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Showing content with the highest reputation on 25/01/24 in Posts
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10 points
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So the Jazz has arrived and snuck in the house and hidden away. Had to get rid of a buzz on the G string but otherwise seems really well put together! I've only had a few Fenders over the years so no expert so not going to make any wild claims but if someone had said it was a Fender for twice the price I wouldn't have thought anything of it. I'm a bit of a sucker for white and gold so I love the look but I did see a pic with a white pearloid scrachplate which looked lovely. Have an empty house later this evening so looking forward to having a wee blast!10 points
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To respond to the message I received calling me a liar, here is where the test conditions for normal conditions are defined in the IEC 62368 regulations (for the EU). The input power to be labeled is defined to be the input power under these normal conditions (or greater if the manufacturer chooses a more stringent duty cycle because of the application). For example, for the amps I design for bass and electric guitar, I typically use more than double the minimum required under the regulations but for acoustic guitar it will be a little less than double: Also, may I ask why there's so much rudeness here? For those interested in learning, I'm providing information that most players clearly don't understand or haven't been exposed to. For those of you who don't want to learn, why challenge the facts is such a manner?8 points
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Can't afford it, don't need it at all, I already have everything I need. Bought it anyway. headless bass itch well and truly scratched. Series S4000 I believe, serial number is 235... I have no idea how to age it though, any ideas? I had no idea these things were so heavy though! I changed the batteries and one of the connectors fell apart as I unclipped it, so it now has shiny new battery clips but everything else is perfect. Can't wait to wheel it out at a rehearsal.6 points
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I've ended up with two of these. They are my favourite all time filter, even prefer it over the Musitronics original version which I also own. It's in great condition apart from a few scratches. Takes two 9V batteries or external power from 9 to 25V (I run mine at 18V from my power supply). True bypass, and if you use it with batteries, switching it 'off' means you don't need to unplug to avoid batt drain. Any questions let me know - manual available here (this is the version with the internal DIP switches to adjust the response) Cheers ped6 points
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Buy the best gear you can find. The stuff that just fits, feels right, looks good and sounds like a million dollars. If it's expensive or cheap, just buy it. . . . be happy, and know you're sounding good.6 points
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For sale is my Cort Ultra Ash with Fishman Fluence pick ups. Have a look at the Ida Nelson vid on basstheworld (YouTube) to get an idea of what these pick ups can do... This is a great modern, lightweight bass. I've just bought too many basses lately. The fingerboard stickers were added by me and can be easily removed (or I can remove them for you). Comes with Cort case. UK sales only and would prefer local pick. Postage can be added for delivery.6 points
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Got my model fet back on the board so naturally had to have a play with signal chain order. And here’s the reassembled board getting some QC from the cat. Forever faffing with pedalboards ✊6 points
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Ibanez Musician MC-940DS Fantastic old high-end fretless Ibanez from 1983, crafted in Japan. It comes with it's original hardshell case. This bass can be played active or passive. Controls are pickup selector/master volume/tone, treble/mids/bass, active/passive switch. It is in used but good functioning condition. There are usermarks and small damages, but nothing serious. On the back of the headstock there are 3 filled up holes. The neck is straight and adjustable. Electronics function like they should as well. Without any doubt this is the easiest playing fretless I've encountered so far. It plays very mwwweeell with a low action. The ebony fretboard shows some stringmarks, but nothing that affects playability. This bass plays great. It has been set up with Thomastik flatwound strings. Weight is 4.5kg on my kitchen scales. The original case is included. The exterior has damages all around, but it's fully functional. The keys are still present too. I got this beauty in a trade recently. It´s a very good one, but don´t have the need or the talent for a fretless currently. Now €1.250 I am located in the Netherlands, but happy to ship at buyers risk.5 points
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That's some super attention to detail in the EBMM aping then5 points
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Managed to get the IDE working on my Mac. Didn;t have to download any drivers from an obscure Chinese web site. That was never going to happen Copied all the code across to the IDE, compiled it, uploaded it and blow me down with a feather it works. No drivers setup, but I now have working keypad, screen and Mega 2560. That was rather painless. Suspect the CNC shield and stepper motors will be a lot more hassle.5 points
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5 points
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4 points
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Indeed, initially as an 'at home' way of keeping my hand in, but quickly moving on to 'giggable' kits. I now play a Millenium 850, bought in an as-new (still boxed..!) condition for 350€; it has excellent sounds, 'native', but I've coupled it to a laptop running Superior Drummer 3, and it's as good as it gets. The one downside, for me, is not being able to simulate jazz brush swishing with any conviction; other than that, I now play my acoustic (Camco...) to keep my hand in, but rehearse and gig with the e-kit. No complaints here, nor from the band, nor the audience, so...4 points
