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mike257

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Everything posted by mike257

  1. I was going to post about the J/MM combo in my Sandberg jazzer but the above poster has more or less said word for word what I would have. I'll just chime in to say that it sounds bloody brilliant and is versatile enough to deal with any of the various genres/styles i've thrown at it across a bunch of different bands.
  2. P Bass, SVT, job done. My old guitarist knocked around with Tord a bit, were next door neighbours for a while. Nice chap and cracking player. His pre-Wombats band Auden Prim were ace too!
  3. I'm about to embark on an IEM adventure with my 5 piece function band. I've gradually dragged them into a decent PA setup but monitoring is still an issue. We're going to go wired as everyone is tied to a guitar cable/keyboard/drum stool anyway, so I'm looking at rack mounting a 4 channel headphone amp for me, singer, keys and bassist (I'm on guitar with this crowd) running to a [url="http://www.thomann.de/gb/fischer_amps_mini_bodypack_mit_lsregler.htm"]Fischer Mini Bodypack[/url] each - this is an in line belt clip unit with a passive (attenuation only) volume control. This means we can set a max comfortable level at the amp then we've all got the ability to adjust mid-gig without going too far and taking our heads off. The drummer can have a single channel headphone amp sat next to him, no need for the Bodypack there. Think we'll be funding the above kit from band gear kitty but everyone will pick up their own IEMs so I'm fully expecting to see a set of iPod earphones appear from at least one of them! Just read through the whole thread and there's tons of useful info, particularly on earphone choice. I've been planning to get some moulded plugs for sound engineering work anyway so got another reason to invest now!
  4. mike257

    New guitar?

    A good Tele is a guitar for life. I have an '04 that just feels exceptional and I know I'll never move it on. If you're getting more into guitar then I'd suggest having something different enough from your current guitar that you're broadening your tonal pallete a bit. If you like the Fender aesthetic, there's loads of variations on the Tele theme that will give you something different. The Cabronita mentioned above sounds great, or you could look at the '72 Deluxe reissue - humbuckers with LP style controls, Tele body but Strat-esque contours for comfort and the big 70's Strat headstock. I have one and love it, feels and sounds different to my Tele and LP despite the nods to both in the design.
  5. I've got a 1U unit with an IEC inlet and 8 individually fused IEC outlets in our PA rack, a few short male to female IEC cables and everything is nice and tidy. I've seen them with Powercon inlets too, which is even more secure for live use as it can't be pulled out. Mine is hardwired to a Powercon on a patch panel in the rack for that reason.
  6. I've pretty much always taken two basses (or guitars) to gigs. I've rarely had to make use of a spare bass but the few occasions that I have done are enough reason for me to keep taking it! I know a lot of people think spare strings is enough but I've always thought that if you're on a multi-band originals gig then five minutes restringing is a big chunk of your 30 min set to let your audience's attention wander elsewhere. If you're on a paying gig then it just doesn't fly. I've had strings, straps and straplocks fail when playing guitar with my function band, every time I've had another guitar round my neck and playing within a bar or two. Show has to go on!
  7. The Ikea one is the Gorm shelf. The internet is awash with how-tos and examples, under a tenners worth of bits if I remember right.
  8. Ace, cheers. I'll put it to him then - don't hold your breath as we've been trying to bully him into buying a new one for ages to no avail but he's finally making noises about doing it and has asked me to keep an eye out for something decent. Fingers crossed!
  9. Where are you based? Our keys player is overdue an upgrade of his awful board, this might do the trick!
  10. [quote name='JTUK' timestamp='1392206344' post='2365885'] Unlimited reduced..???? Guess that venue wants it to look well attended ... If it was sure of a sell-out then it would not want to sell 'reduced' [/quote] Pretty standard practice for local support bands opening for touring artists. There'll be tickets on sale from all the usual outlets but bands will be offered a number of tickets or the opportunity to have a reduced price guestlist for their fans. Works for the bands as people can see them.play a bigger/higher profile show for less and works for the venue because they've got a much better chance of filling the room, selling more drinks to more punters and making more dough.
