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NancyJohnson

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Posts posted by NancyJohnson

  1. I've been ripping and listening to Nine Inch Nails most of the day.  Three or four songs from each album.  In the main, fantastic stuff.

     

    I've also been sent an MP3 of an EP by Milano pop/punkers Panamas for review.  I'm on my third listen at the moment; bejeeeesus, it's absolutely stellar.  Imagine The Ramones meets The Strokes meets The Hives.  10/10.

  2. I've seen guys with huge floor boards covered in stomps who gradually just stopped using everything.

     

    Over the years I've gone through a POD or two, a brace of Tech21 kit and one of those TC Electronic Tone Print amps (great concept, not enough patches, so off it went).  Always used a poweramp or into the effects return on heads.  

  3. 16 hours ago, Buddster said:

    Yes, I agree, my wife is completely understanding of me having different ones, even if she doesn't know why. 

     

    I think this mirrors many general situation.

     

    When our mortgage got paid - and after an awful long time playing a (frankly awful) late 70s Precision - floodgates opened and I just bought any Gibson Thunderbird I fancied.  Wife understood, but if asked couldn't specifically quantify why her husband kept buying basses or what he actually owned at any single moment.  I mean she knows the manufacturers, Hamer, Lull, Spector...those names roll off the tongue.

     

    Her oft-used quote is, 'Always trade up,' which is something I've consistently tried to do.

     

     

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  4. It's odd how you get thinking about auditions.

     

    I'd completely forgot about this east European guitarist we tried out; he was younger than us and was temping in the warehouse where I worked.  We decided to not go the route of booking a room, so we tried him out in the extension of my house; stripped down session. He arrived on foot just carrying a guitar (no bag) and a little practice amp.

     

    He'd clearly made zero effort to learn any of the material I'd given him and I believe his expectation was that we'd become his backing band.  He was also a terrible player and quite terrifying in equal parts.

     

    You remember Alexei Sayle's character in The Young Ones?  That's what he sounded like when he talked and well, that started the drummer laughing.  Every statement ended in 'yes'.  He'd go, 'We do one of mine songs now, it's about the Russian Mafia in Stalingrad, yes?' and he'd play a breakneck fast two chord thing with him shouting out sweary vocals about gang members killing each other and disposing of the bodies in furnaces.  That was one of the more happy songs.

     

    Drummer is laughing.  Singer is laughing.  I'm trying not to laugh and offer encouragement.  He knows exactly where I live.  I'm trying to formulate an exit strategy.

     

    We stop for coffee.  He asks whether I have anything stronger.  I watched him down about 1/4 pint of bourbon like it was orange squash on a hot day and then ask if we have vodka.

     

    Before long, it was thankfully over.  He's going, 'This was great.  We must do this again soon, yes?  You on the drums, play faster next time, yes?'.

     

    Drummer says he's going to be working away for a bit (phew), but singer does not play along however and says it was great and we should do it again soon.  B*stard.

     

    Thankfully the guy got fired and I never saw him again.

     

     

    • Like 2
    • Haha 10
  5. 17 minutes ago, King Tut said:

    Maybe that’s why (at least in my case) the Epi’s don’t seem to be so renowned for massive neck dive? Could they have changed the geometry to improve the ergos?

     

    If I could have a pahnd for every time I've seen people mention neck dive, eh?  With the dozen or so Gibson models I went through, dive was negligible (I mean, much as I joked about it, it was there a little, but wasn't a dealbreaker) and it's non-existent on my Lull, Hamer or Spector.  Grippier strap and I tend to play with my left hand on the neck.

     

    Not in the market for one of these, but I'd be in the market for a TBII should Gibson pull their finger out and reissue those.  

    • Like 1
  6. Nothing against these per se; I played Gary's for a bit and it was fine, but always felt the geometry on the Epiphones was out compared with the original.  I know many will see this as nitpicking, but if you're going to make/reproduce/copy a faithful replica, then then should be doing that (much like they're trying to do with all the Les Pauls, Explorers, Vs and SGs).  About the only area where the body looks correct is the forearm bout.  The other three corners are skewed; the lower horn has always been short/stubby and the upper neck joint and control corner, smoothed out/rounded.

