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Soledad

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Posts posted by Soledad

  1. 1 hour ago, SubsonicSimpleton said:

    it would seem that the primary market for expensive vintage/collectors instruments is mostly middle aged and older people with money

    absolutely right I think. I used to be actively into classic cars, and you can tell who's buying by the period of cars peaking. If you grew up lusting over an E Type, you'll buy one in your 50s or with your retirement pot. The money is in the buyers who are typically 50s - 60s. So work back to what they grew up lusting for and you are currently back to say 70s/ early 80s. In 15 years time it will likely be different.
     

    • Like 1
  2. Part of me frowns on it, the other part sees absolute sense. I collect Swiss watches, so why not instruments?
    With super-low interest rates, volatile stock markets heading towards another top-out, taxation on pension incomes, etc etc - having a folio of objects that grow in real terms is very smart. Tax free returns, plus the benefit of actually enjoying while you have them (a la Cetera).

  3. On 30/03/2019 at 16:55, Romeo2 said:

    My guess is they underwound their MFD  pickups

    Interesting - it's a key point I think. So the L has a passive/active, the M doesn't and (probably) can't. So are the Tribute pups different on the L & M? 

     

    On 29/03/2019 at 09:27, Woodinblack said:

    I wanted an M2500, but ended up with an L2500

    Have you played both? and is there a real difference in native (flat, say) sound?

  4. Found this by accident. Suzi Quattro talking about her basses:

    “I’ve gone back to Fender; as you do when you get older, you come home. I take two Jazz basses on the road. The neck is a tiny bit slimmer for when I do my solo.

    “I use the Precision in the studio because the Precision is the only bass that exists - and I mean the only bass that exists - that you can plug directly into the board and it’s perfect. The thickness of the wood, the shape of the body, and that thick neck, and shame on you if you play that bass with a pick. Shame on you! I never mastered a pick; even when I tried it, I didn’t like it. I like the sound and the feel of the skin of my fingers plucking those strings. It’s magic. You have so much texture."

    I love that coming home quote. Don't agree re pick, but otherwise good stuff. I've heard this a lot over the years - the P drops into the mix like it was made to fit.

    Having gone back to a Precision myself recently there is a thing I notice and I don't think it's my imagination. A lot of slim-neck basses suffer from that dead spot somewhere around B to D. My Precision doesn't (maybe a tiny bit but not significant). I'm sure it's the thicker stiffer neck causing that resonance to reduce and maybe shift. I believe Lakland put graphite rods in the neck to counter this.

    off topic - once owned Suzi Qs Mercedes 280SL, that she'd bought from Mike Chapman. Cool car, that ;)

    Back with pics of my '97 P soon, it's settling in very nice. And my Trace Twin Valve has been located and will be got back soon too.

    (sorry, rambling now)

     

  5. Don't know if anyone remembers the old Dan Armstrong graphic head. I got an early one (at considerable cost) - absolute disaster, could never get a useful sound at all (P bass). I then discovered he'd done a solid state pre and valve power. I believed at the time you want the valves in the pre so you can control overdrive, then use a clean power amp to get up to level.
    I think it's generally right though to just see who uses what and how they sound - according to the reputations I should like Trace (I do), Ashdown (don't know ), Ampeg (I do)... you get the idea.

    Here's the 'thing'

    DA.jpg

  6. Absolutely as new except for a very small graze on edge of top lower bout. I will try and add a pic of this but it's hard to get it to show.

    Currently fitted with D'Addario 45 - 100 rounds (very nearly new). New Duracell Pro batteries and all good to go. Been set up with care, I have action set low, slightly snappy.
    I've heard comments about the tuners - they just felt a bit dry when I got the bass, a very thin wipe with vaseline makes them quite silky.
    This bass is absolutely stock - many users matt down the back of neck (as per Gen 2) but I'll leave that option to the next owner. It does have straploks fitted.

    If you don't know the V7 it deserves its excellent reputation - amazing for the price, so a mint used one at this price should be quite good !
    I find the narrow Jazz neck is not for me (I grew up on old Precisions) and I recently got a '97 P which is my go-to.

    The bass is offered bare (no case) but a brand new Sire gig bag is optional. They are £60 and it is new, so £50 (I'd very happily keep the bag so it's optional).

