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Showing content with the highest reputation on 08/05/22 in all areas
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Created as a contrast to the 'I Hate Gigging' thread, in which some of the comments I find utterly depressing, I would like to think that the majority of Basschatters do actually enjoy the gigging experience. I get that there are some that cannot deal with getting up in front of a crowd or prefer to make music behind closed doors and that's fine, but let's leave the hate out of it. I for one certainly wouldn't do a single gig that I wasn't looking forward to. I don't understand why people would, unless of course they have to for financial reasons. Through 40 years of gigging, I cannot recall a single date that I haven't looked forward to. There have been a few that I've been a bit nervous about for one reason or another, but in the main, those days are long gone. There have also been a few gigs that once I've arrived at the venue, it has become clear that it was not what any of the band were expecting which can be a bit of a buzz kill, but I think we've all had a few of them. For me, gigging is about putting smiles on people faces and getting them moving. I don't do it for the money (although it's a nice bi-product) and I certainly do it for any kind of adoration; it's just a great thing to be able to make people happy and then leave feeling like they've been entertained for an evening. I'm not saying I wouldn't find it a strain, but I would be out every night if I could. Let's hear it for the love of gigging.16 points
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Very overated. Most soundman are absolute bass hating ladyboys. Only one step up the evolutional ladder from wedding dj,s 😉😂😂😂6 points
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I too love gigging. Been doing it pretty much continuously for over 45 years, nearly 30 of them in a full time capacity. Strangely I’ve even enjoyed many of those gigs that were purely taken on to put food on the table, and can only remember a small number which were true car crashes. Like others have mentioned, I see playing bass as a group activity, and wish I’d started playing it sooner - my first few years of gigging were as a guita*ist, which I was competent at but not as good as many other players around me. ( I’m no virtuoso on bass either, but am what people usually term ‘a solid player’.) Even on those days when I may be not so keen on driving up and down the country in our band bus, I never lose sight of the fact that those people who come to see us play actually pay my wages, and also how much it means to them too. That alone makes it all worthwhile for me. If there was no audience then I doubt whether I would continue to play bass, probably choosing to amuse myself playing guitar and piano very badly.5 points
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The king of bass amps! This beauty has served me well since buying it around 5 years ago. I haven't gigged with it since before the pandemic so the time has come to find her a new home! Without a doubt one of the most musical bass amps around, no tweaking required. There's a reason you see these amps on every big stage the world over. It has been kept in a rack case from day 1. There's a few finger marks and scratches on the front panel but nothing major - the photos show it all really and it's in good condition. I should add that the amp is pictured in an old rack case - ignore the marks on it as they aren't on the amp itself! Just back from my amp tech (Tony at Amp Repairs NI) who gave it the once over and serviced the dust fans etc. These are very hard to find at the moment with Aguilar products seemingly out of stock everywhere. They retail currently at around the £3k mark if you can find them, so here's your chance to grab a real bargain at less than half the cost of a new one. I can ship this at buyer's expense - probably looking at £50+. Happy to price around for you. It'll be shipped in an old flightcase for protection and well packaged with double walled cardboard also. No trades please as I am currently buying a house and need to free up some funds! Any queries please don't hesitate to PM Happy Bassing! Danny4 points
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I'm selling my beloved Ashdown CTM100 and 4x10" Ashdown cab, as we've recently upgraded to in-ear monitors in our band which means I don't need quite such a big rig (which is good for my back!) The CTM100 is classic ashdown with a great range of tone (and volume) for any discerning bassist. It's been serviced and PAT tested last year, and is in good working order save for a small crack in the meter and a slightly temperamental DI output. I've got a Roqsolid cover for it also. The cab is a used ashdown 4x10" (410T) which works really well with the head. It's fairly well gig-worn with a couple of scuffs but it's still in good working order. It's fitted with casters so it can be moved about easily and again has a case for it. I'm after around £750 for both, but would be willing to split the two if the right offer was made (no trades unfortunately). The head can be couriered (it's around 19kg in weight) but the cab would need collecting, or we'd have to make an arrangement to meet halfway etc. PM me if you'd like any more information or pictures. thanks4 points
