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Showing content with the highest reputation on 26/02/21 in all areas
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During the first half of a gig once I noticed my top strap button had worked loose in the last song. I finished the song by holding the neck up with my left to take the weight for fear of the strap button pulling out, and sending bass tumbling groundwards. In the break I tried to tighten it but the screw wouldn't tighten properly so I went to the bar and purchased a box of matches, pushed one into the screw hole and broke it off flush. The strap button screw now did up nice and tight, great stuff, now I can enjoy the second half worry free. How wrong was I? All the way through that second set I could hear that the wood composition had changed in that bass. Like an idiot I had not asked for tone matches. What a fool I felt.10 points
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I decided I wanted a good looking single cut bass. So many designs out there look like sperm wales, so here my design. Front and back has a bookmatched flamy/spalted maple cap with a lovely reddish tinge, Core is Alder. Neck will be flame maple/wenge laminate with an ebony fingerboard. ETS hardware and Hipshote Ultralite tuners. Preamp is a Noll 3-band 3-parametric EQ running 18v, Pickup is a Delano Xtender Dual coil.7 points
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7 points
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If I charged £8k for a build, I'd feel obliged to give the new owner my car as well, which wouldn't please MrsAndyjr1515 a great deal....6 points
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The Terrortones had our SpiderQueen EP pressed through Media Hut and the SnakeOil For Snakes Album by Mobineko, and unless they have changed the cutting and pressing plants they use to rubbish ones since we had ours done I can recommend either. The reality of the record manufacturing process these days is that very few of the brokers advertising vinyl production actually do their own pressing and nearly all of it is sub-contracted out to pressing plants in Europe (Czech Republic and France in our cases). However given Brexit and the various customs delays and additional charges associated with it this may no longer be the situation. Certainly before the beginning of 2021 all the UK pressing plants were vastly more expensive than the places we used. That may not longer be the case. From an actual production PoV there are a couple of things to be aware of. There is a trade-off between audio quality and running time on vinyl and also the closer you get to the label on a record the lower the quality of the audio. IIRC the recommendations we got for our pressing were not to exceed 4 minutes per side for 7" and 12 minutes for 12" (both at 45rpm) if we wanted the best quality audio signal on our records. In practice one side of our 7" EP was 5' 30" and each side of the album was 18 minutes and the audio hasn't suffered significantly within the limitations of the medium. Don't bother with the extra expense of "heavy-weight" pressings, it's for vinyl snobs only. Besides compared with the typical records of the late 70s and 80s the current standard of 120 gram vinyl is already a massive improvement. The big problem you will have with producing vinyl as opposed to CDs is how long it takes. SpiderQueen took just over 4 weeks from submitting the audio and sleeve artwork to receiving our records, but by the time we did the album that had increased to 12 weeks turn-around. There are places offering quicker lead times , but all charge a premium. Also if your are looking at getting your record produced anytime during the run up to "Record Shop Day" forget it. The pressing plants are all booked solid with limited edition releases form the major record labels and one-off pressings won't get a look in. When it comes to packaging you absolutely need to have a well-designed and eye-catching sleeve. This is one of things that you use to persuade people to buy the physical product rather than just stream it or get a digital download. These days short run printing is cheap, so there's no excise for not having a picture sleeve for your record so you don't have to act like the Desperate Bicycles when it comes to producing your record. Most definitely the days of ordering records in just plain paper sleeves and then wrapping them in a photocopied sheet are long over (unless you are specifically trying to recreate that late 70s DIY vibe). If you can do/afford something more than just an ordinary printed picture sleeve, that will help your record to stand out - The Terrortones had an 8-page comic with SpiderQueen and SnakeOil For Snakes comes in a clear plastic cover with the band and album name printed on it and then with 5 double-sided insert sheets to give a variety of alternative front covers depending on your mood. While you don't need a graphic designer to do your sleeve design it is worth showing the final artwork to someone who is a packaging design professional to make sure that you don't get any unpleasant surprises when your design is printed. Don't put any cover versions on the record, you'll need to pay for a MCPS licence before you can get the records pressed for any if you do, and get all the songwriters of the tracks on the record to join the PRS. Any more questions just ask away.6 points
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5 points
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I managed to make the cover of one... ...loudest gig I ever attended btw.5 points