    View and play here (Sevenoaks) or I can get it to central London, will consider driving say 40 miles to meet.

    I'll try and add a pic of the mark on side but it is really not noticeable.

    Straight sale, no trades.

    mm1.jpg

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  7. Just for the sake of sharing experience - what I've tried, what might work, what doesn't etc...
    I mentioned above about practicing without looking at the fingerboard - nothing to do with any md54 'rite of passage' but it's a really interesting thing to do. We're making music and one sense that we don't really need is sight. If you just look away I think your attention to pitch accuracy is more acute. Also it forces you to concentrate more on what your left hand position feels like. I just think it's worth a try (and a bit of tenacity).
    I do wonder if the main reason I look at the fingerboard is habit - that's how I learned from the very start cos I had to. I also stir my coffee clockwise - at least some of all this is just deep-rooted habit.
    Re vibrato and slides I said forget them - I don't mean for all time, it's just I think that developing fingering for pitch accuracy is more important early on - the artistic use of slides and vibrato can be added later 'to taste' as it says in the cookery books.

    This is a good thread (in the main) for us fretless pretenders (haha) - just wanting to share some things I have tried.

  8. Nice to hear of a Twin valve user ! I'm hoping to get mine back soon (from a mate).
    There are a lot of variables here, but the first thing I think is perceived volume is frequency-dependent and the mid-range apopears to us to be loudest.

    The basic sum is diaphragm (cone area): pi. r . sqd (can't find the symbols on my Mac) - so the area of a 12" is approx 700 cm sqd (each). A 15" is about 950cm sqd. So for a given diaphragm amplitude the 2 x 12 will beat a 1 x 15 by a good way. The 212 will sound louder anyway as it's punch is at a higher frequency than the 15" (probably, again all the other variables will affect this).

    I'd expect a 212 and a 210 to be really good with a Twin Valve. I've had a few Trace combos wiith 15" in, and the speaker is the limiting bit by a way. I once hooked a 410 onto it and it was really loud but I wasn't sure the onboard 15 was contributing very much - i think the Hartke 10s were more efficient so doing all the heavy lifting.

    The easy thing would be borrow a decent (efficient) 212 and disconnect the onboard 15, run the 210 and 212 and see what happens - my guess is loud and ample bottom end. IIRC the Twin valve has only one speaker output so you may have to faff a little to connect the 2 cabs but there should be a way. I suppose they both need to be 8ohm too.

    Love the Twin Valve - not many around and they were way more expensive than the GP7 combos at the time, but what a sound !! 

  9. 2 hours ago, Jakester said:

    The neck on my M2000T was much slimmer than on the L2000 I had

    Just researching here...According to G&L site M2000 NECK PROFILE: G&L 1 5/8" Medium C with 9 1/2" radius

    Any owner of an M2000 able to confirm this please? I have a hunch I may acquire one someday next few months and I like the 1 5/8, I'm no fan of the 1 1/2 (it's just that I grew up with an old P 1 3/4).

    • Thanks 1
  10. 7 hours ago, paul_c2 said:

    I've played lots of instruments and if you were to have an arbitrary easy-hard scale, it wouldn't be that hard

    Totally agree. Midway through my bass life I broke off to study and play flamenco - for difficulty I would personally mark that 5* (out of 5) - the great players were born into flamenco families and started when they were 6. We have kids at school given a violin or 'cello to learn - they aren't scared of the fingerboard. OK it may not be pretty at first but where did all the orchestral standard strings players start?

    So, regarding fretless there's sound advice here to check your fretted L/H technique for precision (pardon pun), forget slides and vibrato - work on accuracy. And one of my favourites - look away, turn off the lights, play blind. It does come.

    Playing on pitch doesn't make you a great musician, but the great musicians have had to put the work in to make the sounds they hear in their heads. There's no magic or particular gift - it's just graft. (all IMHO of course).
     

  11. 21 hours ago, la bam said:

    The M I have has the following:

    1. X1 master volume.

    2. X1 pick up blend.

    3. Eq - hi.

    4. Eq - mid.

    5. Eq - lo.

    It is permanently active.

