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FDC484950

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Posts posted by FDC484950

  1. This is an underestimated subject. It’s one of the main qualities that separates a good bass player from a great bass player (or musician). Control and consistency over every note you play takes close attention and quite a lot of work, but as you nicely demonstrated, the result is music rather than a racket :)

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  2. Canadian Dingwalls have the best B string I've played by a long way, and the most consistent feel across all the strings. The issue with other basses is with a long scale length for all the strings. I've played 2 different Fodera Anthony Jackson Presentation basses over the years (now well over £20K!) and the G and C sounded really thin and tight, being stretched to 36". Same applies with Overwater Progress (it was also 36").

    I've also played quite a few shorter scale basses with a low B (including ACG, Shuker and Fodera) and in every case the B string was clear enough for the first few frets but quickly lost real definition. Dingwall often sound very ordinary at first because hearing a properly consistent, even range of strings sounds wrong as both our ears and hands are attuned to hearing something different. I nearly returned the ABZ I bought last year for that very reason, but I stuck with it and I'm very glad I did. It's passive with series/parallel toggles and it is so versatile and organic sounding. The only downside is that palm muting is virtually impossible due to the angle of the bridge.

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  3. 1 hour ago, 4000 said:

    Well I agree that The Gallery’s website needs work, but I’ve been going there since 1996 and have yet to have a bad experience (yes, I know others have had). The thing is, The Gallery is not just a shop, it’s also the main calling point for most of London’s - and elsewhere, given I’m up North! - bass repairs and customisation. Most of the times when I’ve been over the years, it has been incredibly busy. 
     

    Given the choice between dealing with BD and the Gallery, it’d be the Gallery every time, by an absolute country mile. 

     

    I’ve had several very poor experiences there, which just goes to show that threads like this might make people feel better to get things off their chest, but don’t really serve any useful purpose. I’ve had plenty of excellent and very reasonably priced repair work done on my basses in the last 10 years and none of it has been done by the Gallery.

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  4. It surprised me, but from my conversations with them the vast majority of BDs customers are either not on Basschat or don’t post here actively and couldn’t care less about online forums (shock horror!)

     

    Really big multi billion-pound companies like Virgin Media, who can afford to employ entire customer relationship departments, have appalling customer service - I wonder if the common thread is a captive audience with few alternatives open to customers?

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  5. There nothing wrong with opening an old thread - In many cases it’s far better than starting another thread and I’ve come across some great info on revived threads.

    Just prior to Christmas I opened about 15-20 threads that were all bumped by different people, all of whom appeared to have joined, just to bump an old thread. It was a bit odd, and in several cases pointless because they were asking the OP a question when that user hasn’t been on BC for years. From a quick search this is the only post any of these new users made. I gather BC wasn’t the only music-related forum where this happened, hence me asking on another thread whether it was some kind of weird spambot.

    And whoosh! if this is what you’re all joking about - I couldn’t see through all the sarcasm ;)

  6. Bought a bass off Michal. Very securely packed - bass was protected inside the hard case and the case in a solid cardboard box - and got it posted very quickly. And the bass is exactly as described and works perfectly. I would not hesitate to buy from him again. 

  7. MM do make me laugh with their naming conventions - a series of US basses called Sterling, then a cheaper range of basses called Sterling, none of which (now) is the same design as a US Sterling ;) 

    I’ve tried a couple of the cheaper Sterling models and they’re fine instruments, but didn’t feel quite up to the quality of finish (or weight) of the current range. Sound was pretty much indistinguishable (US ones were a touch louder and punchier, but very little in it). You used to be able to snap up a US Stingray for well under £1K but prices new have crept up over time.
    I seem to have become a bit of a brand snob over the years so only like the “real” thing now (and I prefer The US Sterling so don’t have a choice, anyway - but if they made a Sterling, er, Sterling then I’d certainly consider it).

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  8. As I understand it, the VB is made mostly from hardwoods (koa?), which would account for the weight. I played one once and it sounded great, but not quite the same as a classic jazz bass. Is it just weight you’re looking to lose? A Japanese Sadowsky should be good quality, and the Will Lee is the only model with any mid control, which doesn’t bother most as they prefer the scooped sound of a jazz. There was until recently a 5 in GuitarGuitar (might have been a German one, but IIRC it was one of the last Japanese ones) and it was over £3K, so €2199 sounds good.

  9. 1. Don’t noodle. It’s a waste of valuable learning time and helps reinforces old (bad?) habits. 

    2. Always play music. It doesn’t what you’re learning, make it a piece of music. No-one listens to a performance where someone is practising, we listen to music. Make everything you play musical and every note meaningful

    3. Learn new things - new styles, songs, ideas etc.

    4. Concentrate on things you can’t play, break them down, slow them down and build it up piece by piece (also see point 1 - noodling is often playing things you already know).

