Jump to content
Why become a member? ×

Marvin

Member
  • Posts

    5,175
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by Marvin

  1. I have a 1stGen V7, one of the very first ones with a signed neck plate.

    It's pretty much stock. I did replace the signed neck plate with a standard looking chrome one (the signed one is in my bass bits box in a cupboard). I also put one of those rubber neck plate gaskets on. Other than that, some Schaller strap locks and D'Addarrio Chrome strings. 

     

    The neck is great, it's really easy to play. Even though I've not been in a band  for ages, so I don't play much, I'd have to be flat broke to sell it.

     

    2nd Gen 'improvements' aside, when I look at the current price of Sires, mine was a steel 😁

    • Like 1
  2. I had a Warwick Rockbass Corvette, one the early ones with the one piece bridge.

     

    I didn't have it long enough to figure out why but the way it hung on the strap the first fret felt a million miles away. That and a neck that was as thick as 2 baseball bats tied together made it the most awful and uncomfortable bass I've ever owned.

    • Like 1
    • Haha 1
  3. I've got one of the first V7s. Great bass for the money.

     

    Would I buy any of the range now? No. The range is becoming a bit of a mess to me and they've gone from great quality at affordable prices to just another manufacturer at an ever increasing price.

     

    I'd probably go second hand Yamaha, Ibanez or Squier, partly due to replacement parts availability 

    • Like 2
  4. I'd like a Cort A4 Plus, but I don't like the look of the bridge. It looks a faff to set the intonation on it.

     

    I'm not keen on gold hardware, or black for that matter.

     

    Natural finishes, no thank you. Although I do have a natural finish bass, sort of, that I love. It's got a heavy lacquer finish, which I should hate really, but don't.

     

    Pointy basses, not really my thing.

     

    Light colour finish. I tend to gravitate to darker colours. 

     

    There's probably more.

    • Like 1
  5. On 11/12/2023 at 08:15, casapete said:

    Reading some of the comments on here, I’m amazed at how some of the bands mentioned manage

    to exist at all!
    Imagine the scenario with say a sports team, who have scheduled matches against others and then one

    or two of the players decide to arrive late / can’t make it / will only play if their other half is in a good

    mood etc etc. The team wouldn't last five minutes. Surely it’s no different with bands.
    Whether it’s just a hobby or something more serious, there is no point in band members having such

    a lack of commitment. Of course things in life occasionally happen which mean changes need to be 

    made to rehearsal schedules, but isn’t it funny how when a paying gig is on the cards then people

    seem to be able to commit to them more readily? In an old band of mine, getting everyone to agree

    on a mid week rehearsal was a nightmare ( mainly down to two band members who were also

    full time teachers) but if we got a mid week gig offered they always seemed to manage it!

     

    At grassroots adult football that happens. The team I used to help with had to disband the 3rd team because players were so unreliable. Several teams I know of locally have withdrawn from their leagues mid-season because players are so flaky. 

    • Like 2
  6. 13 hours ago, dmccombe7 said:

    When we started with the Glam band 5 yrs ago we found issues trying to sync diaries on a weekly basis so we pre-booked the rehearsal studio for approx 2mths ahead every Sun afternoon for 3 hrs then we went every two weeks for 6hrs to cut down on fuel costs and travelling time.  We kept pre-booking well ahead. It tends to focus the attention when you know you have an appointment every Sunday at 12pm - 3pm. You therefore work around the booked rehearsal times.

    Is that a possible option. ?

    We also set realistic targets for the songs to learn for the next week. You need to allow for people's jobs and personal commitments and not try and learn a full set in a week. Pick 3-4 songs every week. The set soon builds up quite quickly. 

    I'm not sure that's the problems you're encountering with current members but keep at it and eventually as @SteveXFR says there are others out there looking for the same commitment, its just trying to get them all together in one band.

    Good luck and hope you find the right people.

    Don't fall into the Marvin syndrome. Zaphod will be disappointed. :laugh1:

    Dave :santa2:

     

    'Practice' night, and I use that term very lightly, is at a time and place that isn't very good for me. It results in me not getting a hot meal that day or seeing my family. It's something I'd be fine with if I thought the others really wanted to get out of the practice room. The 2 guitarists only have to remember fairly straight forward chord progressions, no solos or tricky stuff. Yet at the beginning of every song the phones come out and Ultimate Guitar is referred to. Which is somewhat redundant as the singer wants to change the key of the songs at every practice (there are only 5 songs so far and one of them has been played in about 4 different keys).

    Next practice the singer has invited a cajon player along who can only stay for an hour as they've got a weekly commitment that night. And the singer needs to leave early anyway. 

     

    It really is a shambles. It's simply not how bands function is it?

    • Like 1
    • Sad 3
  7. I think I'm cursed.

