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Playing bass with neck & shoulder issues


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I thought I'd start this topic in the hope that my experiences may help others with similar problems.

I have seen many posts on here about the weight of basses and any new bass put up for sale seems to now have the weight added indicating that weight is a real issue now for some "older" bass players.

I am 50 years old and have been gigging since I was 11. I've always been pretty fit and never ever been in a hospital (for me anyway) until, in 2010, I started getting a horrible pain in my left upper arm that felt like someone had given me a "dead arm" punch. To cut a very long story short, an MRI scan showed that I had "wear and tear" on 2 levels of discs in my neck - C5-6 and C6-7. This resulted in me losing a lot of muscle mass in my left arm and the rear deltoid muscle of my shoulder albeit disappeared. Lifting a pint of water (or beer) was very hard using my left hand.

Throughout this time I gigged normally....

By the time I saw a surgeon, the pain had disappeared and I was left with the weakness. As I wasn't really in any pain at that time, I was refused surgery which I was happy and relieved to hear. 3 or 4 months of physio and a year or so down the gym brought my left arm 98% back to normal strength.

Fast forward to my last gig before Christmas 2013 (5 months ago). The weight of the bass strap on my left shoulder was causing a lot of pain mid-gig and where there was a bar or 2 without bass, I was lifting the bass off my shoulder to relieve the pain.

I took January off from my 2-3 shows a week gigging and got a dep to cover me as wearing a bass was impossible for longer than a few minutes. The pain even without wearing a bass was excruciating.

The pain from February gradually died away but this was replaced with spasms and pins & needles in the left hand. This is the normal symptom of a compressed nerve in the neck which is caused by the slipped disc issue. Then my thumb and index finger went numb and felt ice cold as if it was dipped in snow. Very odd and worrying but I could still play. To this day, the index finger and thumb are still numb and cold.

Fast forward a few months and to cut another long story short, a new MRI has shown "substantial wear and tear" to now 3 levels of discs in my neck. C4-5, C5-6 and C6-7.

I have been made aware that unless this is "fixed" asap the damage to the nerve could be permanent so the index finger and thumb could be left numb forever along with other issues from nerve damage

As I don't have private medical insurance, I am at the mercy of the NHS and 40 days after having the MRI, I am still waiting to sit down in front of the same surgeon from 2010 to discuss my options. However, it is looking very likely that I need a major operation to replace the 3 discs which is a called "Anterior Cervical Discectomy with bone fusion".

Click [url="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_g-WbLsiWh4&feature=related"][b]here[/b][/url] to see a link to an animation showing the surgery: (not gory at all)

Anyway, the reason for this post is to hopefully help other Basschatters who may experience what I have been through and how I have managed to carry on gigging for the last few months - although it is getting harder by the week....

I am avoiding doing any heavy lifting and am lucky enough to have a roadie who picks me up and sets my gear up for me. I still carry bass cases and small gear but avoid the heavy stuff and luckily, the bands I play in are understanding and help me where they can.

I normally use my SVT VR and Ampeg 8 x 10 or my Mesa Boogie 400+ with a 1516 cab - two of the heaviest rigs ever made but sound gorgeous but obviously this could be one of the many causes of my problems :0)

I sold some gear in February and bought a MarkBass CMD 102P which is so light but still powerful and this means I can also do smaller gigs by myself if I need to without straining too much.

I told my bands that on all gigs I would be playing sitting down on a stool for the foreseeable future which they obviously understood but weren't overjoyed with as it looks crap and really not very rock n roll!

I have spent nearly £200 on a Gruv Gear Duo Strap ( [url="http://www.gruvgear.com/duostrap"][b]link[/b][/url]) and another ergonomic strap (can't remember the name) with harness designed to spread the weight of a bass but after hours/days of fiddling I couldn't get either of them comfortable or in the "right" position for playing normally. It may be that I go back to these in my recovery time.

Anyway, I remembered going to a gig in the 90s and the guitarist had an acoustic guitar "floating" on stage that he stood behind and played when required with his main guitar still slung around his neck.

A short time on Google and I found [url="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BWDA-04M9xc"][b]this[/b][/url]:

[url="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BWDA-04M9xc"]https://www.youtube....h?v=BWDA-04M9xc[/url]



The MBrace Guitar Holder - you buy it here: [url="http://www.purewaveaudio.com/furniture-and-stands/stands/stand-accessories/mbrace-guitar-holder/"]http://www.purewavea...-guitar-holder/[/url]

What a revelation!!! This wonderful contraption has allowed me to carry on gigging.....

