Nail Soup Posted Wednesday at 17:43 Posted Wednesday at 17:43 An original keyboard played on early Stranglers hits by Dave Greenfield is repaired in the Repair Shop BBC1. It was given as a gift to the new keyboard player, Toby, who is a massive fan of Dave's even before joining the band. I believe it is Toby who takes it in. Well worth a watch for any Stranglers fans or those with an interest in vintage keyboards. 3 1 Quote
Reggaebass Posted Wednesday at 20:23 Posted Wednesday at 20:23 Just watching it now, quite interesting Quote
Downunderwonder Posted yesterday at 02:31 Posted yesterday at 02:31 We get the show here but most likely some months or years later. 1 Quote
nikon F Posted yesterday at 13:56 Posted yesterday at 13:56 just watched it,well worth a look , Sranglers fan or not. The Repair Shop on bbc i player series 15 episode 2 ,,,with the added bonus that you can skip past all the other bits you might not want to see. 1 Quote
wateroftyne Posted yesterday at 14:12 Posted yesterday at 14:12 I don’t think I can ever watch that show again after they murdered that old Jazz bass. 4 Quote
Reggaebass Posted yesterday at 14:36 Posted yesterday at 14:36 23 minutes ago, wateroftyne said: I don’t think I can ever watch that show again after they murdered that old Jazz bass. The keyboard one is nowhere as painful Quote
cetera Posted yesterday at 14:54 Posted yesterday at 14:54 Toby is an ex-colleague of my Wife and good friend of us both. He's so thrilled to own that keyboard..... and it was lovely to see it brought back to life on Repair Shop! 5 Quote
Woodinblack Posted yesterday at 15:04 Posted yesterday at 15:04 I thought it was repaired really well, but then the guy is an organ repairer. I never saw the jazz bass, wasn't it hot chocolate? Still, plenty of jazzes around! Sort of coincidently as last week I had watched a whole video of a rhodes bass piano being serviced, which was way more interesting than I expected. Quote
steantval Posted yesterday at 21:00 Posted yesterday at 21:00 Many years ago our rock covers band used to play at the Rose and Crown in the village of Somersham in Cambridgeshire, Dave Greenfield lived in the big house opposite, right in the centre of the village, on two occasions he was in the pub watching us play, both times he stayed until we finished and had a chat with us while we were packing away, nice chap, passed away too early. 4 Quote
BassTractor Posted yesterday at 21:37 Posted yesterday at 21:37 When will they be repairing JJ's speaker cones? 🙃 4 Quote
Jean-Luc Pickguard Posted yesterday at 21:53 Posted yesterday at 21:53 7 hours ago, wateroftyne said: I don’t think I can ever watch that show again after they murdered that old Jazz bass. The hot chocolate one? The luthier that did that is based a short walk from me in Sutton, South London. I took a banjo to him once for some work, but if any of my basses need anything done I'll only them to the Gallery in Camden. Quote
paul_5 Posted yesterday at 22:23 Posted yesterday at 22:23 I once took a banjo to a local luthier shortly before he died, and he snapped it in half and burnt the pieces. God, I miss him. 11 Quote
Beer of the Bass Posted yesterday at 22:48 Posted yesterday at 22:48 Which of his keyboards is it? The Hohner Cembalet was the most unusual one in his setup, and not nearly as straightforward as the others for documentation or parts availability. I have an old Pianet N that's the cousin of it (same reeds and pickup system, different plucking method), so chances are I'd find that an interesting watch. Quote
bass_dinger Posted 23 hours ago Posted 23 hours ago (edited) The Strangler's keyboard. Old 'n Brown... And, at 12'10" a far better Golden Brown reference. Edited 23 hours ago by bass_dinger 2 Quote
tauzero Posted 20 hours ago Posted 20 hours ago Lovely piece of work. I assume that either the reeds have locators so they are perfectly placed, or they didn't want to show the 200 hours of tuning them all up. Very ingenious cutter to make the rubbers, that must have been quite a task though to make 61 of them. Quote
SteveK Posted 12 hours ago Posted 12 hours ago My only real gripe with the repair of Dave Greenfield's old keyboard was that coat of varnish. They've done this before with old furniture when the owner wants to keep the scrapes and knocks, the character - but out comes the varnish! As soon as I see a brush and pot of varnish, I'm internally shouting, "NOOOOOOOO!" Quote
BigRedX Posted 11 hours ago Posted 11 hours ago (edited) I did wonder about the tuning. IIRC one of the competing electro-mechanical pianos from that era was tuned by adding or removing solder from the tines. I also wonder if they added some internal bracing at the corners to hold the case together without changing the external appearance. It certainly looked as though it could do with some. And agreed with the varnish. That glossy finish was nasty. Isn't there something less intrusive available? Even a matt varnish would have been better than shellac. Edited 11 hours ago by BigRedX Quote
madshadows Posted 7 hours ago Posted 7 hours ago Really enjoyed the restoration video, I thought it look and sounded great afterwards John 😎 Quote
BassTractor Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago (edited) 10 hours ago, BigRedX said: IIRC one of the competing electro-mechanical pianos from that era was tuned by adding or removing solder from the tines. Yeah, at least the Wurlitzer was like that. Add solder with your soldering iron, and if necessary remove some of that again with a file. The Rhodes OTOH had small, moveable springs (spiral type) near the tines' ends. Edited 1 hour ago by BassTractor Quote
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