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How come the discussion leaps from Harley Benton straight to Fodera? I've had a few dozen basses, and played a ton more... the cheapest cost me £20 or was free, the most expensive had a retail price originally of over £3k. I've played and owned some great instruments, and some that were a bit "meh". I've found generally, that there is diminishing returns the more you pay... and also conversely I'm more likely to find exceptional instruments at higher price points. I've found amazing basses that cost almost nothing, and I've found that there are some higher end basses with a real even resonance across the fretboard that I haven't found on cheaper basses. Don't over spend, don't get into debt to buy, the guy from Vulfpeck did quite well on a Mexican fender, it's not going to make you a better player, stop stressing about it, stop hating on people with more money than you, don't feel too inferior to the folk who are better players on worse kit than you, don't over-justify your own decisions without really listening to the other point of view... some people will have £5k worth of cheap instruments and moan about high end stuff not being worth it, some people have one £3k bass... shrug. It's Friday night, none of us are gigging, there's no live music to hear. I want a beer. [/rant]5 points
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5 points
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I'm actually performing on a Kraftwerk bootleg CD (IIRC it's called "Computers In Love"). It's made up of recordings from their 1981 tour including the one I attended at Rock City in Nottingham. For the second encore "Pocket Calculator" the band came down to the front of the stage playing various portable devices, and after the line "By pressing down a special key, It plays a little melody" they held out one the keyboards to the audience to allow them to press the keys. Being down the front and in the right place at the right time, one of these tunes is being played by me.5 points
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Good to see the old ‘tone is in the fingers’ comment doing the rounds again. It’s true that varying your attack and hand position can alter the timbre of a given sound, but you simply cannot make a P bass sound like a 70s Jazz with your fingers unless you use said fingers to install pickups 😂5 points
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5 points
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Hello, PRICE DROP ! Now £480 / 550€ PLEASE be aware that as the bass is in France, there might be import charges or delay to the UK. No probs with the rest of Europe. For sale is this rather uncommon Yamaha SuperBass800, made in Japan in 1978 and still in very good condition. - Alder body - 1 piece quartersawn maple neck with natural white block inlays, gloss finish - 42mm nut : a Jazz bass with a Precision neck - "Progressive" headstock and back of neck design 😎 - 4 to 4.1kg : under 9lbs Following the Yamaha BB serial chart, the SB800 was made in 1978. It has the same sturdy bridge and general construction as the BroadBass series with 2 jazz pickups : Vol / Vol / Tone The neck pickup has a Precisionesque tone, it is overall quite woody. Absolutely no buzz. It is just back from the luthier for a general check-up and set up : the trussrod works fine but is almost to a maximum, set up with 45-105s. Here is for the neck : back of neck sb800.mp4 In the broad bass body category : Asking for £480 / 550€ Shipping is not a problem. Options to be discussed. I can include a brand new Gator GL lightweight case worth 55€ as I prefer not so ship with neck off. Any questions or further pics needed, please ask. Cheers4 points
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For what it's worth. . . . . . I have been interested in this since the 70s and generally follow a rule of play it/listen to it and then decide if you like it, as opposed to Look at the name on the head an see how Visually appealing it is, Being lucky enough to be able to select several different instruments at one time, I have vever really found a solid and consistant rule of thumb. There is a thread on at the moment about plywood bodies and I have/have had various ones of those and can honestly say that some were absolute dogs and some were really very good. I can (and have, many times) take three or four of something, same make and model/same year/or one year younger or older, maybe different colour but that's all and the all have subtle differences. I have had £150 purchaces and been blown away by the sound and conversely bought something online (which we all do now but didn't 20/30 years ago) because it seemed to tick all my criteria boxes but just couldn't get to love it - tonewood/high mass bridge/fancy pots/high end tuners etc but just couldn't get on with it. Being interested in this, I have gone through the posts and I think bubinga5 made a valid comment " It will always be the sum of the parts. Way too many variables to nail any conclusions down". It is also about fashions, anyone old enough would remember the days when most players lusted for the new this and the new that and older instruments would have been seen to be "high milage" and needed to be replaced. Now, those old instuments are highly prized. Are they all made from exotic woods, perhaps not. Having said all of the above, I am like almost all on here and my head has been turned by something that I have loved the look of and may have been lucky on many occasions, to find that I did like it. Blindfolded, can you really tell the difference between a £10,000 bass and a £5000 bass with beautiful and appealing tonewoods . . . . . maybe, maybe not. Can you tell between a £5000 bass and a £500 bass. . . . maybe, maybe not. Between £500 and £50, more than likely, yes. Fit a new set of strings, a different sound and tone - different lead/head/cab/room/floor/ceiling = different sound and tone. This is something that will roll on for generations, I believe it's a personal thing - maybe best to leave it that no one is right and no one is wrong. 👍😎4 points
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4 points
