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TheKcrimsonKing

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Posts posted by TheKcrimsonKing

  1. I just saw Thomann discontued their old EUB500's and are now making these new ones that kind of resemble Stagg's and Aria's, I'm looking for a double bass for quiet practice at he moment, I'd be very interested to see what it's like and what it comes with.

  2. [url="http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Sound-of-Sweden-Jonas-Hellborg-signature-early-80s-signature-bass-guitar/321867708715?_trksid=p2047675.c100013.m1986&_trkparms=aid%3D555012%26algo%3DPW.MBE%26ao%3D1%26asc%3D33127%26meid%3D527b251417b345ebb42a20653a8fe5ea%26pid%3D100013%26rk%3D7%26rkt%3D15%26sd%3D161819953513"]http://www.ebay.co.u...%3D161819953513[/url]

    Made in Italy apparently, it's even got 27 frets and some weird looking pickups. Never heard of the brand before, is it even real?

  3. I think the reason so many people want old amps is because they do a sound very well that bass players back in the day hated, but modern ones love, I'm talking more about heads than cabinets here. Take Jesse Keeler from DFA 1979, he uses an old Peavey Festival head that I've seen people who played it back when came out have nothing but hate for, because it distorted and sounded bright, which wasn't what your average 70's root note bassist wanted, but it suits him down to the ground because he's a very different player. He has an original cabinet as well which he's replaced the speakers in with PA ones, leading me to believe that it was speakers that caused most of the problems for bassists back then rather than amps.

  4. I think the internet age is the new Golden age of music, and the that level of quality and experimentation in music has never been higher, Time marches on, art in tow, but the Beatles really started a phenomenon in the 60s', I still feel their effect even if most of their music doesn't resonate with me.

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