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Great weekend at the NADB bikers rally just outside Knutsford. Played Friday and Saturday nights in two different marquees. Bikers love their glam rock and despite a few technical niggles with power on the first night we all had a great time. Took two of the shorties, Fallout on the first night and Mustang on the second. Can’t wait for the Farmyard rally in June.4 points
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Love it. Well and truly back into it after covid. Out every week now (except when I’m away in June) until new year! I don’t have to do it. I want to do it. 😃4 points
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Personally, I can’t find any other reason to play bass than to play live. I’m in now way criticising those who love to shred at home but, unlike guitar or piano, there’s little enjoyment in it. That’s why I’ve taken to playing guitar at home, and the byproduct means my bass playing is better.4 points
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I found that it was the first forty years that were the best, and even now, when the rare opportunities come up, I look forward to it, as long as I am able, and allowed, to coil up a lead or two to help out at the end. Fond memories of a totally empty dance hall, on the evening that the first discothèque opened a couple of miles away. The old lady with her broom chasing out the lads that had started fighting. The guitarist, Michel, taking over Gégé's bass to show him how to play 'Sir Duke', but using a banana, the 'discussion' with the BL as to how to play drums for Stones numbers, the 'British' way, the tour bus stuck in a snow drift, and that time all the tyres had been slashed. Clearing a wedding 'do' with a rendering of King Crimson and Saucerful Of Secrets, as a drum-keys duo (wildly applauded...). I had heard the expression 'Sex'n'drugs'n'Rock'n'Roll'. Rock, every time? Drugs..? Saw 'em about oft-times. But when does the 'sex' kick in..?4 points
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Funny how peoples perspectives differ. Mark Radcliff interviewed her when she had been off the radar for ages. Its in his book Thank you for the Days. He said he was surprised at how ordinary she was, no airs and graces and even cooked him lunch. There was no "Get your people to arrange things with my people" type of thing. He spoke with her on the phone and arranged to meet at her house. Rang on the bell and she let him in, then apologised for only having a quiche from the freezer. Nothing was off the agenda and no publicist or management present.4 points
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If I used only the guidance on Basschat to inform my buying decisions, I would be playing a 4-string Precision with flatwounds through some valve monstrosity (no effects) into an Ampeg fridge. I'm rather glad I'm independently minded. As regards listening comparisons, I recommend looking for reviews of hi-fi speaker cables and experiments in double-blind listening tests. Even more revealing, look for reviews of digital interconnect cables (USB and HDMI), for example https://www.whathifi.com/vertere/pulse-d-fi/review4 points
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Great pub gig with dep singer Usually dep myself but did 15 gigs since March while they find a bass guy Rocked the place4 points
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Great 2nd gig with the new band. The Rose and Crown in Elmsett….good crowd, played well, free drinks!4 points
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So I’ve been on a bit of a quest, and last week yielded these two fine basses from my fave 2013-16 range of Fender US Standards, a 2013 from our very own @vincbtand a 2014 from the ‘bay. Match very nicely with my fave 2015. All that was needed was A-String Retainers and Hipshot Drop-D Extenders. The 13 gets the gigging band, the 14 gets the classic rock band.3 points
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For sale now is my fantastic Squier Classic Vibe 50s Precision bass which hasn't even left the house since I bought it in January. In fact it hasn't been out of it's gig bag since February I've had a few single coil precisions from Japanese Fender reissues to a couple I had made by Warmoth and this is right up there with those. It feels really good quality which isn't as surprising as it used to be but personally this is good enough to have a Fender logo on it Although this bass didn't originally come with one, I am going to include a Fender gig bag (there's a small tear in the fabric but it doesn't go all the way through to the bass itself - plus it's a freebie!) and genuine "Fendet" strap which matches the bass perfectly (Another freebie!). I have also just set the bass up with a brand new set of D'addario EXL165 strings. I have the original box and packaging so can courier this bass to your address. Postage will be £22 for Parcelforce Express 24 or £34 for UPS for non-remote parts of mainland UK. I am more than happy to meet up somewhere within a reasonable distance and you're also welcome to collect it from me3 points
