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Staggering on

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Posts posted by Staggering on

  1. I had a bit of a jolt last Tuesday when my cardiologist decided that he should perform an angioplasty and insert a stent in my heart.Until a test two weeks earlier I didn't even know I had any heart problems.It all went well and I spent the night in the hospital.
    When I got home the next day I was feeling pretty good and played my EUB(Yamaha SLB 200) for a while and did a few other things.Then on Saturday(4 days after the procedure) I drove(alone) to a gig about an hour and a half away in the wilds of Northern Ontario and we played a couple of sets that added up to almost 3 hours and then I drove home feeling great.We played well and had a good crowd.
    I have been practicing a lot and although I don't feel any different physically I am having a lot of fun working on new material for both of the bands I am in.
    Just a note to say that I am 71 and have been working full time as a farrier(including last weekend) for the last 26 years,I eat carefully,I go to exercise class,I am a skinny little guy and try to take care of myself and I still ended up with a heart issue-I guess you can't fight genetics.
    Anyway I'm off to a rehearsal an hour away tonight and I'm getting ready for another angioplasty/stent session next Wednesday and then on to more music and more gigs.
    Right now I'm going to plug in my new Traynor SB112 amp(love it-made in Canada!) and work on a few tunes.I am so glad to have music in my life!
    Take care of yourselves everyone... and keep playing, it's good for you!

    Bob

  2. I tried the hand exercisers for a few weeks and found that using them aggravated my carpal tunnel problems so I decided that like Burns-bass I would get more benefit from playing my EUB more and it worked-physically and musically.

  3. Most of my gigs are at least an hour's drive away and I take advantage of that time to get into the right mood for the gig.Since the band members are in different areas we all travel alone and that gives me the chance to mentally run through the sets and individual songs without distractions and make sure I know the material.I am also the frontman/MC for our band so I go over the intros/comments/humour aloud.I may look pretty silly to other drivers as I babble or sing to an empty car as I'm driving but it really helps doing things aloud.I suppose people just assume I'm on the phone hands free.By the time I get to the gig I'm pumped and ready to play and feel more confident that I really know the material.
    This may not be a good idea in heavy traffic but up here in the boonies the highways are lightly travelled and it works for me.

  4. [quote name='owen' timestamp='1506618414' post='3380009']
    Bob. What dates will you be in the UK? This is as easy a way as any to decide a date :)

    Ooooh,that's pressure!
    Two choices:April/May to catch the lovely British spring or September.Having been in the UK at both of these times I had fabulous weather and avoided the summer tourist crowds.
    No plans to visit any area in particular so now it's your turn to pick somewhere that will be interesting for me and convenient for you folks.

    Bob
    [/quote]

  5. I am thinking about another trip to the UK in 2018 and would be interested in attending a bass bash-I've read about them and seen the pics on here.I play a Yamaha SLB 200 and have been a member here for a few years and an event like this would be a real high point in the trip so keep us informed re date/location,it sounds like a great time.If I actually get there it could be described as an "international" bass bash.
    Hats off to the organizers!

    Bob in Canada

  6. My first gig was 56 years ago and I still remember the nerves, the thrill, the fun-especially the fun.
    And it is still fun because every gig is different and each one is still sort of a "first gig" until the music starts and the band kicks in and the whole world is the music-go for it and have a ball!If it's not fun make it fun or find another band.

  7. I was trying to be a bit clever.I had just migrated to the EUB world having bought a Stagg EUB and as I'm getting pretty ancient and was having a hard time trying to play upright I thought it was appropriate.I have since sold the Stagg and moved on to a Yamaha SLB200 and now here I am Yammering on.
    Sorry...

  8. [quote name='PaulGibsonBass' timestamp='1503677332' post='3360277']
    My comment was in reaction to someone saying that the suggested double bass wasn't suitable for rockabilly.

    I didn't realise double basses were genre specific, any more than a bass guitar is.

    Are they any good for metal?
    [/quote]


    Somebody please say yes(re metal) and let the good lines roll.....

