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Boodang

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Posts posted by Boodang

  1. On 24/01/2024 at 13:23, Rich said:

    I would love one of these. I have no gig for it at all, and don't envisage a suitable one any time in the future, so it would basically never leave the house. But I would love one anyway.

    image.png.dc6b21c7d0039779f5ef4adcb30eacc4.png

    I have a CR4 which initially I bought just for a laugh but have ended up using it for so much. Once depped for a mate in a Hendrix tribute band and much to the consternation of the guitarist I used this! It ended well tho as it was quite the novelty but it's actually a very versatile sounding instrument. 

  2. 11 minutes ago, fretmeister said:

    Interesting! I might have to try some.

    Don’t quote me but I think they are the only synthetic core BG strings on the market. I can best describe the feel as flexible and ‘buttery’. And they are not too dull in their treble response. Be very careful when handling them, they are not delicate in the least when under tension but they are easy to damage straight out the packet. 

    • Like 1
  3. The 'physical-ness' of the bass guitar is one of its primary challenges. Make sure you're giving yourself the best chance with the correct technique (Dan Hawkins on youtube has some good tips). No one really has hands big enough to stretch on the first 5 frets, so it's just a case of getting comfortable with it. As said previously, use the DB style technique and not one finger per fret.... and don't get lazy with the pinky!

  4. 27 minutes ago, adriansmith247 said:

    Who would take a £2000+ bass out on a gig? 

     

    I certainly wouldn't but it is all relative as someone has already pointed out. I regularly take a £2000 value double bass out to gigs. It's the only one I have so I don't have much choice there. With DB you have to spend more usually to get a playable instrument. Fitting a new bridge, a pickup and a new set of strings can run into over £800

    Who would take a £2k+ bass to a gig?…. Apparently you would!!! Or don’t DBs count as a bass?! And way more delicate the a bass guitar. 
    But I jest of course! However, I agree with others… I can afford an expensive bass and I’m not going to be precious about it. My basses get used and abused and gigged, scratched up, beaten up and if they’re lucky I might polish it occasionally. I don’t buy them to just look good!

    Thinking of my last gig, our bass player borrowed my EUB and sei, I had my top of the range Yamaha ekit, xr18, foh speakers and cables, and even my synth… gigging is an expensive business, or at least it can be. 

    • Like 1
  5. I play drums in a couple of bands. So, for jazz it's an acoustic kit but for everything else (covers, blues and a power rock thing!), I use an electronic kit (Yamaha DTX6K3-X).... and it's awesome!

    Pros & cons obviously but overall it's great. No sound on stage other than monitors is the biggest thing to get used to and yes, it does look like you're playing 'my first drum kit'! But.... I'm getting a consistent sound out of the PA, I've got a choice of kit samples to choose from to best suit the song/band/venue, and I'm not going deaf as I can control the volume far easier (which is also a great plus for small venues where you can go full smashy power mode and be as quite as a church mouse!).

    One of the things I found over the year and half I've been using the ekit is that you have to get into editing and eq'ing the kit to make the most of it live. I have various presets of each kit depending on the venue and PA I'm going through. So a full PA system with bins does not have a problem reproducing a standard Yamaha 'absolute' kit but for smaller systems I've eq'd the kit so the emphasis is more on the mid punch and click of the bass drum, less resonance on the toms, plus keeping the decay on cymbals a bit shorter I find helps clean up the things. Also, I use sample stacking a lot, so my BD is a 22" and 18" combined, and I've done similar for the toms. My HH has a setting on the half open where I've introduced a bit of tambourine so it cuts through more. Lots of thing you can do with an ekit that are obviously impossible with an acoustic.

     

    We put everything through a Behringer XR18 and IEMs, so much appreciating the lack of onstage volume. Takes a bit of getting used to but overall a plus for me. 

     

     

    • Thanks 1
  6. I remember paying £1500 for my custom Sei back in the day. I think what I find most depressing is that Warwick are now charging for a bolt on what they used to for a neck through, and the NTs have gone through the roof. 
    Still, the advent of quality mass produced cnc’d basses are most welcome and my fav bass is my Squier jazz. 

    • Like 1
  7. 1 hour ago, adriansmith247 said:

    I remember looking at a second hand Wal bass for £1,500 thinking that was an insane price (late 90s) 

    now you don’t get much change out of £15,000

    Wal… the most overrated overpriced two pieces of wood to ever be bolted together. Not that I have a strong opinion about them or anything. 

    • Like 4
    • Haha 1
  8. 2 hours ago, tauzero said:

     

    You obviously need to swap your 5-string Sei Flamboyant for a 5-string fretted Warwick Thumb, which I happen to have just here.

    Ah, the Sei is so beautifully made I've hung it on the wall as a work of art!

  9. 1 hour ago, tauzero said:

     

    I've only got DBEs on one of my headless basses. One of the Seis can take either DBE or conventional, and I've just moved to conventional so I can put nickel 40-130s on (it's fretless, so I thought I'd try nickels to reduce fretboard wear).

    I've got a headless Sei and found a quite a few normal strings that can't be clamped, including LaBella and D'addario nylon wrap, TI jazz and Galli Synthesis. Basically anything a bit delicate just unwraps under tension if you cut and clamp. So I'm restricted to DBE or strings with sturdy windings.

    What I'd like to do is get a headstock fitted to the Sei but everyone I've approached says it's not possible. 

  10. On 14/01/2024 at 05:59, ambient said:

    I'm wondering why they didn't buy a proper headless bridge/tuning assembly and do it properly.

    The string angles through the bridge are dire but doing it ‘properly’ means double ball end strings only and massively limiting your string choice (in theory you can clamp strings but not all strings like that, TIs in particular). Doing it properly in this case probably means a headstock!

  11. 1 hour ago, GrimUpNorth said:

     

    I'm sold on that idea.

     

    I looked on the Design-a-cable website, and found this - https://www.designacable.com/mogami-ultimate-3368-guitar-cable-all-neutrik-1-4-mono-jack-types-low-capacitance.html which I'm guessing is the one you mentioned.  One question, whats the difference between the silent and gold (aside from price).

     

     

    Yep, this is the cable I got, and I’m thoroughly pleased with it. Go for the gold, the silent stops the jack shorting out but it has a very limited operational lifespan, so in my opinion not very practical. 

  12. 4 hours ago, Cliff Edge said:

    I have SR900 and always used flats to good effect. Currently TI Jazz Flats, but they are a tad expensive so you may want something else. Unfortunately there are many to choose from, but I’m sure someone will be along shortly with alternatives. Good luck, you got a bargain. 

    If you go for flats then you can't go wrong TI Jazz. A tad expensive but worth every penny. I also use Galli Synthesis strings, slightly less bright but the only bass guitar strings on the market with a nylon core, so has a very unique, flexible feel. 

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