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Shaggy

⭐Supporting Member⭐
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Posts posted by Shaggy

  1. [quote name='ped' post='274513' date='Sep 1 2008, 01:53 PM']Crikey, what will you have left?[/quote]
    My first thought too! Have you sold off your old penguin avatar too?
    I bought a Listerud Totem 7 off Elros a couple of years back, and can confirm he's a smashing guy to deal with, as well as being irritatingly virtuoso-tastic on ERB's. Shipping from Norway proved to be doddle, even at Christmas, and NO customs / import / VAT duties to pay. Good luck with the sale - just hope you don't regret it! :)

  2. [quote name='CHRISDABASS' post='274206' date='Sep 1 2008, 06:51 AM']where is the love??

    i dont like all this bullshit!

    whats the point in dissing everything??

    ive owned most of the basses mentioned and i believe each of them has their place! if we all played one type of bass it would suck!!

    at the end of the day we as bass players and people are all very different and our gear choices reflect how we express our differences!

    if you like and are happy with your gear then it doesnt matter what other people say!

    personally i couldnt be happier at the moment! i feel very lucky to have what i have!

    :)[/quote]
    +1
    If something gives you pleasure, it’s worth whatever it costs.
    Everybody elses’ stuff is overrated. :huh:

  3. [quote name='mxm' post='273948' date='Aug 31 2008, 06:46 PM']+1 for Shaggy and the SVT300 power amp - it's the business ![/quote]
    Shw'mae fella!
    You would say that, you used to have one uncannily just like it! It's a beast alright. What's the mighty Ferrari badge adorning these days? :)
    Re the noise; I'd read the same thing although mine is really quiet, problem was occasionally the stock valves I think. Also as with all Ampeg gear, worth looking for the older US-made ones if only for resale value (although the valve gear still may be, not sure).

  4. Brynamman RFC, S Wales - The first gig in over a month I've not had to unpack / pack in the BLEEDIN' RAIN!!! A proper "summer" night at last, everyone outside talking and drinking, great vibe in the air, then the dance-floor bouncing once we were on. Bizarrely, the speed knobs on my RD Artist started glowing bright purple, realised there was a UV light over me. Good gig AND a suntan! Bargain! :)

  5. [quote name='Rayman' post='273146' date='Aug 30 2008, 02:10 PM']Did someone say mojo'd Highway 1s?



    Great basses, and I wouldn't mind a P to go with my jazz.

    Nice P indeed.[/quote]
    Cool sticker - where did'ya get it???? :)

  6. Excellent bit of kit, you probabaly know it's identical to the pre stage of the SVT II-pro; 5 valves altogether and if the graphic EQ is switched out there's no solid-state circuitry in the signal path at all. I always check the reviews in "Harmony Central" when potentially buying gear - take a look. Variable "drive" control is lush, used sparingly adds a nice harmonic warmth, or if unsubtly up to full dirt. Should work with any decent rack power amp, really - I use the SVT-300 (power stage of the SVT-II) just because I'm a bit of a valve purist but never really push it hard enough to make a difference; all the tone / EQ colouration should come from the pre.

  7. [quote name='jimbartlett' post='271070' date='Aug 27 2008, 03:17 PM']T-Bird on the right is no longer with me I'm afraid :)

    What are you looking for on the Mesa cab?[/quote]
    Shame! :huh: It was a very long-shot offer, not really looking to sell the Mesa - guess it's worth around £300-ish - but £300 in the hand is soon earmarked by Mrs Shaggy for a new patio etc and I've lost a rare and truly superb back-up cab, whereas £300 against a nice old bass is a nice old bass forever. The logic is chicken-hearted, but undeniable. Anything else? - I see you've got an RD too, don't suppose you've got one in sunburst or black? (love your taste in basses by the way!)

  8. I knew it…...I knew I’d see this here before long! What’s the longest you’ve ever kept a bass, Shockwave?
    As the original progenitor of this beastie (before other projects took over – after acquiring an OLP3 to “learn” on whilst I was building this I soon realised I would remain forever faithful to 4) I can confirm that short of putting a graphite neck on this you’d be hard pressed to find better components or a nicer body than this anywhere at any price. Also, apart from the small stuff (from Allparts), all sourced from BC members! The angled ouput jack on the rear plate was inspired by a Listerud I once had, and is a brilliantly simple and ergonomic system.
    Rob and his luthier have made a fantastic job of completing, and someone’s going to have an absolutely unique top-end bass for bargain money, so BUMP :)

  9. [quote name='Bassassin' post='267713' date='Aug 22 2008, 11:10 AM']I picked this up from a pawn shop for buttons a few years ago, with a view to a bit of Ebay profiteering. I'm not proud:

    [attachment=12515:CSLoriginal.jpg]

    However, even with rotten, dead strings, misaligned bridge, banana-shaped neck, and 25 years of filth on it - the moment I sat down & played it - [i]everything[/i] felt right.

