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Passinwind

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Posts posted by Passinwind

  1. On 05/08/2018 at 05:30, Dad3353 said:

    I got 'hooked' on the beauty and richness of the music I was listening to (Surrealistic Pillow, Anthem Of The Sun, Piper At The Gates Of Dawn, Da Capo, Fairport Convention ...), and it was just the right moment to catch the rising crest of the hippy movement. It's remained with me ever since, and is very unlikely to ebb, now. No longer 'fashionable', but then again, I never was, so... 

    Same here, but then a few years later the jazz bug really hit as well. I could just as easily have gone with guitar, but in my first band we all also tried bass and drums, and the two primary singers found they did best on lead guitar and drums...go figure.

    • Like 1
  2. Three: one EUB, one fretless four, and a recent acquisition that actually even has frets, for the first time in 35 years. It's also my first five string bass to boot. Only got that one for testing onboard preamp builds, but it's been getting played quite a bit more than the ancient fretless four I sold off to make room for it was. I have one electric guitar as well, same one for about 20 years or so. I don't really get much GAS for instruments.

  3. 1 minute ago, Silvia Bluejay said:

    Oh, there's a lot of choice when it comes to 'thin' uprights. I also have a cheapo Harley Benton and an NS Design NXT 5-stringer. The Eminence had been a GAS of mine for a while, just because it's more of a small double bass than an electric upright, and they build lefty models. The BSX looks good - do they do lefties? Their Q&A page doesn't say. :)

    I've seen a few on the Interwebz. My BSX is an older stick model, but it's still hollow, has a faux bout to rest on my gut,  and at least it doesn't use one of those awful tripod stands. Out of the various EUBs I've played the Yamaha Silent Bass I tried at NAMM a couple of years ago felt and sounded the nicest, but it's very expensive and pretty much just as clunky as a real one to pack around. I've been playing a friend's AUB at a local house  jam most weeks for the last 18 months and, as expected, the urge to make room for a nice one at home is pretty strong these days.

    The Gollihurs are great people to deal with; very knowledgeable, good prices, and no BS.

     

    • Like 1
  4. 5 minutes ago, Dad3353 said:

    T'wasn't the booze so much (my tipple is Earl Grey tea, with a twist of lemon...), it was the regular, quality gigs I was appreciating..! Cheers, though; here's to you and yours. :drinks:

    The booze was actually a bit of a problem as time went on, that venue and many others expected the band members to have a full glass of something upscale in plain sight (on their nickel of course), and to be conversant in the whole culture. We would often see bikers loading multiple cases of wine into their saddle bags or trailers, and a pretty crazy amount of consumption on site. My wife watched them ring $14K in under an hour on just one cash register at one show. But in any case, having regular block bookings like that is especially hard to come by for old school jazz groups in a non-urban market out here. And as so often happens, it was all about who I knew, not how great the band was or wasn't. Although holding a gig like that is a lot different from getting it in the first place. Yel_wink.gif

    • Like 1
  5. 1 minute ago, Reggaebass said:

    That’s Impressive   I think that beats my back street reggae clubs 😀

    I thought about posting a few of my favorite dive bars too, actually. There used to be one within easy walking distance that somehow conned world class bands into playing a 100 seat venue in a tiny logging town on a regular basis. I worked sound there for those shows a lot too. But the main attraction was a clientele that genuinely appreciated weird original music, and an owner who was on that plan as well, and knew how to make it work.

  6. 2 minutes ago, Dad3353 said:

    NWiYcgU.gif

    There are quite a few other really nice ones around here (Washington red wines are a thing these days), plus a couple of dozen small breweries. But driving along the river on a weekend morning on my way to those gigs was always a pretty special feeling. And the owners made it even more special with personal tastings back in the special reserve tanks and the like.

  7. I used to play this winery right above the Columbia River (http://www.maryhillwinery.com/) a few times a month for several years. It was perfect for my jazz trio and the owners and staff were super nice to us. Their wine is first class too, so for years I had a really nice stash at home. And we got to do tasting room pre-show stints before Bob Dylan and ZZ Top, with a few thousand people coming through before they made their into the adjacent 3000 seat amphitheater. This gig paid OK but not great (regular local scale plus a few bottles each, and pretty good tips), but it was one case where exposure really did pay off. All I had to do was tell other venues that we played Maryhill and that was typically enough to get the gig if the style match was workable. Good hours too, usually 1-5 PM, w/ four45 minute sets.

