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How1

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Posts posted by How1

  1. I would say you absolutely don't NEED to know any theory, but there's probably a minimum that you could learn that would make your life a lot easier and your basic understanding of what you're doing a hell of a lot more interesting and engaging. It's also nice to be able to communicate to some degree using the language of musicians. Same as its easier to know a bit of Spanish on holiday 😁 - a little can go a long way.

     

    Also if you learn some basics, it soon has a snowballing effect and you pick up other bits. 

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  2. Does anyone know if these can be bought separately? 

     

    Owing to the usual care and attention Fender pay to their instruments, I've found out one of the screws is the wrong size and basically just spins in the hole, so I want to replace it. I've got a gnarly looking wood screw in it currently, which does the job but looks awful. 

  3. On 29/08/2023 at 09:54, TimR said:

     

     

    Have you talked to him about narrowing down a genre and working on some specific songs with the aim of getting a drummer in.

     

    Unless he doesn't sing, in which case, I would be looking for a singer to determine which direction to head in next. 

    It's actually going pretty well. We've kind of settled in a bit and got a few bits recorded, albeit roughly at this stage. We're still coming up with rather disjointed ideas, but the stuff we're jamming out and coming up with 'on the spot' is beginning to find it's feet. He's also notably improved. 

  4. When I was younger I was always looking for something better (for better, see pointlessly more expensive!)or unique or something just different for a change. The first time I went to a music shop to try a bass, I was determined it would be anything but a Fender, because they're so ubiquitous and 'boring'. Guess what I walked out of the shop with?! The jazz bass I bought was the most comfortable bass I tried that day, but I was never happy because I wanted something 'different'.

     

    These days I'm completely the opposite. After all the pointless GAS, I always came back to fenders, because I like how they feel and sound and that's where I stick these days. I know how they'll feel and sound, I know how to record and eq them, I know roughly what they'll weigh...If they break I know how to fix them, and that parts are easy to get. If they got nicked I could pretty much pick up a very similar one, or a Squier if Im skint from pretty much anywhere on the planet, straight off the net or from a shop and be relatively confident of what I was getting.

     

    Are they the best basses available? Absolutely not, but there's a comfort and continuity to Fender, which goes a lot further than looks. And nothing is perfect, so if you know their weakspots you can work round them or fix them. I do like how they look anyway though. 

     

     

     

     

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  5. 2 hours ago, BigRedX said:

    So, without more input from the OP we're all just guessing.

     

    Thanks for all the replies. Good to know it was mostly in my head!

     

    I'm not interested in making any money from music. I think ultimately that would pretty much be a pipe dream, so anything I'm doing is purely for the fun of it. I'm happy carrying on working on my own stuff and working with the guitarist, maybe something will come of it, but would like to play with a band basically, whether it's that stuff or something else. I'm relatively open to the kind of music I'd be playing. There are time constraints like work/family etc to consider though, so that is gonna narrow things down a bit...

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  6. So after about 15 years I decided to start playing again. Skill wise I'm happy enough and picked things up after a few months and I'm happy with where I am skill wise, I actually find it easier now to pick things up and play stuff - I've even started writing a few songs. I've found myself completely out of the loop and a bit aimless though.  I thought I'd be happy at 45 just noodling and playing through some covers etc etc. but I'm not. It'd be really nice to do something more.

     

    I don't really know any musicians any more. One of my friends plays guitar, but he's ok(ish) but the type of stuff he plays doesn't really float my boat. Every time we get together we're  playing really random stuff, like different genres every song. It's fun to some degree but it's not really working for me. How do you even get started anymore? I'm totally out of the loop and a bit disheartened. I thought it'd be nice just to pick up a bass and learn a few songs for fun, but I'm getting bored of playing with myself lol. At this age it's not like I can just 'just a band'. Or that's how it feels.

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  7. 7 hours ago, Happypants said:


    I'm colour blind, what do I know!?


    Here's four pictures taken on my iPhone of my Tidepool all in the same room on the same day, it's quite a tricky colour to photograph and it changes depending on lighting. I'd say the closest to real life are the first two:

     

    IMG_2524.thumb.jpeg.b30794079fdc5e197258e7615e3c0618.jpeg

     

    0E6756E1-D946-4D3D-A2D4-1413E576109A.thumb.jpeg.6361837fbd4fe6516bf201f9ab17c8a5.jpeg

     

    IMG_2510.thumb.jpeg.931d17d34802353e555a845d6130bb83.jpeg

     

    IMG_2514.thumb.jpeg.e98cc3f0455a186bac87f95c4e70d08a.jpeg

     

     

    The one with the scratchplate off looks pretty accurate to me (at least on my screen). Here's another one in daylight.