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You couldn’t buy a bass today with a ‘flimsy’ bridge if you tried, and you’d have to be especially unlucky to have any reliability issues at all. Rest assured you really won’t use the extra frets, that’s what your guitar is for . Safest bet starting out is just buy the bass you like the look of the most.4 points
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That example is disgusting 🤣🤣🤣. I don’t get the relic thing. If I ever win the lottery, I’ll buy loads of old messed up fenders and refinish them. In poly.4 points
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This bass is simply stunning. Visually everything just works perfectly, from the warmth of the colours to the modern hardware. The craftsmen ship is, from the diary, absolutely top notch and I can only imagine it'll sound superb. We all like different features but there is nothing on this bass I could imagine changing. Absolutely perfect. 🙂👍4 points
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One other thing I forgot to mention. You will need some form of digital version to go with a vinyl-only release. Either a CD included in the packaging or a link to free download. You'll find that very few people actually play the records they buy but simply add the digital version to their computer or phone. These days the free download is the way to go. If you sell your record through Bandcamp they will give you 200 download codes for free and you can buy more at starting at 100 codes for $3. Edit: and get your EP on all the streaming and download services using an Aggregator. Some take a very low percentage of your sales and streaming income but require you to pay a yearly subscription in order to keep your music available on line. Others charge a one-off fee for your music to be available for ever but also take a higher proportion of any income generated. Have a look at what the various services charge and pick the one that you think will shut your band the best. I have music available on-line through CD Baby, Catapult and Distrokid. However unless you have a video that goes viral to go with the release don't expect to make much money from on-line sales. Ultimately The Terrortones made less than 5% of the total sales value of our music from on-line (both physical mail order and streaming/downloads). The other 95% came from selling actual records and CDs at gigs (remember them?). In fact none of my music available for download/streaming has yet recouped it's initial Aggregator set-up fees. However as a promotional tool it is pretty much required.4 points
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Careful....you may find you're upsetting many of his previous clients...😉4 points
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4 points
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If we've learnt anything at the numerous tests at Bass bashes is that even bass players/owners struggle to tell the differences. I think the closest we've come to any agreement is that Rosewood fretboards tend to be "warmer" than Maple boards. Personally, I agree with @Doctor J, that looks make a difference. If I like the looks of a bass then this will influence whether I fall in love with the tones. If all of this is only a placebo effect then great...if others don't agree, so what...4 points
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4 points
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You may consider Custom Shop prices outrageous but when you consider the instruments they're replicating - mass produced by largely unskilled labour using some of the cheapest, most plentiful woods at the time - sell for multiples of even Custom Shop prices, it might change your perspective, no? What's worth considering is how cheap some instruments are, not just how expensive others are. There's a whole lot of exploitation built into your £99 Harley Benton. When you consider the cost of the raw materials alone, never mind the taxes and duties, the transportation, everyone taking their cut along the way, it does't leave much for the poor bastards who built it, does it? Comparing the cost of something made where worker's rights don't exist and living standards are barely above the level of vermin and using it as means to gripe about how expensive instruments made elsewhere is just a little misguided, in my opinion.4 points
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Up for sale is this wonderful Fodera Monarch Elite 4. Very rare Elite model (top of the line) and especially in 4 string version. Bass is absolute beauty, plays and sounds fantastic as you would expect from Elite Fodera. Specs: - Mahogany body - Alder tone block - Curly walnut top - nearly magical pattern to look at - Ebony fingerboard - Abalone blocks/inlays - Duncan Dual Coils - Pope Electronics - Comes from "golden" era of Fodera, when everything was done exclusively by Vinny Bass is in perfect condition, everything is original. Shipped from Czech Republic and shipping is included in the price, UK buyers please PM me and we manage postBrexit conditions somehow. 6350€ or whatever equivalent in GBP.3 points
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Superb top of the range Ampeg bass rig. Consists of: Ampeg SVT7 PRO head. This is a new rev H revision with the H board so super reliable. Very lightweight. Tube pre amp and class d power section. Also includes headphone jack and aux in for silent practicing. Ampeg SVT 410hlf USA and padded faux leather cover. Amazing cab. Goes very low and has a horn attenuator for the high end. Very easy to move due to the wheels and bull bar. This is USA built. Much better than the current eastern built cabs. All in all an amazing rig, that will do any gig and is easy to move around. The classic Ampeg SVT sound in a great package. Pick up Leyland Lancashire.3 points