It is not perfect but I highly recommend it to anyone who has a sore shoulder or finds the weight of a bass an issue. Using this alone could stop you aggravating your condition to the point where it becomes a major problem and you need surgery like me. Regardless of the outcome of my surgery, I will try and use this for a year or so just to give my shoulder a break.

Here it is in use: (Note the clackers hanging from my mike stand - it's a 70s show!)



The plus points are:[list]
[*]No guitar strap so no weight at all hanging on your body!
[*]You walk behind it and play your bass!
[/list]
The negative points are:[list]
[*]You are VERY static on stage! **
[*]A bass hanging on a stand on stage makes it very tempting for all members of the band (even drummers) to walk behind it and start playing YOUR bass!
[*]I normally have my pedalboard in front of me but as this stand is mounted on a mike stand (with a normal microphone stand set up in front of that for vocals) means my pedalboard needs to go to the side.
[*]It can look very odd from an audience perspective as the bass is static but you move around behind it - apparently very weird but a good talking point.
[*]As your pride and joy is mounted on a mike stand, it can get knocked over.
[/list]
Apart from that, it is an absolute lifesaver!

I bought a very sturdy Roland ST-CMS1 mike/speaker stand to protect my pride and joy - [url="http://www.gak.co.uk/en/roland-st-cms1-monitor-speaker-stand/60463"][b]link here[/b][/url]

** The MBrace stand screws onto a mike stand - if you don't tighten it up fully, the bass can rotate clockwise and anticlockwise so you can move a bit on stage.

The bad news at the moment is that my left arm and hand is getting weaker by the day and I am losing dexterity and co-ordination in my left hand. Not sure how much longer I can carry on gigging now but will keep going for as long as I can. Plus obviously this condition does mean that by the end of a gig with the travel, setup, gig, packing away etc etc I feel l like I have been run over by a bus by the time I get home in the small hours.

I am using the Planet Waves Varigrip ( [url="http://www.amazon.co.uk/Planet-Waves-Varigrip-Adjustable-Exerciser/dp/B001OCGGEM"][b]link [/b][/url]) finger strengthener daily to help and also trying to practice scales and finger exercises every day.

Anyway, I hope this helps some of you out there should you be having similar issues.

Edited by Gary Williams
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Best of luck with with your future treatment Gary. Last summer holidays ( I work in a school !) I had an operation on my right shoulder, after needing 8 years of injections which were decreasing in efficacy. With suitable physio afterwards, I am now able to play more or less as normal, although sitting down and playing gets uncomfortable after a while. I hope you will be able to carry on again as I am, although the wait you have had seems a bit on the long side..........I bet you wouldn't have had to wait so long for a gastric band, or to have some cosmetic surgery corrected!

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Thanks Rubis! The joys of being a bass player eh? I hope your shoulder gets better.

I forgot to mention that in 2011, I developed tennis elbow in my left arm due to all the exercises I had been doing to build up the left arm again... Oh and then developed "trigger finger" on my little finger left hand which needed an operation to fix.

All of this brought on by the nerve damage from the initial 2010 flare up apparently.

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I absolutely empathise with this.....since having an MRI on my neck for pain which showed up Spondolosis or Arthritis in Engish i have been undergoing lots of physio and rheumatology at the hospital.

Fact is that on top of normal wear and tear our chosen instruments are heavy old lumps of kit which doesn't help.

Hope you get everything sorted.

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Hope you get sorted Gary and have many long years of gigging ahead of you.
Several years ago I moved over to the micro/neo kit and have never looked back. I am now 51 years old (I like to think of it as 21 with 30 years experience :)) and will never be going back to heavy weight gear.
I to have suffered from shoulder pain, which sent me down the Sadowsky NYC route and for the last 4 years, I have been gigging with my bass which weighs just 7 pounds.
However more recently pain to my neck/shoulder has become more of an issue and like you, I purchased a Gruv Gear duostrap but could not adjust it to my satisfaction. Well after reading your post, I plan on spending the afternoon with the duo strap and using it for this weekends gigs and will be putting in an order for for the Mbrace guitar holder next week.
I really enjoy Basschat and am always grateful to everyone for sharing their expertise and knowledge here. However I would particularly like to thank you Gary, as your post has been a real wake up call for me and possibly others on here as well.
Wishing you the very best