    20230626_205331.jpg

    • Like 1
  8. 4 minutes ago, dmccombe7 said:

    Its one of those songs i was brought up on and one of the first rock songs i tried on bass.

    Dave

    It's one of those songs I've always been aware of but for some reason never played! I'm not the biggest Sabbath fan but do like them. I'm a typical child of the alt 90s so it was all Chili peppers and Rage Against the Machine etc when I started playing.

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  9. On 24/06/2023 at 19:44, SteveXFR said:

     

     

    On 24/06/2023 at 19:44, SteveXFR said:

    We've decided to add a couple covers to our set insurance original metal band. Easy set filler we thought so we worked out a stoner metal version of maniac from flashdance (an obvious choice) and a punky version of Paranoid by Sabbath. 

    Paranoid is about as easy as it gets. Every beginner rock guitarist and bassist learns it so why the hell am I playing it so badly? It should be the easiest song in our set.

    Anyone else have trouble with a beginner standard tune? 

    I've being playing this recently and am sort of in the same boat. I can and do on a regular basis play much more complex stuff, but this continues to give me grief! To be fair, I underestimated it a bit.

     

    I think it's just a personal style thing and a difference between playing styles. What might feel 100% easy and natural to one person might feel odd and unnatural to another. Some player's styles you can just be more at home with, irrespective of difficulty. Some of the fingering and timing of the changes don't seem comfortable to me. 

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  10. 7 hours ago, paul_5 said:

    I can heartily recommend the iReal app for learning standards and walking, though it’s Mac only.

    Thanks, I've an app for the same thing after your suggestion, although it's probably not gonna be nearly as good, but it has the chord sheets.

  11. 1 minute ago, Paolo85 said:

    For what I understand, all you get with fake books is the melody of the intro of a jazz standard, and a chord sequence. The RealBook I had once was like that.

    So if that is something that, at your level, helps, then go for it. I imagine nowdays some may have audio files as well.

     

    They are not something that teach you how to walk per se. But if you know how to already at least to a certain level they help with practice.

     

    Ed Friedland's book instead is a manual. It teaches how to walk, from zero to walking. I tried, it did not work for me.

    That's pretty much what I'm after, just a chord sheet to work from so it sounds like that might do the trick. I think the Ed Friedland book might be too basic after reading up Amazon.

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  12. Are jazz fake books suitable for making your own walking bass lines? I want to try some improvised bass lines rather than just learning them note for note. I've been looking at the Real Book(s). Is this what I want? I'm not completely new to walking bass lines, but am by no means very good at them. Can anyone recommend a good book? I seem to remeber there was an Ed Friedland one from years back that is meant to be good..?

  13. 15 minutes ago, NAS Bass said:

    Fender 9050L break in very nicely - a well set up bass and lots of hours playing on these will reward you.

    That's what I originally had on my PJ before I swapped to the chromes. I twisted one though and it was never the same again so decided to try Chromes out of curiousity and stuck with them in the end. I liked the Fenders though. In fact, Fender strings aren't bad at all. I have some nickel rounds somewhere that I got on my p-bass that sounded pretty good. In fact, I need to buy another bass to put them back on 😁

    • Like 2
  14. 3 hours ago, Reggaebass said:

    That’s a guitar isn’t it 😁

    May as well be hehe. Tbf, I actually quite like that sound in some situations (Andy Rourke/Smiths or JJ Burnell springs to mind). In isolation it sounds really good, but tends to get lost sometimes.

     

    Paul Simonon said he learned to play bass listening to reggae because he couldn't tell what was the bass and what was the guitar when he listened to The Who (or something to that effect).

  15. 1 hour ago, ossyrocks said:

    Do people roll the tone up? Blimey, I might try it tomorrow at rehearsal 😂 

    It’s almost always rolled completely off for me, except for a couple of specific tunes in the set, and even then, it’s just inched up a fraction.
    Rob

    Don't get too carried away, you might like it. One minute it's a tad more tone, the next thing you know you'll be playing fresh Rotosound rounds with a pick 😁

     

    It was more in comparison of other strings tbh. The chromes rolled off don't sound anywhere near as good. It takes away a lot of the character of the strings. The LaBellas on the other hand hold onto it, probably even sounding better. They're really nice sounding strings.

    • Like 2
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