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spongebob

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Posts posted by spongebob

  1. I always enjoyed Andy Partridge on Twitter, after it being suggested on here to follow him.

    I know he's got a history of being banned from various newspaper's discussion forums - and, following a bust-up Twitter, he's now removed himself and content from there as well!

    The Dave Gregory interview I posted last year (above) is a really good watch. Gives good insight into the minds of the band - and their relationship with AP. He seems to have fallen out with everybody!

    I was never a big fan of the bands' later material, but it's still a shame that post-XTC, it all went a bit quiet for them. I'd have enjoyed an AP solo album, for example. Appreciate he did odd bits, but it's no wonder he's kind of disappeared under the musical radar.

  2. 1993, Sunn Mustang P-bass copy.

    Used a small Marshall for a while, but my first 'big' amp was a Trace 715 SMC. Time I got the amp, I'd 'upgraded' to a Squier Jazz bass copy!

    Both came from Flying Pig. Think they've long gone - always had good deals and prices at the time, IIRC.

  3. My Ricky is primarily a tool - but given how it sounds, and it's a little modded, it's my tool - and it's the coolest tool in any box!

    It's been my only bass for a while, I'm not into having others, been there, done that.

    Not precious about it getting the odd knock, that's life. When I stop playing, I'll probably just case it under the bed anyway! 😀

    • Like 1
  4. Don't use them at the mo.....though may do soon again.....but I love Fender flats.

    Played them a lot before - really like the tone and feel, best flatwound for me. In fact, when I returned to rounds last year, it was a struggle...hence, I've been really considering going back to them again! 

  5. I've always liked the idea of this.

    Trouble is, nobody I've ever plated alongside has had a PA with enough bass - I was always advised that, unless the PA has subs, it won't work!

    That could be a load of old you-know-what - I'd love to know the truth! 😀

  6. It is bad. I agree 100%.

    Bands like The 1975 represent everything that's gone wrong. Blandness on record, repeated onstage to the letter. It's like audiences can't handle any rough edges. 

    Takes away the point of live music. Where's the rawness, spontaneity.....and the decent acts? 

    • Like 1
  7. Worth checking out is a great live album, The Word Is Live. Lots of stuff from the classic years. 

    For fans of their version of America, there's a 16-minute tour-de-force on there. Squire is on fire throughout, as we all expect! 

    • Like 1
  8. 6 minutes ago, BassTractor said:

    That sounds like the 1991/1992 Yes "Union" tour to me, unless of course Anderson, Bruford, Wakeman, Howe had a lot of guests with them on tour with their evenings of Yes music, which was slightly before that.

    Just checked the ticket and Google - June '91 - you're spot on! 😀

  9. They really were great from the start to Drama - that, and their debut are both great albums that tend to be a little overlooked.

    Best for me, I'd also say Relayer. I reckon it's their strongest - by a slither - as Close To The Edge is pretty flawless. 

    Relayer for best album, CTTE for Squire's best tone!

    I actually saw them (1991?) 'An Evening Of Yes Music Plus' from memory. It was pretty much every member who'd been in up to that point (except Peter Banks). In the round, there were a lot of people on that stage. Very good gig, they opened with a long 'Yours Is No Disgrace', my fave Yes tune - so I was rightly hooked from then on! 

  10. Couple of thing for me.

    Band I was in around 2012-14 recorded an EP with the late Bernie Torme. Of all the recordings I've done, it's by far my favourite. It was just one of those magic days - drums sounded fantastic (always my normal complaint, people can't record drums anymore), my bass tone was right on....we did it live in the studio, warts and all. Bernie was awesome (next band I was in recorded with him as well), and the 4 tracks are something I'll always treasure.

    Pity nobody bought it......! ☹️

    Other one was playing a festival gig to around 4,000. My biggest audience ever - wasn't my band, I was depping.....but what a confidence boost to play it, and maintain that feeling of 'I'm actually getting away with this!' 🤣

    • Like 1
  11. I was a drummer from 11, but a family house move a few years later meant that there was nowhere to set up the kit.

    As such, and wanting to still be musical, it was a case of 'what do I like'? That was easy, besides drummers, I loved Lemmy and Geddy Lee. 

    Choice made, and  here we are 27 years later! I have returned to the drums for a few occasions (the odd gig, but very out of practice now) but from the moment I switched I was a bassist.

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  12. Woodstock was certainly a massively impressive line up. 

    Some of my faves....the Paul Butterfield Blues Band, Hendrix, Grateful Dead, early Santana, The Who....all played awesome sets. 

    Can't wait to watch the BBC show. Also recorded stuff on Sky Arts as well. 

    I remember the big celebrations of 25 years of the festival, back in 1994. 25 years back from then for me was waaay back (I was 20 in '94). So to have even that 25 years ago now, is a very scary thought! 

    I didn't live through it, but the festival line ups of that era were mind blowing. The IoW 1970....Hendrix, Miles Davis, The Who....wowzers!

  13. 19 hours ago, sykilz said:

    Just rewatched Rush in Rio live dvd for first time in ages because of this thread. Firstly....Geddys voice was so much better then ( not a criticism as we all age and his vocals are crazy, but listen to R40 and the poor fella is really struggling), secondly....THE SOUND.....yeah, thirdly... what a great set list, a bit of everything and little tastes of all the Rush flavours. Happy.😊

    Great bass tone on it as well - divides opinion - but I love it! 😀

    • Like 1
  14. Doesn't sound that cheap, TBH, especially at this moment in time.

    Are the older Italian, or newer Indonesian ones? Makes no odds in my experience, but may help you determine the age a little better.

     

  15. 58 minutes ago, Bassassin said:

    Easy. Test For Echo. Hard to find a single redeeming feature - leaden, Rush-by-numbers instrumentation, awful, cringeworthy lyrics, Geddy mumbling away, sounding bored to death. The whole thing (uniquely in their career) stinks of contractual obligation.

    I suppose the artwork's quite nice.

    I'm not sure which career point is lower.....'Dog Years', or 'I Think I'm Going Bald'! 

    I agree, TFE is probably their weakest overall. I still like most of it, though! 

  16. 6 hours ago, hiram.k.hackenbacker said:

    For me, this is like choosing which child is your favourite. I love 'em all, although I probably play Caress of Steel the least.

    New thread idea.....your least favourite Rush album!🤣

  17. In my opinion? Yes. 

    Last 24 hours I've listened to Hendrix, The Stooges, Johnny Thunders & The Heartbreakers.....can't think of anything this century that comes close. I'm a rock, soul, jazz fan. 

    Today.....souless, sanitised....I think there was a turning point around the early 00's.

    And I'm in my early 40s.....so wasn't around for so much 'classic' stuff at the time.

    Last week I put on Miles Davis Live At The Filmore. 49 years young, and more of a challenge/immersive experience than is possible today. Sadly. 

    • Like 1
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