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[quote name='leroydiamond' timestamp='1399121251' post='2441240']
Hope you get sorted Gary and have many long years of gigging ahead of you.
Several years ago I moved over to the micro/neo kit and have never looked back. I am now 51 years old (I like to think of it as 21 with 30 years experience :)) and will never be going back to heavy weight gear.
I to have suffered from shoulder pain, which sent me down the Sadowsky NYC route and for the last 4 years, I have been gigging with my bass which weighs just 7 pounds.
However more recently pain to my neck/shoulder has become more of an issue and like you, I purchased a Gruv Gear duostrap but could not adjust it to my satisfaction. Well after reading your post, I plan on spending the afternoon with the duo strap and using it for this weekends gigs and will be putting in an order for for the Mbrace guitar holder next week.
I really enjoy Basschat and am always grateful to everyone for sharing their expertise and knowledge here. However I would particularly like to thank you Gary, as your post has been a real wake up call for me and possibly others on here as well.
Wishing you the very best
[/quote]yup.. What you said.

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I can relate to this, I cannot wear my Sax on a neck strap due to old injuries and generally being an elderly weakling! so I have to wear sax harnesses and holders and all sorts of rigmarole! for a year I played with a solid splint on my left thumb (which made operating the octave key on the sax very tricky) as I had severe trigger thumb - excruciatingly painful! thankfully sorted with cortisone and physio over a couple of years, I now use a finger exerciser daily and do tennis elbow physio exercises everyday to keep that at bay (physio tells me I'm a very "tendony" person!) I bought the lightest bass I could find and the widest softest strap and am very careful about taking lots of breaks. Good luck with getting it sorted and use whatever bizarre methods and means you can to keep playing! :)

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[quote name='Gary Williams' timestamp='1399113135' post='2441117']
I thought I'd start this topic in the hope that my experiences may help others with similar problems.

I have seen many posts on here about the weight of basses and any new bass put up for sale seems to now have the weight added indicating that weight is a real issue now for some "older" bass players.

I am 50 years old and have been gigging since I was 11. I've always been pretty fit and never ever been in a hospital (for me anyway) until, in 2010, I started getting a horrible pain in my left upper arm that felt like someone had given me a "dead arm" punch. To cut a very long story short, an MRI scan showed that I had "wear and tear" on 2 levels of discs in my neck - C5-6 and C6-7. This resulted in me losing a lot of muscle mass in my left arm and the rear deltoid muscle of my shoulder albeit disappeared. Lifting a pint of water (or beer) was very hard using my left hand.

Throughout this time I gigged normally....

By the time I saw a surgeon, the pain had disappeared and I was left with the weakness. As I wasn't really in any pain at that time, I was refused surgery which I was happy and relieved to hear. 3 or 4 months of physio and a year or so down the gym brought my left arm 98% back to normal strength.

Fast forward to my last gig before Christmas 2013 (5 months ago). The weight of the bass strap on my left shoulder was causing a lot of pain mid-gig and where there was a bar or 2 without bass, I was lifting the bass off my shoulder to relieve the pain.

I took January off from my 2-3 shows a week gigging and got a dep to cover me as wearing a bass was impossible for longer than a few minutes. The pain even without wearing a bass was excruciating.

The pain from February gradually died away but this was replaced with spasms and pins & needles in the left hand. This is the normal symptom of a compressed nerve in the neck which is caused by the slipped disc issue. Then my thumb and index finger went numb and felt ice cold as if it was dipped in snow. Very odd and worrying but I could still play. To this day, the index finger and thumb are still numb and cold.

Fast forward a few months and to cut another long story short, a new MRI has shown "substantial wear and tear" to now 3 levels of discs in my neck. C4-5, C5-6 and C6-7.

I have been made aware that unless this is "fixed" asap the damage to the nerve could be permanent so the index finger and thumb could be left numb forever along with other issues from nerve damage

As I don't have private medical insurance, I am at the mercy of the NHS and 40 days after having the MRI, I am still waiting to sit down in front of the same surgeon from 2010 to discuss my options. However, it is looking very likely that I need a major operation to replace the 3 discs which is a called "Anterior Cervical Discectomy with bone fusion".

