Jump to content
Why become a member? ×

Earbrass

Member
  • Posts

    1,419
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by Earbrass

  1. DR Drop-Down Tuning Strings - 55 / 75 / 95 / 115 - unused

    Bought these a few months back when I tuned my bass down to DGCF. Decided I didn't want to mess with the nut, and got used to the slightly floppier feel of the original strings, so never put them on. Box is slightly tatty, but strings are absolutely as new and unused.

    £20 posted within UK.

    DR_01.JPG

    DR_02.JPG

  2. For me it was gazing longingly at a "Top Twenty" (?) sunburst solid 6-string in Woolworths - probably 1971 or 1972. Cost around £20 if I remember right. Ended up being taken to a proper music shop and being offered a choice between two Columbus copies - an SG and a 335-alike.Got the SG. Cost my Dad £40 - and me a summer of lawn mowing. First bass came a few years later.

    • Like 1
  3. My one and only bass is an old Peavey Milestone 3. Weighs around 3.3Kg (7.27 pounds). 4 string, passive, jazz bass type pickups, long scale. Comfy sculpted body and zero neck dive thanks to exended top horn. Plays and sounds great, and frequently to be found s/h for £50-£100 on gumtree and the like. Not for gear snobs, but otherwise hard to beat imho.

    • Like 2
  4. 56 minutes ago, hooky_lowdown said:

    Yes, but for a complete beginner it's not ideal. A beginner should start with the basics, bass and amp, and later find out about effects and how they change your tone/sound. 👍

    That's exactly what I did when I returned to bass after a few decades. I bought a very decent 16W Kustom practice amp. I quickly realised that it fell between two stools - far more power than was useful in the house, and not nearly enough to take to a band practice. It was small by bass amp standards, but still a chunky lump that took up space, and wasn't easy to move on when I realised it wasn't required - (posting it would have cost more than it was worth). Now I no longer play bass in a band, and have sold my gigging amp, I find I have no need for a small amp, either for home noodling or recording - there are so many good preamp pedals / multi-fx etc out there that do the job and take up no space. May not suit everyone, but that's my experience, for what it's worth.

    Edit to add: my recommendation of the Zoom (or similar) wasn't really based on the fx - I agree they could be a distraction for a beginner - but on the ability to get a decent basic sound, with the additional ability to play along to the inbuilt drum machine, which I think is very useful for a newbie.

    • Like 1
  5. Personally, I wouldn't bother getting a "practice" amp. I'd spend the money on a small cheap multi-fx with aux in and headphone out, like a Zoom B1 Four. This will let you play along to tracks, or to the inbuilt drum machine, and try different amp sounds and effects, without disturbing anyone else, at any time of the day or night. You can also plug the output into a sound system if you really need to hear it through speakers at living-room volumes. If you get to the point of wanting to play with others, then you can get a proper amp with enough power to be heard against drums and other amps. 

     

    EDIT sorry, just realised the B1 Four doesn't have a dedicated phones out, but you can use the output as a headphone jack.

     

    • Like 1
  6. 13 minutes ago, Bilbo said:

    Tonight's gig with guitarist Pete Oxley and drummer Russ Morgan at Jazz East at the Alex in Felixstowe. I played as well as I ever have on the double bass. My sound has settled in and my chops appear to be up to speed. 

    FB_IMG_1569792522281.jpg

    "The Alex" - is that the establishment that used to be "The Alexander Cafe / Cordy's"? - if so it has certainly had a major facelift since I last visited (which, to be fair, is probably at least 25 or 30 years ago, now I come to think of it 😂). 

  7. GONE - sold to a mate.

     

    For sale is my mint condition Digitech RP360 multi-fx. I bought this for home noodling with electric guitar, but now need something buskable and battery powered so am using a (less capable but adequate for my needs) Zoom G1 Four instead. 

    https://digitech.com/en/products/rp360

    Users manual

    - 55 amp sims
    - 27 cab sims
    - 85 stompbox sims
    - 8 fx blocks per preset
    - looper
    - drum machine (though nb you can't use looper and drums at the same time)
    - can connect external expression pedal for wah, volume etc
    - use footswitches to turn fx on/off in stomp mode, or to switch presets, or operate looper.
    - usb : serves as recording interface, or to edit/store/share presets on computer using free Nexus software
    - soundcheck function allows you to record a phrase and repeatedly play it back while you tweak your settings
    - aux in and phones out on mini-jacks

     

     

     

     

     

×
×
  • Create New...