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TrevorR

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Posts posted by TrevorR

  1. http://www.talkbass.com/threads/cheap-wal-mk3-5-string-repaired-neck-player-bass.1205096/

    Just spottted a bass being sold by a guy I know through the various Wal bass chat rooms at a knock down price. Yes, it has a story attached but he's pretty much gone full disclosure in the ad. He's a known collector in the Wal world but got a bass in a sale without realising some of the neck issues that it had when sold, anyway... May be of interest particularly to some of our stateside brethren.

    For info, I've got no connection to the sale or to Mike other than occasionally shooting the breeze online about our fave brand of bass. Hope that someone snags a bit of a bargain.

  2. [quote name='MoJoKe' timestamp='1454602097' post='2971263']


    If he's like most MB users, most of them won't even be plugged in, or it'd be way too loud! You wouldn't hear the bike for bass...
    [/quote]

    Yeah, I was trying to workout the impedence load on the MB, but I'm pretty sure he'd have to be running it at less than 4ohms... Which of course raises questions about the longevity of his power amp...

  3. This is where those "one finger per fret" left hand fingering exercises will pay dividends as they will minimise the need to move hand position...

    But then again, embrace the pure joy of punctuating a line with a huge glissando up the neck and down again. Having just gone the other way it's the thing I probably miss the most!

  4. Yeah, ZingZillas is a top show and another fave. I recall a while back a "how low has Stu fallen?" thread about that. However, when you look at their roster of muso guests it's quite an exalted group. From Nicola Benedetti and Julian Lloyd Webber to The Gossip to BJ Cole, Cleo Laine and Johnny Dankworth, Sharon Shannon and Evelyn Glennie (if my memory serves)... Oh, and the Hawkins Brothers! Each show focuses on an instrument or a genre or an aspect of music. Plus, forget Glastonbury, Live 8, the Albert Hall, I'll bet that if you're a muso with preschool kids, ZingZillas Island is simply the coolest gig you've ever done! Period!

  5. Having a 5 year old you end up watching some funny old stuff on the telly. Latest from CBeebies is a show called Go Jetters. Designed to teach kids a bit about world geography it features four cutesie manga style adventurers who travel the world in a spaceship. But here's where it gets a bit interesting... They are led by UberCorn, a disco unicorn with the voice of Huggy Bear and the sparkly disco jump suit of Travolta!

    And boy, does this show rock! Or rather it funks and discos with all its might! The sound track is the perfect cheesy pastiche of 70s funk and disco. The theme tune channels the theme of the Linda Gray version of Wonder Woman, all big Philly strings and horns, wah wah guitar and funky bass... Plus it features the vocals of the wonderful Sharleen Linton. Goodness knows what they were on when they thought up this show but, it must have been some good stuff.

    And when you get to UberCorn's Funky Facts there's some pretty cool slap bass going on! The music is by Banks & Wag. Worth a listen.

    Anyway, git your funk on to this...

    http://youtu.be/REBUEe3mtXo

    http://youtu.be/WDvVRH6bq3Q

  6. It's funny, somehow I feel I'm kinda programmed to say "Well, Entwistle, of course." but actually, when I look at my listening habits it is Squire's playing I keep going back to and whose playing I most enjoy. Throughout his career he was playing melodically interesting lines and riffs across Yes' various styles. And always with an incredibly tone. Entwistle was, of course a phenomenal player, a huge influence on many and a bass innovator. However, particularly later in his career that clanky, trebly live tone he adopted was all but unlistenable (better on studio recordings, thankfully).

    When I listen to the Who I tend to listen to the overall band sound and, actually, the bass is one of the least important elements to me - certainly not in comparison to Townsend's guitar, Moon's drums or Daltrey's vocals. When I listen to Yes I tend to appreciate all the parts of teh arrangement but my ear does keep homing in on Squire's playing.

    So for me it's Squire by a very long (Rickenbacker) neck.

  7. Definitely chromatic, esp if you're doing non standard tunings. The non-chromatic will tune to standard guitar notes E A D G B. The chromatic will show you which note the string is playing and how in tune it is. I didn't know theystillmade non chromatic.

    The other two tuners to checkout are 1) the Polytune (my personal fave). Good stable tuner, well designed and clear display. And 2) the Boss TU series. I think the TU3 is the latest model. Not as clear a display in my opinion but still very good. This was my fave until I got a Polytune.

    Both excellent, robuat pieces of kit that will probably outlast you! These two alongside the Korg Pitchblack are probably the three market leaders.

  8. For me I think that whether a bass is cool (to me) or not is largely aesthetic and visual - and as such is irrational, inconsistent and purely personal. There are many basses I think are cool that I would never play as I find them uncomfortable or for one or another reason they just don't work for me. For example Ricky 4000 series basses. Love them, can't get on with them but till terribly cool. Thunderbirds, cool. Non reverse TBirds deeply uncool.

    I would probably find it easier to define elements that rule out coolness for me than define a cool formula... So Laklands bridges, modern style single cuts, really over extended upper horns, probably more than five strings and definitely more than 6, multi wood/colour fingerboards, never seen a Warwick I thought looked cool (their aesthetic just doesn't do it for me)... And a random host of others I'm sure.

  9. I guess for me it al depends on how you and the drummer are going to work together in that situation. If the drummer plays his fill as usual at the end of bar 8 and lands back in for the verse or chorue where he's supposed to then you'd do that together. If you think that you and he can have the eye contact and intuition to make a 9 bar solo work seamlessly then that's the way to go...

  10. [i]"When Charvel first started, I went out there and saw a bunch of nice alder bodies, and I hung them on wires and tapped them until I found the one that really resonated. So I took that body to John and we made a bass out of it. It's kind of my Frankenstein.[/i]

    [i]"I've got first-generation EMG pickups on it. Also, I have two sets of Precision pickups, and I have them where Jazz pickups would've normally gone. But I reversed their position, which totally evens things out. In redoing the neck, we had to strip the frets off, and we ended up replacing them with mandolin wire, which is very small fret wire. We didn't know if it would work, but it turned out great. So that's been my main bass since about 1983."[/i]

    I've often wondered how Lee Sklar's Frankenstein Bass apporach would work... replacing the standard fret wide with the thinnest gauge mandolin wire you could find...

  11. Hope you don't mind me posting here. A sort of Wal-based tribute to the late Jimmy Bain over on the Wal Bass History Blog...


    [url="http://walbasshistory.blogspot.co.uk/2016/01/wal-pro-ii-bass-review-by-jimmy-bain-of.html"]http://walbasshistory.blogspot.co.uk/2016/01/wal-pro-ii-bass-review-by-jimmy-bain-of.html[/url]

  12. Been watching this series on iPlayer... Music Moguls: Masters of Pop, 2. Melody Makers: www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/p039x53y via @bbciplayer

    Don't think that there's anything I've not seen before but it's a really diverting watch.

    First episode is Simon Napier Bell talking about the iconic music managers of the 60 and 70s etc. And then number two is about producers, with Nike Rodgers hosting. Great section where Visconti takes you though the multitrack of Heroes...

    Definitely worth checking out...

  13. So my wife's acoustic guitar looked like this when I pulled it from the case the other day...



    Scarf joint is slowly giving up and the string tension was slowly pulling the joint apart. Should be eminently fixable. Anyone know a good repair in the Surrey area they would recommend. I don't know if Guitar Guitar or Andertons they regularly use? I suppose could take it to Paul at Wal but it would be a pain getting it to him and collecting it during the week. Anyone else to check out?

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