Click [url="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_g-WbLsiWh4&feature=related"][b]here[/b][/url] to see a link to an animation showing the surgery: (not gory at all)

Anyway, the reason for this post is to hopefully help other Basschatters who may experience what I have been through and how I have managed to carry on gigging for the last few months - although it is getting harder by the week....

I am avoiding doing any heavy lifting and am lucky enough to have a roadie who picks me up and sets my gear up for me. I still carry bass cases and small gear but avoid the heavy stuff and luckily, the bands I play in are understanding and help me where they can.

I normally use my SVT VR and Ampeg 8 x 10 or my Mesa Boogie 400+ with a 1516 cab - two of the heaviest rigs ever made but sound gorgeous but obviously this could be one of the many causes of my problems :0)

I sold some gear in February and bought a MarkBass CMD 102P which is so light but still powerful and this means I can also do smaller gigs by myself if I need to without straining too much.

I told my bands that on all gigs I would be playing sitting down on a stool for the foreseeable future which they obviously understood but weren't overjoyed with as it looks crap and really not very rock n roll!

I have spent nearly £200 on a Gruv Gear Duo Strap ( [url="http://www.gruvgear.com/duostrap"][b]link[/b][/url]) and another ergonomic strap (can't remember the name) with harness designed to spread the weight of a bass but after hours/days of fiddling I couldn't get either of them comfortable or in the "right" position for playing normally. It may be that I go back to these in my recovery time.

Anyway, I remembered going to a gig in the 90s and the guitarist had an acoustic guitar "floating" on stage that he stood behind and played when required with his main guitar still slung around his neck.

A short time on Google and I found [url="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BWDA-04M9xc"][b]this[/b][/url]:

[url="https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BWDA-04M9xc"]https://www.youtube....h?v=BWDA-04M9xc[/url]



The MBrace Guitar Holder - you buy it here: [url="http://www.purewaveaudio.com/furniture-and-stands/stands/stand-accessories/mbrace-guitar-holder/"]http://www.purewavea...-guitar-holder/[/url]

What a revelation!!! This wonderful contraption has allowed me to carry on gigging.....

It is not perfect but I highly recommend it to anyone who has a sore shoulder or finds the weight of a bass an issue. Using this alone could stop you aggravating your condition to the point where it becomes a major problem and you need surgery like me. Regardless of the outcome of my surgery, I will try and use this for a year or so just to give my shoulder a break.

Here it is in use: (Note the clackers hanging from my mike stand - it's a 70s show!)



The plus points are:[list]
[*]No guitar strap so no weight at all hanging on your body!
[*]You walk behind it and play your bass!
[/list]
The negative points are:[list]
[*]You are VERY static on stage! **
[*]A bass hanging on a stand on stage makes it very tempting for all members of the band (even drummers) to walk behind it and start playing YOUR bass!
[*]I normally have my pedalboard in front of me but as this stand is mounted on a mike stand (with a normal microphone stand set up in front of that for vocals) means my pedalboard needs to go to the side.
[*]It can look very odd from an audience perspective as the bass is static but you move around behind it - apparently very weird but a good talking point.
[*]As your pride and joy is mounted on a mike stand, it can get knocked over.
[/list]
Apart from that, it is an absolute lifesaver!

I bought a very sturdy Roland ST-CMS1 mike/speaker stand to protect my pride and joy - [url="http://www.gak.co.uk/en/roland-st-cms1-monitor-speaker-stand/60463"][b]link here[/b][/url]

** The MBrace stand screws onto a mike stand - if you don't tighten it up fully, the bass can rotate clockwise and anticlockwise so you can move a bit on stage.

The bad news at the moment is that my left arm and hand is getting weaker by the day and I am losing dexterity and co-ordination in my left hand. Not sure how much longer I can carry on gigging now but will keep going for as long as I can. Plus obviously this condition does mean that by the end of a gig with the travel, setup, gig, packing away etc etc I feel l like I have been run over by a bus by the time I get home in the small hours.

I am using the Planet Waves Varigrip ( [url="http://www.amazon.co.uk/Planet-Waves-Varigrip-Adjustable-Exerciser/dp/B001OCGGEM"][b]link [/b][/url]) finger strengthener daily to help and also trying to practice scales and finger exercises every day.