    MaryhillWinery_aerial.JPG

     

    MaryhillStage.jpg

     

    The place next door wasn't too shabby either (http://www.maryhillmuseum.org/) :

     

    Maryhill_Museum.jpg

     

    View from back:

     

    Maryhill_Museum_2.jpg

     

    Mostly we played arts festivals there, out on the lawn with a great family atmosphere, cool food booths, numerous juried art vendors, and good advertising in the big city markets like Seattle, Portland, and Vancouver. If your band made the promo poster as a featured artist you could leverage a ton of mileage out of that. I think we managed that three years in a row.

     

     

    • Like 3
  8. 4 hours ago, Dad3353 said:

    There's no problem with discussion about Rickies, but they are not permitted to be offered for sale in the Marketplace, as this site has been threatened with potentially damaging legal action if any ads are of fakes. As it's impossible to know if any bass offered is pukka or not, no Rickies at all are allowed. The owners of the make are to be thanked for that.

    Which is doubly bizarre given that Talkbass is chock full of ads for used ones.

  9. 1 minute ago, fleabag said:

    Looks like it's the money option. Delicate soldering is not my bag either     O.o

    Nordstrand would be another option then, and G&L also sell one IIRC.

    I figured that since you were contemplating DIY work on the woodwork you might also want to at least look into a DIY preamp solution. I think the last MM knockoff I built cost me less than $30.00. But electronics come easily to me and woodwork...nope!

    • Like 1
  10. 2 minutes ago, discreet said:

    Wow! You have your own amp brand?

    Not exactly. I have my own casual engineering services brand, and I have built around half a dozen proof of concept amp builds to showcase my work, along with quite a few other things. That amp was in a luthier friend's NAMM booth in 2017, and a different version was there this year. The one in the pic does ~650 watts at 4 ohms and weighs about 9 lbs. or so.

    • Like 1
  11. 26 minutes ago, mcnach said:

     

    that sounds like a good idea. Generally it's mostly the mids where I want to adjust things on my bass, and the passive tone control is a good way to get me a "starting point" in my general sound. I rarely touch bass or treble on most onboard preamps.

    I've long toyed with the idea of combining a passive tone control (for treble rolloff) with the mids-sweep module from John East as a simple two knob solution. In fact, you could mount volume and passive tone in a dual pot, and mids/sweep on another... Useful for Precisions and the like. 

    Yep, lots of people have asked me about doing a swept mids section and that would be easily done. However, that's something I personally prefer doing as a fully parametric thing at the amp end. It's funny, nearly everyone tells me they never touch an onboard bass control. I could very happily have just that and two volumes...vive la difference!

  12. On 03/06/2018 at 09:15, Saved said:

    I like more the passive basses.

    One tone and this mostly full closed.

    One on-board preamp i would like to try is the passinwind.

     

    Hey Friend,

    If you're talking about my two band preamp, it will most likely end up being branded as Marco Bass under a licensing arrangement. It does use a standard sort of passive treble rolloff control in both passive and active modes, and the active section does bass and mids rather than bass and treble. My personal favorite that I use in my daily driver bass omits the passive treble, since I typically never turn those things down at all anyway. Or_wink.gif

    And as always, I should reiterate that I have no hardware to sell, I am just an aspiring freelance designer looking to transition from long time hobbiest/DIY'er to maybe making enough to buy a few pints one day.

     

    • Like 2
  13. 18 hours ago, Al Krow said:

    Roger Daltry thinks rock might have peaked with The Who’s fifth album "Who’s Next" in 1971. “Pete [Townshend] was so far ahead of his time, people are still catching up.”

    If 1971 was the year when things started going down hill for rock music then that means that there were more great bands playing and great albums written before 1971 than after.

    Do you agree with him?

    I do think that the Who peaked then in many ways. I also feel that many rock bands peak on their second or third albums, give or take. FWIW, I was 18 years old in 1971 and by 1974 I had pretty much lost interest in rock music. That interest has returned and then ebbed and waned over the years many times, but for me Who's Next is not something I've listened to or thought about for quite a few years.

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