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Showing content with the highest reputation on 27/10/23 in all areas
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I’m starting to slim down my collection a little. This is a fantastic p bass and I’m sure will not disappoint whoever buys it. Bravewood basses are totally hand crafted both bodies and necks. The weight of the bass is 8.75 lbsJohn doesn’t build to order anymore so you could wait a long time before he builds another 58. The bass is currently strung with La Bella flat wound strings and comes with a new hard case. I’m not interested in any trades If anyone has any questions please PM me.17 points
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Being the bassist in a band requires so much more than ability on the instrument - enthusiasm, learning parts for rehearsals, practice before gigs, maintaining communication with band mates, turning up on time reliably etc. I am a very basic, untechnical bass player but pretty good at the other stuff.10 points
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Lovely Trace Elliot 250 SMX for sale - NOW SOLD please close topic I am the original owner, I bought this classic amp from The Bass Centre on Wapping in the late 1980s. It has got the fantastic 12 band grophic with a couple of presets plus the dual band compressor which will give you just about any sound that you could ever want. Seriously powerful amp, but flexible enough to use in any situation, I certainly did for many years! This is a very well made amp, and everything works perfectly in a very solid but manageable 15Kg package. I’m hardly gigging nowadays and only need a small amp set up. This superb amp needs to be used and enjoyed for many years to come. Thanks for looking.9 points
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Hi guys, For sale is my beautiful Maruszczyk Jazz Bass (reputation precedes). Hopefully the pictures do It justice. Its hard to get detailed intel on this bass as I believe many of them are made to order, and I bought It second hand a few years back. If anyone has any more knowledge or a way to trace using serial number I would be very grateful 🙂 Cosmetic markings shown in pictures. Few marks on the headstock, but rest of the bass is in great condition. Plays great, sounds great and the Aguilar pickups really pack a punch. Rosewood Fretboard Maple Neck 1.5" Nut 21 Frets Tortoise Shell Pickguard Comes with a Fender gig bag. Strung with DR Hi-Beams. To get a flavour of how it sounds, here's me playing a few years back: Looking for £550.00 ONO. Pickup in Guildford. I have a small studio setup in my home so If interested come and have a play before you buy.8 points
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This is beautiful 🥲 https://yamahaguitardevelopment.com/2023/10/26/yamaha-guitar-development-custom-shop-amos-heller/8 points
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My Caveman Audio BP1 Compact arrived this week - and all I can say is WOW 🤩 All the words people use to describe it that do sound a little bit generic (like ‘it sounds so clear without being harsh’ and ‘it just makes you sound better’) make perfect sense once you’ve played through it. I actually don’t really know how best to describe it, it wasn’t until I’d practiced for a few hours that I really started to understand it - it’s not just a sound, it’s how it feels under your fingers, it almost changes the way you play the to a degree because it makes he dynamics & subtleties of your playing shine through. Combined with a bit of the Marcus Miller-esque sizzle from the SBP-2 and the well known benefits of the Cali76, I reckon I’m pretty satisfied with my board. I’m gonna get a HX Stomp (or similar - any suggestions for any alternative that’s good for bass, like the Hotone Ampero, Headrush gigboard etc, are very welcome) for Dep gigs which I do quite a lot of, but for now I think I’m done….. 🤞 🤪8 points
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Selling my westone thunder3, bought it as I’d coveted them from being a kid but sadly I can’t get on with the ‘P’ width neck so I’ll unlikely ever gig it and as beautiful as it is I can’t justify it as a wall hanger! Everything works and finish is in very good nick, small chip out of headstock, recent setup and fresh set of fender flats. Would prefer collection (NE England) but can arrange shipping if needs be, about £30. Comes with gigbag, and will be well packed for transport if shipping is needed6 points
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After selling off a medium sized board with effects that I simply never used I have built up a high quality small board for amp less church worship dates running direct to PA. Optical compressor - tuner - API preamp - passive di box.6 points
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Ok. Drum roll............... And the winner is...... Lunglight by The Shaky Hands. Bandcamp https://theshakyhandspdx.bandcamp.com/album/lunglight Spotify Apple Music https://music.apple.com/bg/album/lunglight/289937827 YouTube https://youtube.com/playlist?list=OLAK5uy_mXabWDHTNlQozeNovb8gqvHuSdroZBI4o&si=m0zrssY_NFCZ1n13 Tidal https://tidal.com/album/19117087 Hopefully shouldn't be too challenging a listen for me this one. Please feel free to post links to any other streams you find on your service of choice. Enjoy. 😉5 points