Anyway, I hope this helps some of you out there should you be having similar issues.
[/quote]

You've mastered the art of levitation :)

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[quote name='essexbasscat' timestamp='1399198089' post='2441920']
I would highly recommend;

- Ongoing physio
- Lessons with an experienced Alexander teacher for postural education and control

Best wishes for the future
[/quote]

Was just about to recommend the Alexander technique, this is brilliant.

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Got one of those stands for the prog gig to put a guitar on. Not entirely sure I'd want the bass to be on it, but it looks safe enough in your pics.

Just ordered a Duo strap & hoping I can get more comfortable than with the Slider I used 7 or 8 years ago before the shoulder replacement.

Seeing the rheumatologist later this month for the half yearly check & will hopefully get the results of the MRI on my lower back, but I fear that the shoulder replacement is eroding the bone around it so hopefully the Duo will work better than the Slider for playing position and will be back to full gig fitness!!

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[quote name='essexbasscat' timestamp='1399198089' post='2441920']
I would highly recommend;

- Ongoing physio
- Lessons with an experienced Alexander teacher for postural education and control

Best wishes for the future
[/quote]

Thanks EssexBassCat - the thing is my physiotherapist has discharged me as I urgently need the operation.... she said anything at this stage is really too late. Obviously once I have the operation it will be quite a few months of physio then gym etc a bit like I had in 2010.

Will look into the Alexander Technique though - sounds intriguing....

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[quote name='SaxyBassist' timestamp='1399200563' post='2441950']
I can relate to this, I cannot wear my Sax on a neck strap due to old injuries and generally being an elderly weakling! so I have to wear sax harnesses and holders and all sorts of rigmarole! for a year I played with a solid splint on my left thumb (which made operating the octave key on the sax very tricky) as I had severe trigger thumb - excruciatingly painful! thankfully sorted with cortisone and physio over a couple of years, I now use a finger exerciser daily and do tennis elbow physio exercises everyday to keep that at bay (physio tells me I'm a very "tendony" person!) I bought the lightest bass I could find and the widest softest strap and am very careful about taking lots of breaks. Good luck with getting it sorted and use whatever bizarre methods and means you can to keep playing! :)
[/quote]

Thanks Saxybassist!

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[quote name='WalMan' timestamp='1399204614' post='2442011']
Got one of those stands for the prog gig to put a guitar on. Not entirely sure I'd want the bass to be on it, but it looks safe enough in your pics.

Just ordered a Duo strap & hoping I can get more comfortable than with the Slider I used 7 or 8 years ago before the shoulder replacement.

Seeing the rheumatologist later this month for the half yearly check & will hopefully get the results of the MRI on my lower back, but I fear that the shoulder replacement is eroding the bone around it so hopefully the Duo will work better than the Slider for playing position and will be back to full gig fitness!!
[/quote]

Thanks Walman - I got pretty good results with the (cheaper neoprene not leather) Duo strap but had to do a bit of research.

I didn't want to drill another strap button onto the back of my basses so I was left with the remaining option of using the canvas strap that stretches between the 2 strap buttons on the bass (left to right) and use the leather loop to support the right shoulder strap. This canvas strap was a so flimsy it felt quite loose so I ordered the leather version of this strap from BassGear in the UK for £8 or something (which comes as standard with the more expensive leather Duostrap) and this made this left to right support much more rigid so I got a usable setup with this strap.

I did struggle getting more weight onto the right shoulder strap than the left shoulder strap without the bass shifting sideways into an unnatural playing position....

But to anyone who bought the cheaper Neoprene version of the Duostrap, I highly recommend to upgrade to the leather version of this "left to right" strap. BassGear stock these and as I said, only £8 or so.

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Another sufferer here. I have RA and Spondolosis in the 3rd 4th and 5th vertebrate. I gave up playing for a couple of years due to the RA causing damage to the bones in my right hand. I had surgery last year and had a metal bar inserted with means I have limited movement in the wrist. I used to b e a pick player but now use fingers. I am just about to take delivery of a new bass which weighs in at around 7lb so hopefully I be able to stand up and play again.

Good luck with the op and best wishes for a speedy recovery.

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[quote name='Bassman Sam' timestamp='1399218816' post='2442163']
Another sufferer here. I have RA and Spondolosis in the 3rd 4th and 5th vertebrate. I gave up playing for a couple of years due to the RA causing damage to the bones in my right hand. I had surgery last year and had a metal bar inserted with means I have limited movement in the wrist. I used to b e a pick player but now use fingers. I am just about to take delivery of a new bass which weighs in at around 7lb so hopefully I be able to stand up and play again.

