rain gets in, But the holes are small - that's why rain is thin.
  2. Incidentally, that rehearsal space became known as "the junkyard". When I migrated to an industrial unit in Acton (during my divorce), the new space became Junkyard II. Now that we are settled into our new place in Harrow, Silvie & I went ahead with The Final Junkyard, developed along very much the same lines as the one I did in 2011, and that's where my band now rehearses. Most unusually, Silvie didn't document the build in great detail (I think ... Silvie?) but the build principle and materials used were much the same. The two big refinements were (i) a proper aircon/heater unit so it's always comfy in there, and (ii) a steel multi-bolt door that wouldn't look out of place at Fort Knox - it would be easier for an intruder to demolish one of the walls than to come through that door.
  3. Yup, but they were blown out of the water by a new thing ... Now That's What I Call Music.
  4. So Schoenberg would not have seen Chopsticks as a sequence of chords?
  5. Are we now on to The Music Of The Spheres?
  6. It's OK ... I'll have my people talk to your people.
  7. You're allowed to bump more often than every 10 months, Si ...
  8. In this scenario, McBass should certainly go with what his accountant has told him, if only because if it all goes horribly wrong then he can claim against the guy's Professional Indemnity insurance. Sad, but true. Meanwhile, and I ask this entirely hypothetical question in a pure spirit of enquiry, were one to claim £5000 against income tax because one had just bought a 1965 Fender Precision, then one would avoid paying at the very least £1000 in income tax. Were one then to sell said 1965 Fender Precision for £6000 (because these things tend to appreciate over time) would one declare that as a capital gain and pay capital gains tax on it? I'm guessing not. Were one then to sell said 1965 Fender Precision for £5000 (because these things tend not to appreciate as much as one might like) would one reverse the previous claim against income tax and pay the at least £1000 income tax on it? I'm guessing not. So that's tax evasion then. Just saying ... I don't work for HMRC, and I have absolutely no 'moral stance' on this. But sometimes it's worth actually thinking through these scenarios.
  9. Just for clarity, next time I play Walk On The Wild Side in the Dog & Duck (sliding double stops all the way through) and a punter congratulates me on my "chords", you'd like me to tell him that they're not "chords", they're "dyads"? And when he says, "WTF is a dyad?", the correct answer is, "It's two notes played simultaneously to create an interval, but not enough notes to warrant being called a chord". And when he says "Are you taking the fosters?", the correct answer is, "No, this how bass players think about their music". Bwahahahahaha!!!
  10. I haven't read Lefty's link so I may be doubling up here, but you can only claim the COST of the bass, not its price. If you buy a £4000 Wal that does not mean you can claim £4000 against tax. If you can show that your Wal is depreciating in value (i.e. it is worth less each year) then you can claim for the amount of depreciation you have suffered. If your £4000 Wal is still worth £4000 a year later then you have incurred no COST and cannot claim anything. Some high-end basses and many vintage basses are not a COST, they are an investment. You can turn them back into cash later ...
  11. Sounds about right to me.
  12. So make sure that you always sell to buyers in Montrose or Fraserburgh.
  13. Well that's a whole nother thang, in't it?
  14. The buyer is the one with the cash, mate ...
  15. And there's your answer - way too many scammers around these days. If I'm selling a high-value bass or amp or anything else, I will always prefer the buyer to visit in person, try it out to check that it actually works and does what he wants, and then pay in cash so that he can't fraudulently recall his money later. Sad, but true.
  16. Agreed - "This site can't be reached".
  17. I still call my clumsy plunking "playing" ...
  18. Seeing as Silvie & I will be bringing at least one double bass, we can't offer too much space for lifts from Harrow (London NW) but we can certainly carry a couple of Basschatters if they promise to leave their DBs at home.
  19. Sorry Chris, but Wikipaedia would beg to differ. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chord_(music) As far as I'm concerned, a double-stop is a chord. It may be primitive, but it's still a chord.
  20. I had a Goodfellow owned once by Kim Novak, but it was Novak and Good. I persuaded Stephen Stills to do a setup for me, but it was Stills Novak and Good.
  21. Yes, no problem. Not actually sure why I specified "mainland UK" actually ...
  22. What's the thinking on the Mids? Is everything supposed to be handled by the Contour control? Personally, the fewer knobs the better for me, and I don't get on at all with parametric Mid controls, so I ain't complaining.
  23. I must have spent nearly a minute wondering why there was no battery before I realised what I was looking at.
  24. Eric Clapton 'Blackie' tribute guitars: http://www.guitaravenue.com/guitars-basses.htm#xl_fender Gone right off them, I have.
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