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Irie from a new reggae bassmon


Raslee
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Hi all, just joined up and thought i'd say hello. I play in a reggae and Ska covers band and loving it but have dabbled in a bit of funk and alternative rock in the past too.

Current bass porn set up,
98' Fender USA Jazz 75 Reissue
Lakland 5502
Hohner B2AV headless (currently for s[b]ale/swaps?[/b])
Fender USA Jazz bass 2004 (Currently for [b]sale/swap[/b] to pay for my recent purchase of the 75 Reissue) - Translucent Sunset (Can see the Ash wood through the red colour, lovely bass)
Clarrisa acoustic bass
Old skool Aria Fretless
70's Lawsuit Jazz bass lookalike relic

Ampeg B2E (350W)
Ampeg 4x10 HLF
Fender Pro series 15"
Sansamp Para Driver
Dave Hall Valve Compressor

Am looking for an Eden WT550 if anyone knows anyone selling one and possibly Ampeg 8x10?

PM me if you want to know more details about the Hohner 5 string headless or Fender Jazz bass that is for sale.

Anyhow apart from all that, big irie and a big hello

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[quote name='paul, the' post='205814' date='May 25 2008, 06:56 AM']Welcome to Basschat.

Great to see you've got the proper fams bass![/quote]
Cheers paul, yeah i got the reissue for that reason entirely...Familyman, Bootsy and Jaco are the three wise guru's IMO

But at heart i'm a reggaemon!

Attached is a picky of my beloved 5502 Lakland also....feel well posh these days considering i came from the ghetto with a cheap Spanish acoustic guitar with bass strings on it!

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Fe sure, totally Robbie Shakespeare , Lloyd P., - all dem riddim studio 1 kings that new what phat bass meant.....But Fam's is the Teacha! - seen!

gwan keep dem fyah blazin fe I&I Jah ....Rasatafari

[i]Becoming a bass player means being unable to listen to music without homing in on the bass part. This tendency can make it hard to relate to others. I look longingly at non-musician friends who seem to absorb music with blissful ignorance, responding to the song in its instrumental totality while I analyze the bass performance. But with reggae, we can get along. It gives those same friends a glimpse into full bass appreciation by dint of its undeniable bass heaviness. Whether or not you jive with reggae’s ganja-laced religious overtones, it has a uniquely dependent relationship on our instrument that you have to love. Reggae musicians crave bass—the kind that ripples through the body and stirs the soul.
[/i]
Blessed love
Irie ites

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