  9. [quote name='PaulGibsonBass' timestamp='1503669146' post='3360179']
    I don't know much about them, isn't a double bass a double bass?
    [/quote]
    Now you've done it!That's like a double bass player saying "aren't all those bass guitars the same?"Let the fun begin....oops,I see Dad has started already...

    Maybe you should also post on the EUB and Double Basses forum.

  10. I tried the test again today, four days after my first go.This time I used decent speakers connected to my MacBook and my ears went backwards in time to the 40-50 bracket(I was at 61 the first time).Is there a device that can do that for the rest of my 71 year old body?

  11. 61 in ear age,71 in real(?)life.Hmmmm....I wonder how accurate the test is.
    I guess all those years of playing in bands,blacksmithing(anvils are loud),chainsaws, lawnmowers and power tools are really getting to me.Maybe I should get rid of everything but the music from now on and save what I have left.

  12. [quote name='Happy Jack' timestamp='1501426220' post='3344584']
    [url="http://s1128.photobucket.com/user/h4ppyjack/media/Just%20Stuff/Music%20and%20Musicians/Cutout_zpsfk4hq2l8.jpg.html"][/url]
    [/quote]
    I didn't realize you played lefty, everything else looks the same,dapper as usual.

  13. I wonder if she can work from chord charts.Our classically trained keyboard player does that very well since she has a thorough knowledge of theory and has learned to "go with the flow" when things go a little sideways in a song.The hard part is getting her to relax and listen to the music instead of only reading it but she is a huge asset to the band.I'd definitely give it a try, nothing to lose.

  14. [quote name='Happy Jack' timestamp='1500967670' post='3341303']
    Fascinating! I always thought that song was far too hip & cool to have been written for Peggy Lee. I wasn't sorry to hear the last of Captain Smith & Pocohontas either ...
    [/quote]

    The original song didn't have the part about Romeo and Juliet and Captain Smith and Pocohontas,Peggy Lee wrote those lyrics for her recording and it is debatable if it was a good idea or necessary.It always sounds a bit odd to me.

  15. [quote name='Happy Jack' timestamp='1500901206' post='3340928']
    And, by a weird coincidence, I shall be playing Fever (complete with key changes) at the Ealing Jazz Festival on Saturday.

    :)
    [/quote]
    And I will be playing it at The Raven and Republic (restaurant/music venue) in North Bay Ontario Canada on Wednesday as part of their jazz night.I'll be using my Yamaha SLB200 EUB but will not be changing keys(singer's choice).Great song for bass and the Peggy Lee version has a simpler bass line than some(a lesson here?) and is at a faster tempo than most people expect, she keeps it moving.
    I'll be watching for that video bluejay.

  16. I played guitar and banjo in bands until I was in my early 40's and then got asked to play bass in a band who had lost their bass player.I bought a bass and learned a few basics(I can read music) and pretty much jumped right in and learned on the gigs and a few rehearsals.Thirty years on(I'm 71) I'm still playing in a couple of bands and gigging up to about 4 times a month and I am still working at my job more or less full time as well as gigging and rehearsing.I play EUB most of the time but still play some bass guitar.
    Go for it, it can take you down a wonderful road!

  17. https://youtu.be/oysMt8iL9UE

    Henry Mancini's theme from the old Peter Gunn series,I don't know if it was available in the UK but we watched it here in Canada and every budding guitar and bass player tried to play it.The best version is the one that was used on the show but everyone from the Ventures to Duane Eddy had a run at it.

    ...and yes,I managed to get some of the notes on my first guitar when I was 14...ooh that was a long time ago...

  18. I guess I'm a bit of a "belts and braces" guy and always worry about things.I play my Yamaha SLB200 EUB in our jazz quartet but I always take along my Yamaha RBX750A bass when we play gigs.It's easy to carry around in its Fusion gig bag and is quickly available(tuned and on a stand) if anything goes out on the EUB.I've never had to use it but EUB's are a bit more delicate than the average bass guitar and having a spare bass just gives me peace of mind.I'm just packing both of them into the car right now to go to a gig tonight.

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