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Mog

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Posts posted by Mog

  1. Hi James, heres the tribute models. About £570 in Musicstore. Details are in German so I cant be too sure of the specs.

    [url="http://www.musicstore.com/en_EN/GBP/G-L-Tribute-L-2500-Premium-RW-3-Tone-Sunburst/art-BAS0003291-000"]http://www.musicstore.com/en_EN/GBP/G-L-Tr...-BAS0003291-000[/url]

    [url="http://www.musicstore.com/en_EN/GBP/G-L-Tribute-L-2500-Premium-MN-Natural-Gloss/art-BAS0003288-000"]http://www.musicstore.com/en_EN/GBP/G-L-Tr...-BAS0003288-000[/url]

    Heres the blurb on the G&L .com
    [url="http://www.glguitars.com/instruments/TributeSeries/basses/L-2500/index.asp"]http://www.glguitars.com/instruments/Tribu...-2500/index.asp[/url]

    Hope that helps.

  2. 4000 watts in a pub! Ditch the backline and use monitors. Levels can be sorted easily with some friends filling in as sound techs. Just get to the venue earlier and have the soundcheck finished before the punters come in. Once everything is level soundwise its just a matter of using the master on the PA to reach the most suitable volume.

  3. That bass is fairly hard on the eyes but it has a killer tone. Was at a couple of U2 shows this year and it sounded immense! Ability wise he is as good as any rock bassist.Keeping things simple is ok sometimes. Michael Anthony got away with it with Van Halen as does Colin Greenwood in Radiohead.
    Ha ha ! Sorry forgot what year it is! was at a couple of shows last summer!

  4. steves right, the tonelok pedals all have dodgy switching. i glued a piece or hard foam to the black pad thats on the underside of the lid that normally comes in contact with the switch. it still sometimes needs a second press but its not as bad as it was. it also helps to press the pedal as centrally as possible. pity about this defect because the pd-7 is a great sounding pedal.

  5. cause it rocks!! seriously though without getting into theory too much the standard blues progression is used in lots of styles from jazz to metal. learn some blues scales and you'll come across the blue notes, usually flat 3rd or 5th's. theres plenty of great blues artists around at the moment worth looking into. check out jim kirkpatrick.one of the best in the uk at the mo.
    [url="http://www.myspace.com/jimikirkpatrick"]http://www.myspace.com/jimikirkpatrick[/url]

  6. [quote name='Sibob' post='703728' date='Jan 7 2010, 12:34 AM']Eugh, Slinkys

    I use 40-100 Newtone strings as my first choice and drop D is fine!

    Si[/quote]
    Si, I was just on the Newtone website. Those Platinum strings look good. Any idea what they sound like or is that coating just like Elixers nanoweb?

  7. [quote name='billphreets' post='703590' date='Jan 6 2010, 10:31 PM']your not the first person to mention these strings to me today....[/quote]

    Is that a good or bad thing? :rolleyes: You could try warwick red label in 40-100. About €9 a pop and not half bad. Started using them after I went back to uni. Cant afford to change the ol prosteels every month no more :)

  8. I have to agree with the O.P and say that Wooten is totally over rated. Bit of a one trick pony IMO.Seen him with Bella Fleck last November in Uni and was not impressed. Under rated IMO is Pat Padger (yes I'm a sad git who listens to Extreme :snob: say what you will!). Check out the bassline for Tradgic Comic off Three Sides To Every Story. Genius.

  9. Cheers Mykesbass. The Behringer/Bugera brand seems to be the "hate figure" at the moment but any I've come across seem to be ok. The Bugera heads really impressed me. Our guitarist uses a 6260 and always gets positive feedback from people regarding the tone. When we record he teams it up with a JCM800 and gets a killer N.O.L.A. sound.

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