  11. [quote name='TheRockinRoadie' timestamp='1388858666' post='2327013'] I'm running an Orange Dual Terror through a Marshall VS412 cab, with my Fender TC-90 and Ltd-Ed. PRS SE Custom 24 It also sounds incredible - The Dual Terror is a great amp and the P90s in the Tele certainly come in to their own. I was jamming with some friends last night and theyre all equally jealous! What do you make of the PPC2x12? I'm currently saving for a V30- loaded Zilla cab. [/quote] I used to have the PPC212CB, the big closed back one. Sounded great. I'm a huge fan of Orange cabs in general. Mate of mine has a Zilla 2x12 in white with V30s he's selling for £300 if you want me to put you in touch. He's started a filthy metal band and is getting a 4x12 insteada
  12. I used to tour with upwards of £5k of kit which I foolishly didn't have insured. These days I'm covered up to £2k with my MU membership and my kit travels securely in the back of my splitter van so that gets me through most of their caveats. Don't see the point in buying lovely gear to only play in the bedroom. I guess if I was playing somewhere particularly rough I'd think more carefully about what I was leaving lying about but I don't really come across places like that. I buy gear because it sounds great and feels good to play, couldn't justify leaving it sat in the house!
  13. Reaper is built to be light on resource usage. I've done 12 track simultaneous recording on a pretty basic spec laptop that was crawling slow and full of crap (borrowed from teenage stepdaughter when mine was out of action!) and it didn't bat an eyelid. Mixed on the same system and didn't object when I threw a load of VSTs at it. Cubase would have been creaking at the seams well before that point, in my experience. On a well specced system its less of a concern, but if you're looking for a DAW that you can use on a low spec box, or maybe throw on a cheap laptop for location tracking then it's a great shout. All that aside, it's nice to use, pretty comprehensively featured these days and costs buttons. It's a fantastic piece of software.
  14. The MIM Classic Series instruments are great. My Telecaster Deluxe '72 RI is a fantastic guitar and I know a bunch of bassists who have owned and loved the Classic Series 70's Jazz. The MIM Standards can vary in quality but if you get a decent one they're great for the money. The USA Standards are better in principle but I'd go to a couple of shops, play the hell out of both and see if the bump up in quality is enough for you to splash all that extra dough. If you grab a MIM you like then you might not feel the extra expense is justified.
  15. [quote name='BigRedX' timestamp='1390484610' post='2345903'] What does concern me is the "lie back and take it" attitude that some of my fellow bassist seem to have to the fact that some engineers seem to want to take the DI directly from the bass irrespective of how important or not the other elements in the bass signal chain might be (although this is something that I have NEVER come across in my 35 years of playing). [/quote] That's a fair point. One thing that never ceases to surprise me (as someone who wears both bassist and sound tech hats) is just how many bassists there are out there who don't give much consideration at all to it. I've been happy with just a feed direct from the bass when that has been a suitable sound (more often than not, if I'm honest) and worked out a more appropriate route when it's been required, but I've worked with guys at various levels who just don't seem remotely interested in where their tone comes from so long as its loud and bassy!
  16. The "lazy" or "stuck in his ways" sound engineer always comes up when this is discussed. When a sound engineer is working a multi-band bill he'll have very little time to prepare individual solutions for each band's preferred tone and usually have a small window for soundchecks. Invariably, compromises have to be made and often the best thing to do is to follow a tried and tested method that you know you can get a good result from in that room and with the gear you are working with. Sound engineers don't mic the guitar and DI the bass out of apathy or laziness. Believe it or not we'd like the band to sound good too, since that's what we're paid for. I'll usually give a band the option to take a box or a line out from the amp, if they're a decent player with decent gear you'll get a good sound from either and amp failures on stage are relatively rare. If I worked long term with a single band I'd tweak my working methods to get the best out of them but that is a luxury and not one that your house engineer at a typical local venue can generally afford. We ARE on the same side as you guys, you know!
  17. I haven't played the PM but I do own a JM4 (now called the TM4 if I've got them the right way around - it's the Jazz type one). It's a stunning bass and has killed my bass GAS completely. I've played really heavy stuff, mellow stuff, folky stuff, and all kinds of covers stuff too with it and it's nailed any tone I've needed and has sounded great with rounds or flats. My Stingray barely gets a look-in now. I actually find myself leaning towards the neck pickup more these days, as I love the extra heft in the low end it has, but the bridge sounds great too. Versatile pre-amp, splittable humbucker, sounds great in passive mode, there's nothing not to like in my opinion. I picked up mine second hand in a trade deal but if ordering brand new you can specify options to suit you, but the stock instruments are great as they are.
  18. [quote name='EBS_freak' timestamp='1386612660' post='2302186'] To be honest, live, I would be very impressed if people could tell the difference through the FOH system between a DI straight off the head and a dedicated DI. I would only be looking at serious DI boxes like the Avalon if you are recording. [/quote] This is it really - I've used a U5 in the studio and it sounds great. To really get the difference at a gig though, it'd have to be a big enough room that the audience are hearing much more from the rig than they are from the stage and also be a good enough PA to reproduce the signal with sufficient dynamics and clarity. For most of us, that's rarely the case! I know of at least one BC member who has used the U5 into a power amp as his bass rig and spoke highly of the result, but if you're just looking to augment your live sound you could probably get most of the way there for a lot less cash with the suggestions above!