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Hi for sale only.. I bought this wonderful bass from @timcook Beautiful Handbuilt Baseline Buster bass 1996 Amazing playing and sounding bass from Germany. https://bassline-bass.de/en/ 4 string 24 fret… 34 inch scale 38mm nut. 3.6Kg Zero fret ETS bridge (fully adjustable) Le Fay Humbucker pick-ups 9v 2 band Noll pream 3 Schaller strap pins Neutrik locking Jack socket Alder/Ash sandwiched body 3piece Maple neck Pau Ferro fingerboard Volume push/pull active/passive pickup blend Treble cut/boost Bass cut/boost This is one of the very original Buster basses! In excellent overall condition for a 25 year old bass. A few dings as to be expected see pics..Plays fantastic with a slim neck and low action, plus very light!! The Le Fay pickups really sing with the Noll preamp..Frets in great condition and truss rod works as it should.This bass would be in the region of £2000 if new. This is a bargain here!! Can ship next day postage for £20 mainland UK. Will come in a padded Warwick gig bag possibly older than the bass!! but perfectly functional. Any questions please ask? Thanks😃👍3 points
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Matching phoenix tail feathers for the neck cores? "The wand chooses the wizard, Harry, just like the bass chooses the player"3 points
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This is the point I've debated with. There is nothing wrong with a cheap bass, but there may very well be something a little sinister about how it's made, not just the pennies on the pound some of these people get paid, but the responsibility behind sourcing the materials to make them. Cheap is often cheap because someone is getting a bad deal, and that someone is usually the person who physically made it. I would rather pay more knowing that everything is a fair deal, though I appreciate I am in a fortunate enough position to have the luxury of taking that stance. There is a question of morality between the pros of a cheap bass and the ethics behind its creation and the expense of a custom bass which supports a single craftsperson. The same arguement can be had with almost everything we consume - cheap is cheap for a reason, though buying something expensive isn't always proof of a better product. The choppy waters of ethical buying are often hard to navigate with purposefully confusing currents put in play by those who wish to steer you towards a particular purchase.3 points
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I do full builds, mods, tweaks and what have you. Personally I really don’t care if it is assembled or made from scratch, as long as I enjoy doing it. Whilst I am relatively capable, my full builds are not Ken Smiths or Wals, nor would I expect them to be and in turn I would not judge anyone for using parts instead of building things themselves. It is so dependent on time, money, equipment, talent and skill. Not all bass players are equal, but they are all bass players. Same with bass builders. So as long as people are transparent about what they have done I have zero issues at all. And mind you, many custom basses are made by CNC ... so you should not even attempt to draw a line.3 points
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Some leftover oak worktop, an hour or so in the garden with the chopsaw and drill/hole saw, and a bit of rasping and sanding, plus some sticky-back rubber from hobbycraft and some osmo oil to finish…3 points
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I don't think you get the 'tone is in the hands' quote. It's not about making a Jazz sound like a Precision or a Hofner or whatever. It's about how a particular player brings their individually to an instrument. It's why Pino sounds different to JJ Burnell even though they both play Precisions, or why Marcus sounds different to Jaco even though they both play Jazz Basses. Likewise, a player can play different basses, and while there will be a change in sound due to the instrument, there is still something recognizable in the tone due to the player. Look how many discussions there are about whether Geddy Lee played his Jazz or Ric.3 points
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Amongst my modest collection of 7 basses there are MIJ, MIK, MIRC, Indonesia & unknown. Previously I've had MIA & MIM. The price or origin does not influence my decision to keep or move on, only the feel & voice of the instrument after a setup and a few weeks of playing it. I have noticed over the last several years though how the cheaper models have improved in quality. This must be down to improved QC and with CNC machining the accuracy & consistency of manufacturing. Sure, "you get what you pay for" is still true to a certain extent but not a hard & fast rule. It's good that a decent instrument can be had from the word go for a modest outlay. In the 60's when guitars first became popular there was a rush by manufactures to meet demand and quality was variable to say the least. But we didn't know any better. We didn't know about setups & intonation. String type & gauge were limited too. I would say we're spoiled for choice now whatever your budget. And with easier access to information we are better informed before we buy, thanks to places like BC.3 points
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I know, I'm an idiot. It ruined that gig for everyone. The audience were visibly shocked at the deterioration in sound quality.3 points
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3 points
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Med scale 32" Aria Pro11 Thor sound TSB550 Neck through bass in natural Ash. Quality hardware with passive vol and 5 way tone control and a coil tap switch. truss rod fully functioning frets are in great shape with minimum wear. 44mm nut width with a super fast shallow neck, low action, 17mm string spacing at the brass bridge. Lovely light weight bass about 8lbs, very comfortable bass perfectly balanced on the strap in great condition with a few minor dings and a tiny scratch next to the jack socket, it is rare to find a bass of this age (1980's)in such good shape. Prefer collection from Nr Plymouth Devon, I'm happy to drive up to around 50 miles for a personal handover but if a courier is required it will be very well packed in the hard case .2 points
