-
Posts
5,027 -
Joined
-
Last visited
-
Days Won
2
Content Type
Profiles
Forums
Events
Shop
Articles
Everything posted by Dan Dare
-
Rosewood may be more difficult to find on a Tele/51 style bass neck. They are usually maple. You can make a gloss neck satin by rubbing down the back of the neck with 0000 steel wool, but do unbolt it from the instrument first to avoid covering the bass with fine steel fragments. You'll never get rid of them, especially from the pickup pole pieces, if you don't.
-
Thoughts needed on pre-amp / power amp rigs vs a head
Dan Dare replied to Nickthebass's topic in Amps and Cabs
Carvin appears to have re-launched. There is a current website. I don't know whether someone may have bought the rights to use the name/brand or whether the original firm is back in operation. I have a B1000 bass head which I like very much. -
Noodling between numbers is showing off, pure and simple. Call it out for what it is, but be prepared for a hissy fit from the culprit.
-
Seems from your final comment it may not be for you. Some would find it an interesting prospect, but if you are someone who likes everything nailed down beforehand and has strict ideas of what is and isn't for you, probably not.
-
What 1" compression tweeter and crossover unit should I put in my cab?
Dan Dare replied to Dev R's topic in Amps and Cabs
Take up fishing. I find it a great way to while away my twilight years. -
Lovely job. Looks really pro'.
-
I think we're onto something. Diversification is the name of the game if you want world dominance. How about Scott's Car Repairs, or Scott's Open Heart Surgery?
-
Starting out with a PA - Am I on the right track.
Dan Dare replied to Stub Mandrel's topic in Amps and Cabs
Good advice. When you mic' drums in small venues, you can roll off a lot of the low frequencies so you get dispersion and clarity, but little to no "wump" from them in the PA. The same applies to all other instruments. It really makes a difference out front, even at modest volume levels. -
Some great deals to be had on analogue desks now everyone is going digital. Can't go far wrong with A&H.
-
Starting out with a PA - Am I on the right track.
Dan Dare replied to Stub Mandrel's topic in Amps and Cabs
One other thing I forgot to mention. If your Soundcraft has a low cut option, use it. On everything. A lot of bass in the mix uses up amplifier power and muddies things horribly. -
I like Chromes, too. As flats are generally higher tension than rounds, I just use a lighter set. I tried a set of Roto jazz flats many years ago and hated them, mainly because they felt like anchor cables.
-
Starting out with a PA - Am I on the right track.
Dan Dare replied to Stub Mandrel's topic in Amps and Cabs
The gear you have will certainly be good to start with. In answer to the above: 1 Yes. A sub mixer for drums is sensible. I'd suggest mixing the drums down to mono, which will save you a channel on your main mixer as you can route the output from the drum mixer into just one. Stereo drums might matter in a concert hall, but not in a pub/club setting. Ditto the rest of the band. Panning anything right or left In a noisy pub/club will just mean people on one side of the room won't hear properly what's going on at the other side. 2 Definitely use separate channels for snare and kick if you are not sub-mixing the drums. Eq, etc will be very different. 3 Yes, but when using larger cabs as monitors, you will need to roll off a lot of the low end. Too much bass in monitors is mud city and will often cause problems with feedback. 4 Up to you. Powered monitors are more convenient, but used power amps can be had cheaply, so depends on your budget. 5 I use 10s for monitors. They're of reasonable quality (HK Premium Pro), but It isn't just about size. The important quality in monitors is clarity and articulation, not a wide frequency range (see above comment about avoiding running low bass through them). 6 Depends on onstage levels from backline, drums, etc, how efficient/clean sounding your monitors are. I use a 500w a side power amp for four monitor cabs and it's more than ample. Get solid stands for those large heavy FOH cabs. You want something with a wide footprint that can't be knocked over easily. -
And the anti-depressant capital of the country. More prescribed per head there than anywhere else.
-
From Webster's - scat: noun (1) : animal fecal droppings. For many animals, particularly predatory ones, a scat is a calling card that marks territory and leaves information.
-
I had one for a few years. Didn't use him for hunting. He was a pet (purists can look away now). Great character. Used to take him for walks with a cat harness and long lead. It was amusing in the local park when dogs used to run up to him. He'd arch his back with his fur standing on on end, bare his teeth and hiss at them. He never backed away (I was always ready to grab him and pick him up if things got ugly). Must have been something about the smell or sound of him, but dogs, even large ones, never pushed their luck with him. Owners would come up and say, "Did my dog frighten your... what's that, mate?" "A polecat", I'd reply (he was dark marked like a polecat). They'd drag Fido away, complaining that I shouldn't be in the park with a "dangerous animal".