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I love gigging, but have found that I need to get the right balance. My last band was pretty full-on, gigging most weekends with sometimes gigs both Fri & Sat, and these gigs were all over the UK and in Europe. Whilst it was great I just wasn’t getting enough rest & recuperation time. So I’m now in a band that does about 10 gigs a year, which suits me much better.3 points
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I played my first music, in front of punters, for over two years last night. It looked like it might never happen, as the singer of my main band had some serious health issues over lockdown, but she's feeling much better now and ready to Rock n Roll again. I'd been rehearsing with other bands but they're not quite ready to gig yet (if it ever happens). It was great to get up and turn everything up to 10 (well actually the gain was probably on about 2). We ended up playing everything about 3 times it's correct normal speed (I think the drummer was a bit nervous).3 points
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3 points
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Traditionally the bass is the bridge between the rhythm and the chords. There's nothing wrong with that. Tradition is a good thing, but bass doesn't always have to be pigeon holed. If you're any good you make your own boxes and if you are even better you make boxes irrelevant. It's all up to the player.3 points
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We played at The Wrecking Ball Arts Centre at Hull. A long drive and a load in upstairs but what a lovely venue. Downstairs is a record shop/bookshop/cafe with lots of vinyl. Upstairs is a 100 seater venue with small bar. Nice sound due to heavy drapes all round. It's fitted out with a top quality PA and a young full time sound engineer who really knows his stuff. We played without a support band (Vambo have been with us on most of the dates) and it was nice to stretch our legs for over two hours. I had a change and used my GK MB500 instead of my Bugera. Achieved a nice tone with a really solid bottom end, not sure if it was the amp or the raised stage/PA but I'll try the same set up next week. Sound was excellent, had a decent crowd and despite being a man down due to illness we had a great night. The Bullingdon in Oxford next Thursday and The Boston Music Rooms in London on Friday bring the tour to an end.3 points
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So I'm feeling good today. I bought this bass in 2013. It had the original parts and I had a "professional" replace the pickups do the setup. I get it back and the e string barely made sound. The intonation was off and the strings were fretting out. Frustrating and still largely unusable I decide to find a second person to fix it in 2018. He tells me to buy the wrong bridge. Installs it incorrectly. Still have the same problems. 2022 I go to basschat and a group of very friendly and helpful people encourage me to do the work myself. You all helped me figure out my bridge position, find the right bridge for this short scale, encourage me that drilling a few holes isn't so tough. I also took it upon myself to install a new pickup. Let me say, I feel very proud of myself for being able to do this but I wouldn't have even tried if it wasn't for you guy. A very special thank you goes to @Downunderwonder for all the encouragement and advice and being there throughout the process. Also @Woodinblack for encouraging me to rip out the wiring and start from scratch. You helped me figure out how to use my multimeter and I learned how to solder as well. Not to mention how to fill holes with toothpicks. The bass is working now about as perfectly as I could possibly ask for. Intonation is great. I'm not sure about the string height yet but it plays well. The G string is a little offset on the bridge pickup but it picks up the sound pretty decently. If I really wanted to I could maybe move that pickup I little toward that direction. The only thing I want to consider in the future is mainly aesthetic. I was hoping to find some paint to match to do some touchups. I was also looking to get something to do about the exposed cavities. Maybe I'll take a 3d printing class in the future and design something to fit over it. I don't consider myself a handy person but right now I'm trying to learn. So thank you to everyone who participated in making my bass what I wanted it to be in 2013. For something a luthier wanted to charge over $300 I did for myself with a soldering iron and a new bridge and a lot of support. The old wiring The new wiring It goes to 11 now 🤘🤘 I had Harry Nilsson's "Jump Into the Fire" bass line in my head all day so it had to be the first thing I played when I finished. Here's a sample of what the bass sounds on the different settings. The first three are demos of just the bass straight into ableton. The last three I'm running the bass through a Rusty Box pre-amp before sending it to ableton.3 points