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In covers bands, it's band members not learning parts prior to rehearsal that has always bugged me the most. Hey, let's all hang around in an expensive rehearsal studio for a good 20 minutes while the guitarist listens to the song for the first time........... 🥺👎5 points
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I think I posted this elsewhere but: This is the list of filters I have had (not including those built in to various multi fx): Had and sold: Mini Qtron FX25 (sparkle) MXR M87 3Leaf Wonderlove 3Leaf Proton V4 Meridian Funk-u-lator Mr Black Fwonkbeta Aguilar Filter Twin Chunk Syatems Octavius Squeezer Maxon AF9 Lovetone Meatball Solid Gold FX Supa Funk Currently have: Mutron III Bassballs Green Russian Mutron III+ Qtron Qtron+ Bassballs USA FX25 (light green V1) Xotic Robotalk 2 I think my all time faves and the ones on my board are the Mutron III+ as well as the original and the Green Bassballs. Trouble is there are so many things to take into consideration - the bass you put into the pedal, your dynamics, how you amplify.. some of the pedals I sold ages ago may sound better with my current setup. But I'm definitely happy with the Mutron sound, something about the lack of anything harsh and the usefulness of the range switch.5 points
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Ok guys and gals. It's D Day. 😁 I'll be rolling the dice for the first time this evening. Probably around 5 o'clock UK time. Fingers crossed it's nothing too challenging for the first outing. 🤞5 points
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Not going to lie…… We kicked donkey last night. It’s our 40yr anniversary, and a bunch of gigs are coming. I’ve been through a bunch of basses during this reunion, but it’s all about the Thunderbird and the Ashdown ABM 500. Such an amazing tone. Anyone into original heavy rock….. not being funny….. we’re still ace for a bunch of old men. 😆4 points
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I appreciate these are BB Basses in name rather than in appearance, but I’ve recently acquired an almost identical twin to my long-serving BB604. They are both from 2003 (serial number says even the same month…) identical colour, spec and weight (both are 3.8kg and well balanced thanks to that small headstock.) My main one is a bit more scuffed up and feels a little bit more resonant and loud, possibly because I’ve played it to death for the last seven years. Both strung with D’Addario NYXLs too. The newer bass has got replacement Gotoh machine heads, my main one has the originals. When I got the first one back in 2016 it quickly became the best value bit of gear I had and a proper Swiss Army knife bass to cover loads of different stuff. So I’ve been on the lookout for another for a while and this came up on Basschat over the summer. Delighted. Excuse to play it loud at a gig expected in the coming weeks.4 points
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4 points
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Pretty crass thing to say. He wasn't talking about 'your' mum, it was a figurative term of speech. A lot of people on this forum aren't going to have mums for various reasons yet you have to try to weaponise it. For a man with a history of low scoring posts I do believe you have set the bar even lower. Well done.4 points
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They should have taken it back and refunded you, even if it was on commission. Misrepresentation pure and simple.4 points
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TLDR: In search of my main recording bass. Dove into five Precisions and made some measurements, charts below. Hey everyone, So, a mate of mine suggested (probably as a tease, knowing him) that I throw my recent obsession onto basschat. Been neck-deep (pun intended) in specs of different P-Basses, and thought, why not. Might be fun to see what others think. I’ve embarked on a quest to find a new bass that I can call my main, especially for recording. I want to downsize, so I’m being quite picky, particularly about the feel. I turned to the specs and made some measurements, focusing mainly on the neck to understand why some of them just click while others are meh. I’ve recently had the chance to compare five models: MIM Deluxe Active Special, MIM Classic 50s, Player, American Performer, and Professional II. What really struck me was discovering that the Player and the Performer have very similar neck specs on paper. However, when I got my hands on the Performer, it surprisingly felt more akin to the Pro II neck. I'm wondering about the consistency between the US models (Performer, Pro II, Ultra even). I know for a fact the neck lottery is a standard "feature" on Gibson guitars... Speaking of the Pro II, it’s a fantastic piece of craftsmanship overall, but the neck is quite chunky. It made me question whether all Pro IIs are like this or if it's a lottery as well. Anyone else have thoughts or experiences with the Pro II specifically? The Deluxe Active Special has a Jazz neck. It’s pretty comfortable, and I tend to prefer slimmer, narrower necks. However, the rolled edges on the Pro II are something else; I wish that Jazz neck was finished like that. Attached some graphs for y'all, hopefully useful for a few of you. Shoot if you have some insights!3 points