    I've owned & played some really nice instruments over the years, but this thing has something indefinable that nothing else does - and it's my no. 1 bass, and now looks more like this:

    [attachment=12516:CSL2008.jpg]

    If I had to sell the lot & keep just one, it would be this, no question. :)

    Jon.[/quote]
    Ah, now you’re talking ……..back perloid (I did the same with my MM Sabre) and ‘80’s crème DiMarzios– you just don’t see enough of it these days! Absolutely love it!

  10. I play in 2 covers bands; one has an OK drum machine and the other has a seriously good drummer. I find playing with the drummer FAR easier and more natural - night and day difference - but I've no idea why this should be! Part of it down to sheer audibility (is that a proper word?) when live, but certainly not all.

  11. [quote name='bassicinstinct' post='266114' date='Aug 20 2008, 10:18 AM']I have an early 70's Gibson bass - well gigged and considerably upgraded over the 30 years + I've owned it - which I decided to advertise for sale here last year.

    Mercifully, there was little or no interest in it at all.

    With the benefit of hindsight, I'd have been mortified if I actually had sold it. :) :huh:[/quote]
    Makes you believe in fate, doesn't it! I seem to move on new-ish basses, can't seem to bring myself to with the old ones.

  12. EvilLordJuju is the one to ask about this, but being as even a modern Epi copy would cost that 2ndhand you can't lose. Grab it!

    Mid-60's ones seem to go for around the £500 mark - either because they're totally undervalued, or not very good basses depending on your point of view! (tone is pure mud) The EB-3 a much better bass.

  13. [quote name='NancyJohnson' post='265533' date='Aug 19 2008, 02:23 PM']You know the weirdest thing about the TB is understandably my overriding memory of how heavy it was.

    It looked beautiful and was incredibly stable, never went out of tune, infinite sustain (which was good, but when you're playing a lot of notes each bar, sustain doesn't come into it!).

    The pickups weren't very adjustable; there were allen bolts through the back of the body, but they pretty much did nothing other than anchor the pickups/body/neck together. The original bridge was pretty chunky/clunky and I put a BadAss on when the guy changed the fingerboard. Prior to the bridge change, the bass had through-the-body-stringing. The holes never quite matched up, so if you had a tendancy (like most poor musicians) to boil up your strings, it was terrible trying to re-string it with used strings.

    I have no recordings or anything that I know of. Sure I remember it sounded OK at the time, but nothing special. I've mentioned here a few times that I've always been looking for a Rickenbacker type clank and I never got anywhere close to that. Soundwise I would say (from memory) that I sounded more like a phat version of Peter Swivel (of US 70s metaller Starz) rather than say, Mick Karn.

    Given the choice, would I get another one? Yes, but only for the novelty of having one. There are dozens and dozens of better basses for the money. If I did try and find one, I would probably go for one of the later models - perhaps serial numbers 400 or above - Travis Bean altered the body shape slightly - the wings were wider and they just looked aesthetically nicer - or if one came up, maybe one of the dozen new prototypes that were made about five years ago, which are [i]incredibly[/i] saucy.


    If you're looking for a Bean, there's the Travis Bean resource site - google it. There's classifieds, a forum etc. There's also tone of photos!

    Hope this helps.
    P[/quote]
    Thanks - always really useful to hear from an actual owner/ex-owner. Haven't put me off, I still want one!

  14. [quote name='NancyJohnson' post='265211' date='Aug 19 2008, 08:44 AM']Not trying to hijack the thread, but this [i]was [/i]fretless for a while. The original board hadn't adhered properly to the aluminium in a couple of spots, so I had an ebony board put on (and a BadAss bridge) by a luthier based in Kingston (he was a British Airways engineer and made baroque instruments in his spare time. Let's just say he knew glue!). It was later refretted by Dick Knight.

    It was a beauty, would be worth a small fortune now.
    P[/quote]
    Again, not trying to hijack this thread, but what was your impressions of the bass otherwise? Seem to have a warmer, woodier sound than a Kramer. Lovely basses!
    I'd liked to have met your luthier - I also play the lute (badly)

  15. [quote name='NancyJohnson' post='265179' date='Aug 19 2008, 07:50 AM']A Travis Bean 2000 series bass #222.

    I lost interest in the bass and part-exchanged it for an Ibanez Roadster. Read that last sentence again. Part-exchanged. I gave up my TB and gave cash to acquire an Ibanez Roadster!

    I still think about that TB once or twice a day.

    P[/quote]

    Damn, feel your pain on that one – I’ve been looking for a fretless one (in fact any one) for around twenty years!
    Only one lost bass love really – a mid-‘80’s Gordon Crook custom fretless (know nothing about him except he was Somerset based), very similar to a Wal Mk 1 in shape and feel, other than being neck-through. Sold her for virtually sod all at some low point when I’d given up on bass, still miss it.
    Also a nice original ‘70’s Orange valve head , traded for some nasty Laney thing ages ago before I understood you actually had to change the valves now and again.

  16. [quote name='wateroftyne' post='264419' date='Aug 18 2008, 10:31 AM']Well - the *real* prized Fender body wood - the swamp ash and alder they used in the 50s - is cosmetically as dull as ditchwater.[/quote]
    True, but they do age to a nice "butterscotch".

    The other advantage of natural basses is that they pretty much match any strap/stagewear ( :) prententious? moi?)

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