     

     

  7. 19 minutes ago, Mokl said:

    Jeez, my bass with East pre does that too. I'd not put 2 and 2 togerher...Worth contacting John about it? I've not found him responsive in the past tbh.

     

    The sound would just randomly start and not stop until I tapped the mid-pot with a finger or messed with it somehow.

     

    John let me know how to take the pot out of the circuit (so I could at least start playing it again without fear) and I returned the pot and cable to him.  He returned it a few days later (uncertain if it is/was the same pot), but he included a new wire/ribbon saying these were more stable than the old ones, so I suspect the problem was was with that.

     

    Anyhow, reinstalled everything and it's been 100%.  Give him a shout!

     

     

    • Like 1
  8. Mate of mine had a huge house (that looked a little like Tracy Island) with a large basement studio where we'd just leave our gear set up 24/7 and turn up and play.

     

    We were never going to take things out live, this was a more open musician session thing where we'd write/record/jam/drink beer; several drummers played, other guys just either lost interest or had commitments elsewhere; I'd mentioned to everyone I knew that we just needed someone to come along and play drums.

     

    We got a suggestion of a local bloke through a friend of a friend of a friend, so in desperation we asked him along. He'd apparently being playing for ages, but not so much recently.  I guess the latter comment should have rung alarm bells.  He turned up and unloaded an absolutely beautiful old Ludwig kit, all the hardware looked lovingly taken care of.

     

    Big problem was he really couldn't play at all, but I don't think he realised that in the slightest.  There was just nothing there whatsoever.  He could barely hold together a slow 4/4.  It would be akin to getting your mum to sit in on traps for a session.

     

    It was an uncomfortable three or four hours.

    • Like 3
    • Haha 3
  9. 34 minutes ago, snorkie635 said:

    As long as it all measures up, you should be fine. Back in the early 80s, I had three Wals and eventually did a three-way swap with no problems. There must be three current owners wondering why their necks don't seem to be the correct ones for their basses (if they ever noticed).

     

    Decades ago, I remember a mate going into a shop on Denmark Street to buy a Precision, he liked the black body but not the maple board, so the store just swapped over necks from another Precision with a rosewood board.

  10. So just to get this straight, the two basses(?) you're talking about are the ones pictured below?

     

    I haven't gone as far as to check scale lengths, the depth of the neck pocket or how far the neck pocket sits towards the bridge, so there may (obviously) be an issue with intonation and action height (which one would hope could be resolved by adjusting the bridge or by utilising a shim of some sort in the neck pocket).  The other thing is the holes in the neck and the ones running through the body sufficiently line up and whether they'll need dowelling and redrilling; given the propensity of neck plates being more or less identical, the neck holes will likely align with the body holes, it's just questionable whether they're in the right place.  These are the most obvious things.  If you're confident of setting the instrument up after, then go for it, I say! 

     

    I've not seen much in the way of neck swap posts, so would be interested in seeing how this pans out.  I do wonder whether manufacturers just carry out wholesale copies of instruments allowing for easy swappage between manufacturers instruments.

     

     

    squier-classic-vibe-precision-bass-51-10

     

    wrycihxbsraxv1dptstb.jpg

     

    • Like 2
  11. I stopped playing this for quite a while because the John East circuit developed an issue on the mid-pot.  It all worked, but periodically the bass would just emit a theremin type squeal.  The thought of replacing the full circuit was a bit of a costly ball ache.

     

    At my wife's prompting, I spoke to John, he sent a replacement part and bingo, back in the game.

     

    20230828_181146.thumb.jpg.a3199f49cf303a0c7f7bc1f1399a1fc6.jpg

     

     

     

     

     

    • Like 5
  12. While I favour Gator bags, if you want a well made and sturdy bag for the stuff you're stating, check out Troop London.  Cavernous, loads of pockets, different sizes/colours etc. great for just chucking stuff in.

     

    We've got three in different sizes; used them for gigs and holidays.  Currently in Madeira and there's two up in the hotel room as I type.

     

    10/10

     

    https://www.trooplondon.com/collections/all-bags

     

    • Thanks 1
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