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MartinB

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Everything posted by MartinB

  1. According to this recent Andertons video, there are finally signs of life at Burns. I'm very interested in a reissue black Bison bass... but it remains to be seen whether it'll actually (a) happen, (b) be a reasonable price, and (c) be a good compromise beween slavish re-creation and sensible modern update ๐Ÿ™ˆ
  2. My band's first release is out! ๐Ÿ˜ https://ditto.fm/decimator-black-hole-jets

    1. LowB_FTW

      LowB_FTW

      I quite liked that.

      ย 

      Mark

  3. I stuck the cables in what I thought was the right way round, then tested using panned-left and panned-right signals and realised I'd got them the wrong way round However on closer inspection just now, I've realised that the end of the cables actually have "L" and "R" embossed in them! Very difficult to see on the clear ones unless the light is at the right angle. I've done my best to get a picture: The side of the cable with the letter on it should be on the outside, i.e. facing away from your head.
  4. I can understand taking a second banana as a spare, but did you really need a whole box of them?
  5. I bet you could find enough room on your board for one of these... https://sineeffect.company.site/nanoPara-1-band-EQ-p553975571
  6. So just to speak in general terms, and not implying anything about Basschat's security: When you sign up to a new site/service, you don't know whether it's got sensible security precautions to guard against password guessing (e.g. lockout/timeout after a small number of failed attempts). And you also don't know whether your password will be stored securely, i.e. not likely to be leaked and also not easily cracked if it does leak (by being properly encrypted etc.) So as a general rule of thumb, why not do everything you can to protect yourself? - Use a strong password; long and complex is best, but otherwise long and simple generally beats short and complex (see table below) - Use a unique password, so in the event of compromise you'll only have a problem with one site - Use multi-factor authentication, if available Illustrative guide to how it long it takes to crack a leaked password: Terms and conditions apply; your mileage may vary; source: https://www.hivesystems.io/blog/are-your-passwords-in-the-green
  7. I'm not sure 8 characters is still considered "good" in 2023 ๐Ÿ˜Ÿ
  8. These look great! IMO all guitars with dark fretboards should have painted headstocks.
  9. If I had to tune that low, I'd be looking at 35" scale basses
  10. That thick, punchy bass tone just sounds great and works really well for some genres and songs. It's all over 60's and early 70's soul and funk; it's not just a Jamerson thing. I wasn't even born when this was this sound was in fashion, so it's definitely not about age, nostalgia, or analogue vs digital.
  11. That there is a Vintage Modified Precision Bass V. Mine's 4.1 kg (9 lb). That style of tortoiseshell is not my favourite, so I swapped for mint green:
  12. Since I got my Keeley Bassist, I haven't been tempted by any other compressor. It just works, with the absolute minimum of fiddling about.
  13. Ampeg's IR loader software also lets you set a "lo cut" (HPF) and "hi cut" (LPF) for each of the cabs - though the manual doesn't indicate the slope of these filters
  14. Yeah - looks really cool, but at that price it's up against some real big hitters. Still - nice to see new stuff from Ampeg!
  15. The slope (3 dB/oct) is a fair bit shallower than the common ones for bass, so depending on what you want it for, it may be too subtle. Micro Thumpinator 2: 36 dB/oct VONG-Filterung: 12 dB/oct variable and 24 dB/oct below 30 Hz Fdeck HPF-Pre: 12 dB/oct, or 12 dB/oct variable and 24 dB/oct below 35 Hz on the series 3 models Broughton HPF: 12 dB/oct Mini-HP-VONG: 12 dB/oct I'm guessing there's a limit to what can be achieved without a powered circuit
  16. That's the tube channel with: Drive 7 Bass 7 Lo-mid 7 (switch in "up" position) Everything else flat
  17. I've gotta say the tube channel does a pretty solid impression of the splatty sound that I associate with 60s soul. I'm not even using flatwounds here: digbeth tube splat.mp3
  18. Update: 9 months later, I'm still using the DB-PRE. I'm mostly using a core tone that's slightly dirty, with loads of low-mid punch: Digbeth bass.mp3 Tube channel Bass 7 Lo-mid 7 (switch in "up" position) Hi-mid 6 Treble 5 Drive 7 A great piece of kit for the money!
  19. That's a really smart design, and it's great that they did it properly with an IEC cable instead of having a separate power brick
  20. Yeah this is a great trick - especially where something's been down-tuned or played on a 5-string. Adjusting the left-right balance or setting the channels out-of-phase can sometimes yield useful results as well, depending on how a track has been mixed.
  21. It's always a good idea to grab* a local copy of anything that you might want to listen to again in the future anyway. Things vanish from Youtube all the time due to copyright claims, accounts being closed, etc. And they also disappear from Spotify et al, due to (I assume) record label dickheadery. * Assuming, of course, there's no legit way to obtain a copy in your territory in a way that supports the artist ๐Ÿ˜‡
  22. So let's assume you've accepted that Spotify are never going to restore support for ASD, and you're going to have to start using local copies of the songs you want to work on instead of trying to stream them. I really like Transcribe - it's got everything I need (looping, speed change, EQ, transposition, section marking, spectrum analyser). It's absolutely possible to do all of this in any DAW (e.g. Reaper, ยฃ0), but I find that a dedicated app makes for a simpler/faster workflow. For me, the price was affordable, and it's a one-time payment rather than an exploitative monthly subscription.
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