  19. Quick update to this in case anybody is ever searching for feedback on this gear. Been used for 20-30 gigs since my last post and on the whole I'm really happy with it. Ended up getting a Yamaha 01V mixer for an absurdly low price too - it's old tech now, and not the greatest sounding but for under £200 it was head and shoulders above anything else I could get hold of cheaply and I've got a preset mix stored that now only takes the bare minimum of tweaking to suit the room we're in at soundcheck. The EV Force cabs are still working reliably and sound great. I do feel like the subs are lacking in a little 'oomph' but I only take two out for space/practicality reasons. If I was putting a big rock gig on I'd run all four but in reality it's probably plenty for most wedding/function venues with the two. Came with a pair of Cerwin Vega CV-2800 power amps and a cheap'n'cheerful active crossover. I'm running the 2x15 tops in stereo with one amp, and the second amp split to feed a mono-sum sub signal (crossed over at 100Hz) from one side and a wedge for the drummer from the other. I think the amps will be the first thing to be upgraded as they're back-breakingly heavy and our 12u rack is a monster lift because of them. Really pleased with what we got - the whole system (cabs, amps, mixer & case, rack, cables, bits to make patch panel etc) came in at around £1500 so think it's proof that you can achieve really good results on a tight budget. We regularly mic the whole band (kit, bass, 2x guitar, keys, 3x vocals) and the sound is great, especially when we've got a big room to put it to work in. The amp rack connections are all on a patch panel and everything is labelled with all cables stored in a rack drawer so I can have the whole rig up and making noise in around five mins flat, and the none-techy band members can do it almost as quick too!
  20. I've never asked a dep to pay for a rehearsal , nor have I ever paid for one when I'm standing in. I actually offered to once as it was for some good friends, but they politely declined aa I was helping them out. Are the band a covers band, earning money at gigs? Sounds like the regular bassist has got himself a sweet deal if they are! I'd get my coat.
  21. Aside from the O2/ABC I've recently had a band up at Stereo, that was nice. Lovely place, nice staff and crew and we got fed a tasty meal too - all vegan food, some interesting and tasty stuff on the menu. We had a bit of a Spinal Tap moment in there too. Drummer walked through the wrong door into a fire exit instead of the dressing room after the main set and couldn't get back out for the encore!
  22. If you join the MU then you personally are covered by their public liability insurance, not your band. This probably won't pass muster if a venue ask to see your PLI. This doesn't happen to us all that regularly but it is something you need to be prepared for. I don't think any of the MU's insurance would cover your liabilities if you were unable to meet contractual obligations, that'd be for the band to deal with. You might be able to look in to some kind of business continuity insurance or something but would have to speak to somebody far more clued up than me to know if that could be applied to the situation you describe. A stand-alone PLI policy for the band as an entity shouldn't set you back more the a couple of hundred quid for the year and likely a lot less and is worth investing in - you don't want to be footing the bill if your PA falls on Joe Publics head mid-show! MU membership does give you £2k of gear insurance - you don't have to specify the items so in theory you could claim for any members kit but £2k doesn't go that far when you add up most muso's gigging set ups. You're also (I think) limited to the number of claims you can make per year so if you claimed on a bandmates behalf then something happened to your kit six months later you could be stuffed.
  23. I do 40-ish weddings a year with my function band, whilst we have a song list that clients get to see that probably isn't far off that number, the reality is that we continually evolve our set and replace things with fresh material but from one gig to the next it doesn't change massively. It isn't as if you're playing to the same crowd every week and having to change it up for them, so if he wants a pro wedding band your first priority should be getting an absolutely storming 2x60 mins that you can play really well and then looking at things you can have up your sleeve to change, deal with requests etc. If we tried to maintain 200 songs to a high standard (whilst keeping that list fresh with new material, which is a necessity) we'd spend ten times more hours in the rehearsal room than we would being out earning - not really the point of being in a 'pro' band. The majority of clients are perfectly happy to let us call the shots with the setlist so we concentrate on having a really solid core that works week in week out. As a new band, you need to make a good impression and playing 40 songs brilliantly will do that much more effectively than playing 200 songs moderately well.
  24. [quote name='Si600' timestamp='1382802495' post='2256744'] Do you? I hadn't thought of that aspect to it. So basically we're looking at a quality kit plus a quality PA to get the best out of it? [/quote] And monitors for the whole band. Absolutely cannot scrimp on your monitoring as you will be stuffed if you can't hear him!
  25. Matt, you weapon - I have the perfect bloke, pro session man who plays both to a very high standard, I'll drop you a text later!
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