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Aria Pro II SB-1000B Oak The Aria SB-1000 is a faithful and ‘high-end’ revisit to a time when bass construction was enjoying a surge of creativity and flair. Aria Pro II SB series had been esteemed by legendary bassists through the ages including Cliff Burton, John Taylor, Rudy Sarzo, Jack Bruce, Marcus Miller. Smoothly sculpted neck-through body offers you superb sustain as well as unbeatable access to the upper frets. Pure tone boosted by double coil pickup is absolutely strong and BB-Circuit allows you make a wide range tone control. * B.B. Circuit: The “B.B. Circuit” was the one of the distinctive function brought SB basses to a stardom. Provide a ton of sonic flexibility, literally at the turn of a single knob. Each of the six presets change the frequency of a low pass filter, which changes the character of the bass tone. *Super Balanced Body: Slightly tapered body thickness ensure the perfect body balance. Year: 2021 Weight: 9.5lbs Case: Padded Gig Bag Body: Ash Neck: Maple/Walnut 7 ply, Neck-thru Body, Heel-Less Cutaway Fingerboard: Ebony Number of Frets: 24 Scale Length: 864mm (34 inches) Pickups: MB-1E Double Coil x 1 Controls: Volume x 1, Tone x 1, Attack Mode Selector, Bypass Switch, Battery off Switch. Machine Heads: Gotoh Tailpiece: Gotoh Hardware: Gold NB The Bass is completely original except for the second switch which is used to deactivate the batteries in moments of pause. Price : 1300€2 points
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2006 Indonesian made model which IMHO are better than the Mexican Fenders at that time. Upgraded with Tone Rider pickups, but the original Seymour Duncan designed pickups are included. Tone rider Jazz Plus pickups - https://tonerider.com/product/jazz-plus/?v=79cba1185463 Beautiful maple neck and finger board and natural body. Medium to low action at the moment, very few marks on it. There is a slight dent in the fingerboard above the 7th fret (see picture) but it can’t be felt during play. As you can see, it has a white pick guard and 70’s period style plastic knobs. The original black pick guard is also included. VGC Gator GW Bass hard case included - only a minor scuff on one of the corners (again, see pictures). Weight is 4.5 kg on my kitchen scales - see picture Price is £300 or £315 delivered Price is £325 collected from Perthshire or £340 delivered to your door Payment by bank transfer or PayPal if you are happy to cover the fees Product Specs Model Name:Vintage Modified '70s Jazz Bass®, Maple Fingerboard, Natural Country Of Origin:ID Color:Natural Body:Soft Maple Body Finish:Gloss Polyurethane Body Shape:Jazz Bass® Neck Material:Maple Neck Shape:"C" Shape Scale Length:34" (864 mm) Fingerboard:Maple Fingerboard Radius:9.5" (241 mm) Number of Frets:20 Frets Size:Medium Jumbo String Nut:Bone Nut Width:1.5" (38.1 mm) Position Inlays:Black Block Truss Rods:Head Adjust Bridge Pickup:Fender® Designed Alnico Single-Coil Neck Pickup:Fender® Designed Alnico Single-Coil Controls:Volume 1. (Middle Pickup), Volume 2. (Bridge Pickup), Master Tone Pickup Switching:None Pickup Configuration:SS Bridge:4-Saddle Vintage-Style Hardware Finish:Nickel Tuning Machines:Vintage-Style Pickguard:3-Ply Black2 points
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Most claims made in the HI-Fi cable world are preposterous at best and many border on fraudulent IME)2 points
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I think it has the type of truss rod with a brass nut? There are a number of things that may have happened, but it maybe that the nut has bottomed on the thread of the rod. If so, Fender sell spacer washers (the inside and outside dia's are a bit unusual which is why standard washers are no good. It says something, though, that Fender sell them...) that you pop under the nut to give it a few more turns before bottoming. Worth a try...2 points
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That’s great though! Its obviously reputation 😉 We seem to have a lot more parties this year, I guess people catching up from the last 2 years of staying in. Started taking bookings for 2024 weddings now. 😃2 points
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Yes, it's really weird that this year is busier than the few years immediately before the Big C. I'm also getting a fair bit of dep work as well. I'm not quite sure why this is happening, but I have gigs with 3 new bands I've not played with this year, plus some Ska dates. I have by no means gone out of my way to seek these out, they've just fallen in my lap, so I guess quite a lot of bands are busy. Either that or a lot of bass players have given up gigging 🤷♂️2 points
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I love gigging. Aside from the rush, the pressure makes us all play that bit better than in any rehearsal.2 points