Good luck with the op and best wishes for a speedy recovery.
[/quote]

Always on the look out for what is happening in the super light bass department. What is the make of bass you are due to take delivery of?.
The one positive is that my shoulder issues really limit the GAS I experience regarding basses. Anything over 7 lb is of little interest

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[quote name='leroydiamond' timestamp='1399219368' post='2442167']
Always on the look out for what is happening in the super light bass department. What is the make of bass you are due to take delivery of?.
The one positive is that my shoulder issues really limit the GAS I experience regarding basses. Anything over 7 lb is of little interest
[/quote]

It's a Bass Collection SGC Nanyo SB310 which I am buying for Psycoandy for this forum. He's kindly holding it for me until I get back from holiday in Prague next week.

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[quote name='Gary Williams' timestamp='1399216563' post='2442147']
Thanks EssexBassCat - the thing is my physiotherapist has discharged me as I urgently need the operation.... she said anything at this stage is really too late. Obviously once I have the operation it will be quite a few months of physio then gym etc a bit like I had in 2010.

Will look into the Alexander Technique though - sounds intriguing....
[/quote]

If you come up London way at all, I can recommend a very good one in St Albans. The Alexander Technique is something that needs more than a few sessions, but it really is worth it

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[quote name='Gary Williams' timestamp='1399217353' post='2442154']
Thanks Walman - I got pretty good results with the (cheaper neoprene not leather) Duo strap but had to do a bit of research.

I didn't want to drill another strap button onto the back of my basses so I was left with the remaining option of using the canvas strap that stretches between the 2 strap buttons on the bass (left to right) and use the leather loop to support the right shoulder strap. This canvas strap was a so flimsy it felt quite loose so I ordered the leather version of this strap from BassGear in the UK for £8 or something (which comes as standard with the more expensive leather Duostrap) and this made this left to right support much more rigid so I got a usable setup with this strap.

I did struggle getting more weight onto the right shoulder strap than the left shoulder strap without the bass shifting sideways into an unnatural playing position....

But to anyone who bought the cheaper Neoprene version of the Duostrap, I highly recommend to upgrade to the leather version of this "left to right" strap. BassGear stock these and as I said, only £8 or so.
[/quote]Bugger I ordered the nylon strap with it rather than the leather as I thought that the strap locks I use wouldn't fit the leather verson :( May have to go back to Dunlops to fit

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I purchased the Duo strap (leather ) about a year ago, but after several attempts at setting it up I gave up. However following Gary's post, together with a noticeable increase in my shoulder pain over the past couple of months, I decided to get it out of the drawer and give it another go over the weekend.
I spent many hours attempting to set up this strap, but whatever setting I arrived at, it just felt awkward. the sensation of having a strap over both shoulders just felt weird. I felt like i was wearing a harness as opposed to a strap.
This weekend I just concentrated on my playing and let the Duo strap go to work. Normally after a weekend of gigs my shoulder is stiff and sensitive to the touch. I get home from a gig and put a heat wrap on it in an attempt to ease the pain.
However, after playing two 3 hour shows this weekend with the Duo strap, I have little or no shoulder pain :). .

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[quote name='leroydiamond' timestamp='1399219368' post='2442167']
Always on the look out for what is happening in the super light bass department. What is the make of bass you are due to take delivery of?.
The one positive is that my shoulder issues really limit the GAS I experience regarding basses. Anything over 7 lb is of little interest
[/quote]

My Ibanez SR300 is very light - even little old weakling Granny me can play it for a couple of hours with no problem! :D

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Best of luck with the procedure once it happens...I took a look at the [i]not gory[/i] You Tube thing and then a quick peak at the actual op. I still find it remarkable that surgery - irrespective of how brutal it looks - can resolve major issues that the patient would historically have just put up with.
P

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[quote name='WalMan' timestamp='1399288886' post='2442726']
Bugger I ordered the nylon strap with it rather than the leather as I thought that the strap locks I use wouldn't fit the leather verson :( May have to go back to Dunlops to fit
[/quote]

I use the Ernie Ball straplocks on the Duostrap and they squeezed on just about....

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