    5. Don’t kid yourself you understand  something or you’ve got it down when you haven’t. If you can’t play it purely from memory without stumbling you don’t know it well enough.

    6. Good time fundamentally comes from within but can only be improved by playing with other (better) musicians.

    7. Allow yourself to fail and to learn from failure by getting to the root cause for that failure. In fact don’t even call it failure - call it experimentation.

    8. Whilst there are many approaches to technique, simple physics dictate that there are better and worse ways to fret and pluck notes. There’s load of info online - go with what feels comfortable for you and give you the sound you want - but aim for a sound where the bass is strong, clear and precise and makes the band sound great. I’ve seen some bass players on gigs who are sloppy, have poor time and make a band sound worse. It’s not hard to not be that bass player :)

     

     

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  10. It’s an extension of system like the MM Big Al, with individual switching system, just with a lot more combinations. TBH I’m quite surprised at just how different the settings sounded - I heard at least 6 very usable sounds and I love the versatility of my Big Al. I guess the market for something like this is non-existent, given that apparently all any bass player needs is a P bass :)

  11. Many bass players get a 6 to play chords on. I took a different approach and just thought of it as a regular bass with extended range. You’re really limited to 3 note chords due to the low register, unless you use two handed tapping (and then it’s more like a Chapman Stick than a guitar so the advice might be different), and far fewer options with voicings.

     

    You don’t say whether you’ve had a 5 before so I’ll assume not. Get everything you play today and explore playing it with the new range. Play lines you played on the E string in the B, and stuff higher up on the G, transfer to the C. The quicker you stop thinking about a 4 string plus 1 extra string each side and see the fretboard as a whole the better. I found not swapping back to a 4 for a few months really helped. 

    One potential issue is that the vertical range is so big that many players get stuck playing in one position. Break out of that by playing one octave scales and intervals over two strings so you get to move up and down the neck horizontally. 
     

    In terms of literature I would just get some jazz standards, learn the melody then record some chords and try writing down and learning the solos, you can prep for this by playing chord tones all over the instrument to get used to that extra range. Something like Musescore is great because you can just put chord symbols in and it’ll play them back on piano (albeit not with the best voicings). Jamey Aebersold book/CDs are an alternative. I’d imagine there’s a ton of great videos on YT but take a look at players like Anthony Jackson, John Patitucci, Todd Johnson, Steve Bailey, Alain Caron etc.  

     

    Finally, pay attention to your technique. There’s a lot strings more to keep quiet and the wider fretboard can put extra stress on fretting and plucking hand.

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  12. 16 minutes ago, fleabag said:

     

     

    I had a parcel go missing after using brokers Interparcel, and using My Hermes as the courier.  Interparcel refunded me within 5 days of contacting them.  Just a couple of emails each way and it was sorted


    Did you do the lottery that night? You must have been feeling lucky to have emerged from a MyHerpes transaction unscathed ;)

    To be fair Interparcel did cough up for me a few years ago when a motorcycle screen I thought was in bombproof packaging (and apparently made of unbreakable material) was destroyed by the courier in transit. They asked for photos of the delivery (probably to claim back from Parcelfarce) and paid out in about a week. If I were sending something £1,000-plus I’d be more nervous.

  13. 11 hours ago, Hellzero said:

     

    Don't you think that we have brokers over here in Belgium, @Kev and that taking me for a fool is some kind of stupid sectarianism ?

     

    Really astonishing patronising behaviour, especially from a moderator !

     


    Something lost in translation there Mr H. Nothing even slightly controversial in @Kev’s post. 
     

    Here in the UK buying a service becomes a contract between buyer and seller. Therefore your first and only course of action when there are problems is to go to the seller. However, it all becomes a bit murky when they’re a broker of other services (like just about any kind of insurance). You think you’re reading the broker’s terms and conditions when booking, but it’s more likely to be either the courier’s, or a combination of both. In the case of a missing or damaged parcel, you may have put £500 cover in and paid for it on the broker website - but it doesn’t mean you’re covered as it depends what the courier offers, and also what items they offer cover for. There are some very slippery terms and conditions in broker contracts.
    This is why I never, ever use companies like Parcel2Go or Interparcel for anything of any significant value.
    Paradoxically when posting basses, signing up with an account directly with UPS offers the same services for far less than Interparcel, genuine transit cover (but make sure the bass is in a hard case and boxed) and your contract is directly with the courier (I pay with credit card too for an extra layer of purchase protection in case things go wrong, not sure whether I would actually have a claim but it can’t hurt).
    The other option is of course separate transit cover, but that’s usually significantly more expensive. 
    I guess all courier services are fine until something goes wrong…

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