-
There's something much worse than a music stand and that's a singer peering at a mobile whilst singing. Never experienced it in a band, but have seen it on several occasions. A discreetly placed stand with printed sheets or an iPad on it is one thing, but hiding behind it and making no eye contact with an audience is quite another. I suspect most of young women in those dad rock bands are the daughter of one of the players. I turned up for an audition with one such band some time ago. The singer was easy on the eye and had a decent voice, but most of the material was bland pop. That and the fact that dad was insanely proud of her led me to decline. I could tell that any suggestion regarding the vocals, however diplomatically put, would not go down well. Working with people who are partners carries a similar risk. Regarding the more general point, female rock singers are relatively rare beasts in my experience. Plenty of female soul, pop, jazz, etc singers about, but not rock.
-
This. in my experience, BD has the better selection of stock. As you're contemplating a major purchase, it would be worth (if it's possible) taking a day off work and paying them a visit .They're in Warwick, so not that close to you, but easily reachable by road. I did that a few years back when I went lightweight. If you visit during the daytime in the week, the shop will be fairly quiet and you can try stuff to your heart's content and make an informed decision.
-
As far as I'm aware, BE use stock Celestion drivers. I've seen a couple of their cabs. Traditional boxes. Solidly made and offered in a range of finishes, but little different from any other conventional cab.
-
You keep ferrets?
-
Anyone looking to dispose of a shipping box in Kent/E Sussex?
Dan Dare replied to Cairobill's topic in General Discussion
I sold a guitar on eBay recently and needed a box. I went to my local Halfords and got one that a child's bike had arrived in. The guy asked how many I wanted - they go through dozens of them and chuck most of them in the recycling, so he was happy to give it to me. -
You don't need a finger training aid. You already have one - the neck of your instrument. Just fret with each finger in turn repeatedly. No need to play or even have the bass plugged in. You can sit and do it whilst watching the TV. The tendon that moves the third finger is linked to the one that moves the second, so it has less independence of movement than the others and needs work to develop it.
-
I may be sad, but I still enjoy doing sound. I'm happy to carry my PA (and also to earn a fee for its use). As it's compact and lightweight (class D and neo speakers have reached the PA world, too), it's pretty easy. The heaviest items I own are 2 Fohhn powered subs that weigh a little over 20 kilos each, so hardly a strain for a reasonably fit old geezer like me and I have a trolley. To each his/her own, of course.
-
Me. I joined a busy, established function band with a full diary. I put in (via deductions from my share of gig fees, not as an upfront payment) an amount to make me an equal partner and owner of the band's jointly used gear - PA, lights, etc. It worked out very well. Over the next few years, I got back my original investment many times over. When we split, we divvied up the jointly-owned gear and sold or used it individually.
-
Hardly. We're talking about a situation where you become a full member of a partnership/collective (call it whatever you like), where you receive an equal share of the earnings of said partnership and where, if you leave or it breaks up, you have the right to an equal share of its jointly-owned assets. This can be set out in a written agreement - probably a good idea to do so. If you were in his class and people were knocking on your door to get you to work with them, you wouldn't be on here arguing about buying a £3k PA. And of course, any large, successful act will own several truckloads of jointly used gear - PA, lights, etc, etc, which will have been bought with the money the act earns. Read my previous comments and I you will see I suggest what a singer who plays no instrument should be expected to do (which is to provide a reasonable vocal-only PA - should cost about the same as the amounts you mention that other members have spent on their gear). As for a band needing the equipment owned by individual members for their own use, you are correct. However, a band is not simply a collection of individuals/soloists. So who pays for gear that is needed in order for the band to function that is not owned/solely used by individual members? Many on here seem to believe "Not me, guv". Guess they'll have to stick to playing solo.
-
You are paying to become a part owner of jointly-used gear. It can be done via deductions from gig fees, rather than as a "joining fee". Not your responsibility? OK. Consider this. Band works and spends money to achieve a following, create a good sound, etc. Then their bass player departs for pastures new. His ex-colleagues pay him out his share of the jointly-owned PA. You come along and say "I'd like to join". You audition and they say "Great. You're in if you want it. We have a jointly owned PA which is essential to the band's sound. Would you mind contributing as an equal member to its cost? The contribution will be its value at present, not what it cost us when new". You reply, "No way, man. This is, like, meant to be a collective. I expect to benefit from the work you've already done and the money you've already spent without contributing myself". Yeah. Good luck with that.