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2 points
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2 points
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You overestimate the size of the portions. I always decline the waffer theeen mint.2 points
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Being young , dumb and 'enthusiastic ' for a better word , I do appear on 2 nwobhm live recordings . Myself and my friend , kept shouting for " if I were king " on the vardis album . They played 100mph instead . The other recording is a bit more embarrassing , and a nice roadie let me do the following : At the marquee when iron maiden played 4 oversold out shows, I went to 2 of them . The first and the last one . They were filmed , but not on the gigs I went to . Anyhow , after maiden encored with "I got the fire " on the final night , the microphone was left on the stage floor . I picked it up . I thought about having it as a souvenir , but I saw roadie come with a smile on his face , and I just shouted " ooh iron maiden " . That is on the sanctuary ep.🥲( can't find embarrassed emoji ) Regarding jarre at the dock lands . I went to the rainy Saturday night . I met jmj at virgin records with my friend . We were among the last dozen or so before the rest got turned away . I didn't know what to say to him , so I just said " have a nice day '. He saw the funny side and thanked me . Again , I can't find embarrassed emoji. 😼 There's probably more , and I may chip in later ..2 points
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Any excuse to post this, it was played in every club in Ibiza at one time , the good ol days , it’s where I met miss RB, she was a podium dancer2 points
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I've been a bit busy with work recently, which is slowing the project up, but I managed to fit the drivers to Phil's cab and measure the in-cab impedance of the bass driver this morning. The tuning frequency with our 100mm diameter x 120mm port is around 58Hz. We need to get it lower and I've already planned for that. Those of you familiar with WinISD might like to enter the parameters of the Celestion Pulse 10 to see what's happening. The impedance curve is a useful troubleshooting tool, which tells you a lot more than just the load the driver is placing on the amp. Notice the bump just above 2kHz, which was there when I measured the impedance in free air. That's the main breakup point of the cone. There's likely to be some irregularity in the response here, depending on how well the manufacturer has managed to damp the resonance - if at all. There's also a faint bump at about 350Hz. That's caused by the vertical standing wave inside the cab. It looks better than I'm used to. The most interesting - and unusual - bump is at 60Hz. I have a good idea what that is but will have to troubleshoot it. Any suggestions?2 points
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Sex with a Voodoo doll of yourself is the only true example of a closed infinity loop.2 points
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The hardware on Sire basses is fine. I've used a V7 on a load of gigs and recordings, and it's done exactly what it's supposed to. Sure, it's not Hipshot or Gotoh, but it's cool. Personally, I wouldn't get too hung up on humbuckers or 24 frets, and I'd get a Sire, which are my favourite basses in their price range.2 points
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Welcome KN - Happy Birthday - you're three years younger than me and I'm just looking to re-start playing bass too after a long sloth-induced absence. Enjoy this - it's a great thing to be doing.2 points
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I know people who work at some of the factories that make OEM for western brands, including Peavey, ESP, Schecter and Ibanez in China. They're not indentured slaves. They get paid a wage that is comparable to similar role of responsibility and skill in other market sectors, just like the UK. Something like 3-4000 RMB/month. No that doesn't translate into much by UK standards but the workers come from families that have modest lifestyles and income tax is extremely low. They're comfortable with a lifestyle that is free of many financial drains such as status symbols, expensive hobbies, large insurance premiums, council tax etc. They're also free to leave their jobs (and they do, many will stay a year in one place and move on) and workers rights are stronger in China than they are in the UK in regard to overtime, holiday pay, and maternity/paternity leave. Companies were required to pay minimum wage to all staff during COVID lockdown. EDIT: The cost of labour is the main reason why stuff is cheap but that'll change in the next 10-20 years. The other reason is because each person spends as little time on their part of the manufacturing process as possible and, yes, too often the labour is often (but not always) unskilled because factories don't see the point of investing a lot of time in a single employee if they're likely to bugger off in 12 months. This is the main reason why some Chinese stuff is poor quality. For some aspects like finishing, there's no substitute for having someone involved who has experience. If you have a product that needs very little time to make and is fairly straight forward to make (ie. no finishing) then stuff can be churned out at insane rates.2 points
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It will always be the sum of the parts. Way too many variables to nail any conclusions down.2 points
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Something is only “worth” what someone else is willing to pay for it.2 points