    Has anyone done a passive bypass pull mod - I mean (on the M) swap out the vol for a Warwick-style volume pull and send the pup signals just through volume and pan so you get a passive 'raw' output?? Wonder if it can be done, partly because I fancy an M2000 if one comes up somewhere, some time (I'm not chasing the one on eBay btw, just so we all know).

  12. If that flame is in the wood it's amazing!! And I assume it is. I've seen that odd crazing on MIJs before - it's not wood movement because it doesn't follow the grain flow, but it does seem like the finish kind of moved on top of the wood.
    Don't know, just a guess. Could maybe be related to the rather thick finishes the MIJ basses seemed to have.
    Fine bass at a v good price I reckon. Not for me but v tasty indeed.

  13. 2 hours ago, md54 said:

    .....you're not a fretless  bass player. 

    I guess that is a harsh truth, but it doesn't mean you can't be. I don't think Jaco or Pino were born with some enhanced motor skills us normals just don't have. There was a time when those guys couldn't play.
    I've found some good tips and insights here - it's a hill to climb and there isn't a top (I think Andy Summers said approximately that once).
    My cup's half full and I enjoy the climb.

  14. I've been getting confused about L and M. On the 2000 the M seems to have the 5 pot EQ, the L 3 pot plus 3 switches. Is the M discontinued? No sign in retail that I can find, or on G&L site. The L has active / passive switch, the M is active only. Is this right? 

  15. 4 hours ago, bigsmokebass said:

    f they made passive basses on the tribute series and without breaking the bank or being a Fender J/P imitation

    Totally agree, if the Tribute 2000 could just have a passive pull on the vol that would be great - not one of those fiddly little switches. I think Warwicks have the passive pull, and my Mayones does, really tidy and quick. One reason I'm less keen on the US 2000s is the row of switches.
    I really like the M2000 all over but in particular the EQ looks very tidy / logical.
    There's one on the Bay at the moment - £113 but destined to rise a good bit I reckon. Wonder how many of us have snipes on that one :)

  16. 7 hours ago, Geek99 said:

    I found a substitution of the no-load pot quite effective

    Pardon, que ?? 
    I plan to run my Precision absolutely stock, but i'm interested.
    Been listening for what may be a bump in the high-bass (almost low mid) as per chart above, around 600Hz, 4dB which is quite significant. Although I don't know if the response curve above is P specific or just a generic low-pass cct. 

    generally I have always just turned both full clock and sorted what I need at the amp. Maybe I need a valve head... ;) 

  17. There's a lot of good advice and tips here - I've played fretless off and on for many years and it took me a while to figure out why I was often a tads sharp. Placing the centreline of my fingetip 'correctly' is a little sharp because my finger is a lot thicker than fretwire ! So slightly back and all is good.
    Personally I really dislike lined fingerboards - tried one once and it just put me off and caused the problem above.
    I have sometimes played/practiced in dark rooms - I really recommend that because it forces me to listen to pitch rather than look at it, and I think it helps develop muscle memory - the holy grail even on fretted but essential on fretless.

    One other thing maybe - find a fretless you like and stick with it. How it sits against you, neck profile etc all inform your muscle memory. Switch basses and some errors creep in. OK- you adjust and fix them but feeling at one with your chosen bass does help a lot I think.

  18. It's this thread in particular that prompted me to hunt dowm my Twin Valve combo - amazingly not too hard. I got it new, gave it to Mike, he got divorced so it's in store in Cheshire. Never been gigged. Hopefully it's coming back to me. May need a 210 to go with it. I do remember it sounding the VFDB ;) Looks good too, all metally on the front, tasty.If I get it back i'll post pics.

    • Like 2
  19. 41 minutes ago, ikay said:

    a passive tone control acts as a low pass filter

    Thanks ikay - so it is just a simple low-pass. Running at T10 all the time is not really affecting the lows, except that hump on T0 at around 500-600 is odd, looks to be about 4dB.
    I guess that's just some kind of circuit phenomenon and may vary from one circuit to another.- but I'll have a listen for it.
    But generally I'm OK doing as ever before, 10 and 10, eq at amp.

    Notice you're Horsham - just picked up a '97 P from Horsham on Sunday ;)

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