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This thing is absolutely fabulous, but just not what I need for the band right now. I’m saving for a Gibson Thunderbird or a US P bass ideally. If you have either, and want a trade, let me know. This is a classic era, ‘94 Fortress, absolute quality instrument, with a brand new, professionally fitted Aguilar OBP-1 preamp. Plays beautifully, and currently has brand new TI flats on it. With all the extras, it owes me well over 1K. I travel all over the country with work, so meeting you somewhere would be ideal. Thanks for having a look.3 points
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I suffered for several years wondering why I struggled to play material at rehearsal that I could play perfectly at home. Then we got a dep drummer in and realised where the actual problem was. I left the band soon after and haven't looked back since.3 points
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I ended up going with the end of the neck. Sounds pretty awesome at home so looking forward to trying it with the band.3 points
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3 points
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My 1993 Washburn B200 LP bass. I have had it just under 3 years and it cost me about £200 from eBay. It will always be my #1. Looks great, sounds great, plays great, it's pretty much all I need. 😎3 points
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3 points
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3 points
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Oh the lustre was back last night, in absolute spades. It was the best I've seen them in years. For anyone who's interested, the set was: I'm off to make a playlist of it3 points
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Unless they are sequenced, it is pretty well impossible for most original bands too Also, not being Johnny Cash would have caused exactly the same lack of success. Ask an orchestra, they seem to like it. And the art of playing things, the fun of playing things and playing live motivates a lot of people more than coming up with something new. Some people prefer playing music to a 100 people who are all dancing and having a good time rather than their mum saying 'thats nice dear'.3 points
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I know we’ve mentioned this before @BassApprentice @Brian18242 But Miki Santamaria has a beautiful MM bb.3 points
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Yet another example of "What Yamaha Can Do vs What Yamaha Give Us" I know this could be said of most brands - but I feel the BB range has such potential for different finishes or pickup arrangements. Maybe one day something like the above will make it to market.3 points
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Just fill the existing holes with standard wood glue, squeeze some tight fitting wooden sticks down in the holes, pinch or cut off the excess sticks above the holes, wipe away excess glue with a moist cloth and let it cure for 24 hours. After that you don't have to worry about this. Also just because the body wood of the bass is relatively soft doesn't necessarily makes it a crap bass, the Music Man Bongo Bass and several other relatively high end basses got bodies made out of Basswood, which is a relatively cheap and soft wood that is infamous for stripping screws if exchanging anything, but also acknowledged for actually being a great Tonewood.3 points
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3 points
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Last Sunday was our regular jam night. We're in our 7th year at this venue and we've got a good little scene going and it's well-supported. It's also very orderly. we get new people sometimes and that stops it being groundhog day. We're getting some promising younger people along to take part and it's all good. We rehearse new songs at the jam (by learning them at home and rattling through them to get them together. We haven't done that for a short while. I'd like to get a few new things together. We HAVE been playing things that have fallen out of the set list, so we can slot them back in. After the jam finished on Sunday, we were packing up and I fell over some mics stands in a carry case in front of the drums and fell down hard to the stage floor with a very loud crash. Ii hurt like hell and I felt bruised for a few days and was knocked sick at the time. What I really couldn't get my head round was a weird woman who's there every week, acting like she owns the place, who laughed and clapped when I fell over. She saw how annoyed I was with her and she said she 'thought it was part of the act'. Lame. I said 'keep digging'. I was furious. I'm not looking forward to this Sunday.3 points
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In the same way that some people go to discothèques, to dance to pre-recorded music, or a DJ's mix or 'mash-up', and some folk like the 'live' aspect of singing, or watching others sing, karaoke, there are many that want to see and hear a 'live' band play music that they know and like, often with dancing and other social interactions involved. There are some that will enjoy a musician's version or interpretation; most won't have that as their main source of enjoyment, and having something close to what they have in their head already is what's required. The whole point of 'covers' is to give the audience the impression that they're seeing and hearing the original version, or close enough for them to recognise it and enjoy it. Bringing something 'original' to the party can work, of course, but it's not the 'main event'. Being close '1:1' is next to impossible for most pub/club bands, but add one's own 'flavour' is a secondary part of the affair, for most bands and for most pub/club audiences.3 points