     

    I initiated a new project several weeks ago with a singer I know. They brought along 2 others. After a few practices it's clear it'll go nowhere. 

    No one seems to be able to practice regularly or what seems longer than an hour and a half. No-one seems to want to bother learning material. 

    I was very clear at the outset that I wanted to get gigs, not be a practice room project and get out of the practice room fairly quickly. I can't see that happening. 

    Just another ensemble of people who like the idea of being in a band. 

     

    I'm not sure whether to keep going or just pack it all in. This is the 4th or 5th time of going nowhere since my last band fizzled out.

    • Like 1
    • Sad 4
  8. Mrs Marvin and myself went to watch Far From Saints (Kelly Jones of The Stereophonics, and Dwight Baker and Patty Lynne of The Wind and The Wave) in Reading last night.

     

    I've followed The Wind and The Wave since they started out (Patty Lynne slightly longer) and have always wanted to see them live but haven't had the opportunity, mainly as they don't come to the UK often. So when the FFS tour was announced I snapped up tickets as soon as I could.

     

    It was a fantastic performance last night. A great band, faultless. Kelly Jones has a great voice in my opinion (even if you don't like what he sings he sings it well). For me though Patty Lynne's voice is awesome, and she can belt it out as well. 

     

    Whoever was on the sound desk deserves full credit. Perfect mix. You could hear everything when it needed to be heard. Nothing overpowered anything else. Whoever it was should give lessons to all those poor sound persons.

     

    You might have concluded I enjoyed last night's gig 🙂... I did.

    • Like 1
  9. The most number of basses I've had at any one time is 3. Now I've only got 2. I've only ever really owned one amp set up at a time. For 2ish months I did have a giggable combo and amp/cab in the house. I toyed with the idea of splitting my signal so one would be clean, the other effects only. I couldn't get bothered in the end and sold the combo.

     

    I've simply not got the money or room for more than what I have right now.

  10. I've dropped out of the loop of contacts I had 5 to 10 years ago. Although quite a few of the bands I got involved in were via JMB to be fair though. I never got anything from going to open mic or jam nights.

     

    When I look on JMB these days there's barely anyone looking for a bass player, and if they are it's +40miles away. That and most bands being, and venues wanting, acoustic duos there's limited pickings.

     

    I do wonder if I should just keep one bass and my headphone practice set up and sell the rest (not that there's much to sell)

    • Like 1
  11. What does it matter? Is anyone forcing anyone to listen to any potential new Stones material? Is anyone forcing anyone to go to their concerts? No, they're not. If you're not interested stick to playing covers in the local Dog and Puke and be on your merry way. If you don't want to still be playing at 80, feel free to be filling your incontinence pants listening to what ever tickles your what not.

     

    It's up to the Stones what they do. If there's still an audience for whatever they're up to, all the best to them. 

    • Like 16
    • Thanks 1
    • Haha 1
  12. I've had Chromes on my Jazz bass for 6 or 7 years. Initially they were brighter than the dead rounds I took off. However, it didn't take long for them to bed in and now they've barely got any top end at all. 

    I'm a very below average player, but I don't find the tension an issue. I put a set of rounds on the Jazz a while back, thinking I'd notice a big difference in tension, and to be honest... not really.

    • Like 2
  13. 100% top most greaterist musician person I was in a band with was a young woman. She was superb. Fantastic voice. Memorised all her parts, vocals and rhythm guitar. She was brilliant. 

     

    A band after that had 3 young female singers. All as mad as a box of frogs and excellent singers.

     

    I was in an originals band with 2 brothers, and we auditioned a young female singer. I thought she was very good. They thought she was awful because wasn't coming up with lyrics or melodies they wanted. They hadn't told her what they were looking for, hadn't written any lyrics etc themselves. I suggested that if they'd wanted a mind reader they should have said so in the ad. I was kicked out for that comment. 

     

     

    • Like 2
  14. I think there's only been one band I've been in that played material I liked and I might possibly go and see. All the others, no.  

    I've played in various covers bands that played songs where the world would have benefited if they hadn't have been written at all, but the band was good and good fun to be in. I was in an indie punk originals band that I definitely wouldn't have gone to see... and the reason I left was because no one else wanted to see them either. 

    • Like 1
  15. I played in a blues r&b covers band a few years ago where I mainly used my Jazz bass. I'd got into the habit of using only the neck pick up. I thought it sounded good for the band. Then we played a venue where just using one pick up was bringing up the dreadful hum you can get. I played the whole gig with both pick ups on with the same settings on the amp. My wife recorded a few songs and the bass sounded very different to how I thought it would on those settings. It sounded almost like an upright bass. I was rather pleased. So that's how it's remained. 

    • Like 2
×
×
  • Create New...