A lot of tunes you will find the note for note bassline only properly grooves if the rhythm guitar cops it right on. Drums also. As soon as one of them wings it you can forget about note for note.
Generally it takes the guitar player to get with the programme and then the drummer will fall in.
Once upon a band jam both my feet left the ground simultaneously. There is no other way to describe it. I didn't jump, I was lifted up by the music. I can't fake that.
Challenge accepted.
I have played a few weddings but I don't consider myself all that flash as your average wedding band bassist.
Playing straight quarter notes perfectly is a lot harder than it sounds. Walking at the same time ramps it up some too.
About 180BPM for me. It's right there on the chart! If I was to set to 220 I could probably mash it out leaving out the twiddly bits.
That'll work so long as
1 the aforementioned cone breakup isn't required.
2 the amp isn't one of the new breed with classD power stage tuned in breakup. Some cabs can be rewired to 16ohm to help out there but I wouldn't bet on it solving the neighbour problem because those amps are all 600 to 1000w afaik.
As an early morning brain exercise I am putting my non electrical third eye to work to build the chocolate block crossover. Through the fog I think it requires 4 screws each side?
I used to play violin. The rosin dust got on the violin and strings and had to be wiped off before putting it back in the case. The rosin dust that got on the carpet stayed there until the next vacuuming so I guess 99% of it is still stuck to the carpet? Pro players tend to live long lives so it can't be very toxic.
My teacher had a little bottle of some expensive cleaning cream that would take off built up rosin without harming the finish. We only used it once to clean up my vintage inherited instrument that Grandad hadn't cleaned.
Deluxe Sansamps do that. One advantage is you can have a different volume level set to go with the loop on in the patches.
I used to run:
1 clean.
2 effected unity.
3 effected and boosted.
The fx are separately toggleable on off but revert when the patches are changed. So a clean boost was also on tap.
I still had an EQ because the Sansamp has a baked in mid cut that can't be fully eq'd back in with a cut to bass and treble.