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I asked a friend for ideas for how to reshape the headstock of my PB50. He suggested using an angle grinder with a velcro sanding pad and various grades of abrasive. I would never have thought of this and had no idea of how well it would work, but as he had the necessary tools and offered to do the job, I took the neck over to his place yesterday and he had a go. I think it came out really well. I just need to do a bit of hand sanding and it will be ready for refinishing.2 points
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I love it, it's the point of doing music for me. I'm quite fortunate as I don't even get nervous, unlike my 2 band mates.2 points
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I have posted this before but it’s a Pedal train classic jr2 points
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I would have said blue , but then thought of my actual basses through the years and the clear winner is red, closely followed by white, and 'natural'. In fact I've never owned a blue bass. But they look nice. Also I saw one of these in a shop recently and lost my mind, it actually looked as awesome in the flesh as in the pics. Ridiculous, but awesome. my current bass is one of these, roadster orange apparently, and it's lovely2 points
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As with most music, Kate Bush totally passed me by at the time. I somehow got my hands on a greatest hits album round about 2000, and it totally blew me away. There's not many artists I would consider to be truly unique. I'd never heard anything like it.2 points
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I saw Kate Bush on TOTP singing Wuthering, as her first single, and that was that. I bought her first 2 albums, and was blown away by just how intricate her song writing was. Plus that unique voice ( marmite ) and the talented musicians playing on those albums. But, those first 2 albums is where it ended for me, because i didnt like anything she wrote after The Kick Inside and Lionheart. Having said that, re. Kate Bush the woman, she could have the top off my egg any day, from the day i first saw on her TOTP,... bad voice, diva , foul, whatever. I dont care.2 points
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Pretty much every band I have been in from start up, that had the intention of gigging, jammed out in the initial stages to test the waters, find a groove, develop a style and so on. I would have thought that to be the norm. A good jam session can bring to the surface interesting ideas and creativity that are necessary to write material that is required for gigging. In my experience it is part of the process Rehearsing for up to 12 months with guys who come up with excuses after excuse to not gig, surely would be the exception. It hardly takes that long to suss out such a guy, be he dishonest or otherwise. It should be apparent in a matter of weeks and can be dealt with one way or another. I have no idea how you came to the conclusion that I would feel its ok to rope people into a project under false pretences. That would be disingenuous and plainly dishonest. I assure you I strive daily to be neither. People coming together, be it a band or otherwise, will have a degree of unpredictability, together with having to rub up one another for better or worse. In my opinion dealing with someone who is not showing their full hand, is part of lifes lessons that can lead to one's flourishing and wisdom. The only soul being destroyed is that of the person who is being deceitful2 points
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Sound "persons" can be a hit or a miss. I've had some great ones and some disastrous ones. I liked the comment about them being one step up the evolution from a DJ. That to me is spot on for most of them but i've had a few that were bass players themselves and the sound comes out brilliant with a great balanced mix with nothing overly loud. With ex DJ's the bass gets lost and even our guitarist has picked up on it during sound check and corrected it. Dave2 points
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Using the Two10 in 4ohm mode and with the One10 in 8ohm gives you a load of 2.7ohm If you set the amp to 2ohm that will be fine to use them all together.2 points
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I think we know what you're interested in! 🤣 In the last 5-6 years I expect you to pop up in any thread about Ernie Ball basses saying how you think they are great in some way or the other. I'm not sure that positivity is much different really to other long standing members not liking something.2 points
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I think it's aimed at anyone who hasn't worked out how to get the best bass sound. IMO there are a lot of those around at all ages and levels of playing. The simplest things are always the most effective. Good advice to everyone.2 points
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