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Doctor J

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Everything posted by Doctor J

  1. Ah, I was looking at that one. Great bass for double the £360 it went for.
  2. Get some Freddie King, especially Burglar which is a sublime mix of Texas blues and 70's funk. Early ZZ Top cannot be faulted either. John Lee Hooker's 70's output is pretty cool too, lots of extended boogies. It's not all about 12 bar, you know. Albert King was fantastic too, guys who played songs rather than just solos and always had excellent bands behind them. I don't "get" Joe Bonamassa's blues. I've listened to several albums but he just leaves me cold. Not strictly blues but if you want to hear slide guitar played with unreal skill and melodic sense, check out Sonny Landreth, he'll have your jaw on the floor.
  3. [quote name='mcnach' timestamp='1340185568' post='1700486'] I don't think they're criticising you for having more basses... I think you read it that way because your subconscious feels guilty. You need to liberate yourself. How? Buy a LOT more basses. That will teach your subconscious!!! [/quote] I don't feel guilty at all. I'm just trying to help those who feel guilt to see the light
  4. If we're actually honest with ourselves, there are very few of us here who couldn't do everything they want and need to do on a bog standard Jazz bass and, I put it to you, that even owning more than one is an induglence. Why are people who have two or three applying a stigma to having more than that? At a push, you could say there could be a need for fretted and fretless but saying you [i]need[/i] a Stingray tone and a P bass tone is a bit much. Just get more if you want more and enjoy it, don't think too much about it, just play them
  5. Doctor J

    N(o)BD

    Oil or wax is fine for maple. It has a wax coating, just like countless maple bodied and necked Streamer basses which have done ok since the 80s. It won't stay spotlessly clean like your average Fender entombed in poly and the likes, but it will be protected enough and I don't like the feel of a glossy neck anyway. Having spent a few days getting to know this, I must say I really like the electronics package. It could use a blend pot and I can't see myself ever using the bright switch, but I've really warmed to it in a short space of time. I would heartily recommend one of these for anyone who likes slapping, it has a perfect slap tone.
  6. Do a full edit of the first post and you might/should have the option there.
  7. [quote name='Jimryan' timestamp='1339950029' post='1696647'] I knew I forgot to mention something... If I can, I'd like to avoid a blend pot as I can't stand the things. Cheers for the suggestion though :-) [/quote]I've spent the last few days getting to know a L2000 and the one thing I'd change is the selector switch, I'd love a blend pot in it. Different strokes for different folks though On the positive side, the sound out of it is pehnomenal even without one. Possibly not as versatile as legend would have you believe but the pickups and EQ really work well together and are very responsive to how you play. Take it easy and it really cleans up, dig in and unleash actual thunder. I like it a lot.
  8. ProTools continually writes and reads to the disk your sessions are saved on. It's pretty intensive. If your operating system is on the same disk that can cause problems because your OS continually writes and reads it's system disk too. Hence, a disk dedicated to ProTools is a good idea. You can use USB but they don't officially support USB drives anymore. Ideally, you want your external disk to be as fast as possible, a USB powered one doesn't sound like a high-performance disk to me. Try it, but be prepard to invest if it doesn't work out.
  9. If these are your criteria [quote]something with lots of thunderous, rattly bass, plenty of clarity and trebles that sing, but can turn aggressive if required[/quote] I'd say transplant the electronics from an L2000 into whatever you're building and you'll be set. Maybe change the pickup selector switch for a blend pot though
  10. Why sell it now unless you're immediately stuck for cash? It's only going to appreciate in value and, in my opinion, basses are there to be played, even old ones. It might be something worth keeping to help your organisation out in a time of need in the future.
  11. The main problem I found was narrower string spacing for my right hand. I think that, unless you're using the extra string, there is no point playing one. 4s , IMO of course, feel better in hand and I wouldn't have that extra wood in hand unless it was going to be used. I've never met a floppy B that a .135 string couldn't fix.
  12. I played one of these in a shop, it was rather good.
  13. I dig that colour. It is very gloatable
  14. It's definitely a looker. Nice bass.
  15. Doctor J

    N(o)BD

    Cheers fellas. I better move on to getting a life now.
  16. [quote name='Wooks79' timestamp='1339796595' post='1694727'] [quote name='Louis.m' timestamp='1339796380' post='1694720'] Please, please, go out this weekend and meet people in real life. Come out of your Internet lives [/quote] I love everytime you say this... On the Internet! [/quote]I preferred that song coming out of the Beatles, to be honest
  17. Your sitting their, drinking beer. They're beer, not you'res.
  18. [quote name='Louis.m' timestamp='1339791735' post='1694569'] Get a life doctor Jh [/quote]You selling? How much?
  19. Doctor J

    N(o)BD

    I picked this up from the US for about the price of a Tribute. It's an early 90's L2000 body which was mated with an early 80's SB2 neck. The neck had been stripped, looks like it was painted black at some point, stripped badly again and had a bad nitro finish applied. It wasn't in great shape to be honest, the seller was a little liberal with the description and it had 20 years of crud all over it. I spent many hours yesterday sanding the crap off the neck, both the crap nitro and the remnants of the black still on there. On the positive side, it's a great feeling neck and straight as an arrow, but this accounted for six hours of my life. Luckily, the pain of the defeat against Spain distracted me from the pain of several grit phases of sanding. The nut was broken so I installed a brass nut I had to hand which was a perfect fit, also did a fret level, crown and polish and finished it with the same wax my Streamer is finished with. It feels great now. I stripped and cleaned the body and parts too, had to replace the barrel jack and mismatched knobs and, after a good set up, it turned out real nice, real nice indeed. It sounds amazing, definitely something fans of Warwicks should investigate if they haven't already. Of course, being an early 80's neck means it has been in the room with Leo, which means its [size=5][b]+++AWESOME+++[/b][/size]
  20. You got your asking price plus postage and you then go fishing for higher offers? Bunch of arse.
  21. I've come to accept that I'm a bass nerd. I get great enjoyment out of the little differences, out of the different design philosophies, the differing concepts behind the different basses I have. I love them all, just in different ways because they're all different interpretations of the instrument I have a passion for. I don't see the point or nobility in rationalising having just one. I am comfortable having more than one bass. It's great, to be honest. I spent many years with just one bass, which I still have and that's great too. Tell me this, is your life going to be any worse off for having the JV as well as a kick ass Streamer? Hell no. Do you think the day might come where the raw power of the JV will excite you just as much as the finesse of the Streamer is exciting you now? So why think about moving it on? Some days only the JV will do, some days you'll just need the Streamer. Smile at how great your life is and learn to live with the burden.
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