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Yes, superb gig - they looked like they were having a whale of a time on stage. Great to hear some proper oldies in the set, I swear I squealed like an excited child when started. 😄 I do wonder if perhaps we're seeing the farewell tour here though...3 points
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3 points
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I absolutely live and breathe envelope filters lol. After trying nearly all of them I have come to the conclusion that every filter reacts differently to every instrument you use it with, and that also depends on the player's style and attack. As such it's really hard to recommend any given filter because even some of my favourites sound better with some basses than others. As said above, it's a slippery but funky slope and you won't lose anything by trying out as many used examples of all the different types as you can. Can I also recommend that you keep your first one, because it's annoying to realise that you liked that one best all along when you're about 20 filters through the journey!3 points
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And the music video for our song 'Micromanager' has now been released! You can see some up-close shots of the Ric, but the audio is from a Warwick Thumb NT4. Enjoy! 🤣😎🇬🇧3 points
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I quite liked Clive Dunn's reggae phase. "Permission to Toast, Sir?" and "They Don't Like It Uptown" are dub classics.3 points
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Great, thanks for that, but "are you a fan?" wasn't actually the question.3 points
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2 points
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2 points
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2 points
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I'm 'average to good', I'd say. Don't read music but understand patterns on the fretboard and can play the right note when required 99% of the time. I can groove, syncopate, provide dynamics or just plod an 8th note when needed... I learn my parts, turn up on time, do my homework and 'bring it' live. Not sure I'm improving anymore but I have the skills for what I enjoy doing. Would be nice to slap a little better (for my own enjoyment) but never needed to....2 points
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New Gazelle Twin album is released today: I love Elizabeth's work.2 points
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Knowledge is always a good thing, but we don't have to be brilliant technicians to be good bass players. We just have to put the right notes in the right places and make them flow. Do that and you've already made the band better. The rest is the icing on the cake.2 points
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Recently got this beautiful 55-94 as well as the HX stomp. Going minimalist with my board. Christmas came early for me haha2 points
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An absolute bass monster who doesn’t get nearly as much love as he deserved. 17-11-70 remains one of favourite live albums and it’s in no small way due to Dee and Nigel.2 points
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2 points
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Saturday afternoon's adventure. My blues rock trio Toredown played a little blues club in Billericay called 'Blues at Barleylands'. They rent a social club every Saturday afternoon and put on blues acts - sometimes pro-acts that are on tour. We'd not played there before so didn't quite know what to expect - the deal is you get door money after they take out expenses but apparently guaranteed to get £300. The place itself is what you'd expect a small social club in the sticks to be like, a little bit jaded. Lots of tables and seating, large bar. Easy load in from the dedicated car park via the fire door. Slightly raised corner stage, lots of power points behind black sheets. Covered pool table for us to stash our cases. We arriveds early, set up and sound checked before most of the people turned. Who then kept on turning up, I reckon there were around 60 people when we kicked off - not capacity but busy for a small place. Well, what a reaction! To say we got a rapturous response would be an understatement. I know the band are good but the genre is rather love it or hate it. In the past we've played pubs and gone down like a lead balloon. We have our monthly residency at a music pub and that is brilliant but still get the occasional idiot distracting us. This lot, being a dedicated blues club, totally loved it. Huge cheers after every song (after most guitar solos, too), at the end people wouldn't let us get on with packing up, kept coming up to us wanting to chat. Even with me! Such a diffrent vibe from playing in a pub. No drunk tw@t shouting for Wonderwall. No drunks, in fact. At the end we were handed an envelope containing £500 - a much bigger payday than usual - and we sold some CDs, too. Absolutely fantastic. Post gig some lovely comments on their Fb page. They immediately booked us again for next year, too, promising a packed crowd as word gets around. I used my recently acquired Gibson SG - my go-to now - straight into the desk via a TC Spectradrive. Sounded good, really sits in the mix. Obligatory pic. Looks like I am doing a mic swallowing act.2 points