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From reading around on the topic, yeah I assume it must be - but you'd imagine their marketing people would want to turn that into a fancy-sounding feature like "space age lightweight multi-laminate hybrid core" 😆4 points
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What kind of gigs do you play? If you're playing at places where you are fearing for your and your basses safety, I would recommend not doing those gigs in the first place. The cost of replacing my Mike Lull is about £4000. It has been one of my main gigging basses for 12 years. IMO there is no point in owning instruments if you're not going to gig them.4 points
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I think a significant difference is that Pino and John Giblin both had a much more formalised and conventional approach to playing bass than Mick Karn. That made them much more suited to mainstream session work than Mick Karn, who's style was probably just a bit too idiosyncratic for some artists and producers.4 points
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A heads up, for easily the best strings I've used in decades. Anyone looking to try something new, check them out. My Warwicks, my Thunderbird (main gigging bass) and at least half a dozen of my other basses are fitted with them. Sustain for days, piano like tone and good longevity, even with a sweaty bugger like me, and very reasonably priced. Order well in advance, because they're a small maker in Derbyshire, and it takes a couple of weeks to get them made and shipped. I am in no way affiliated, never met them (although I drive right past them often) and there's nothing in it for me...... just saying. absolutely awesome strings.3 points
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The start of another year of Basschat music making, looking forward to it already. Congratulations to Skankdelvar on his excellent victorious cover for the December challenge, but the honour of the picture choice for January fell to @AndyTravis, who won the November challenge, and he gave us this picture ... 'There we go…a nice cheery image for new year 😂' So that's it then , it's time to listen to the entries and vote for your favourite 3 1 @AndyTravis “You’ll be sorry” - basically just the idea of Technology being introduced into everything… Will it take over? 2 lurksalot Happy families , I was hoping for a slight edge to it , but it's come out as a wholesome waltz! 3 @Leonard Smalls I thought I'd celebrate Albert Hoffman's Bicycle Day a bit early this year 😁😎☠️ In a dreamlike state, with eyes closed, I perceived an uninterrupted stream of fantastic pictures, extraordinary shapes with intense, kaleidoscopic play of colors. 4 @Wolfram Ok, here is my horribly unfinished entry - I'm out of time - away for work next week, flying early tomorrow. Imagine this with vocoded robot voice musing on not losing sight of having fun and letting life pulse by mechanically - being more like the children in the photo than the adults. 5 @Doctor J The disintegration of the family unit due to overindulgence in technological quick highs can only be stopped by those who truly value and embrace the human experience... or forget to charge their phones. 6 @SH73 What a shame , a brilliant picture, but will have to leave this one out, not enough time in a day. Unless a 30 seconds intro I started would suffice. Rather than watching rubbish on telly or having an early night, here we go. 7 @upside downer Robot holds kids to ransom and maniac father tries to pay the droid off with an unsuitable offering then threatens violence to the droid who just wants a bit of TLC, or something like that. Warning! Puntastic Chili Peppers outro lyric! 8 @MoonBassAlpha Robots in the picture looking liverish after Christmas. A bit of dubby electronica should cheer them up! There we are then, a quality bunch of tracks that really fit the brief and a great start to the year . Vote for your favourite 3 Voting will close at midnight on 31st January enjoy Lurks3 points
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I have been fortunate enough to have owned and gigged expensive custom made basses like Overwater, Fenders, Stingrays, Squiers and a Harley Benton Jazz I got for free. With some small amounts of adjustment almost all of them have been great sounding and playing instruments. At no point has a member of the public commented on my basses, how good or bad they sounded, and none of them made a significant difference to the sound of my band. Yes some fitted better with different genres or tunes but none sounded bad. Two basses stand out over the years. First was a Fender American Standard bass that was total horse-poop and should have been picked out and burned before it left the factory, and it cost over 1k new. The second was a Squier Vintage modified Precision V that I got for under £300 new. That bass was sublime, so much fun to play, looked quite striking in white with a tort guard. I gigged that and smiled all night long while I was playing it. Can’t remember why I sold it to be honest but I have looked for another since. Moral of the story from my perspective; most people don’t give a monkeys about your gear, you can get inspiring and fun instruments at any price point, buy what makes you happy if you can afford it. Losing people had taught me life’s too short to not enjoy the fruits of your labour as long as you can take care of yourself and the people around you.3 points
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3 points
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this might not be a wood screw at all, if it's a fine thread it might be threading into a metal insert / tee nut, this is common for strap handles. a pic of the screw will show this, if it has a flat end rather than a point then it would suggest that it's a machine screw for an insert. the nut might not be in place but as i'ts likely to be steel it will be stuck to the speaker magnet. I've had a fair few cabs apart and i've never come across a strap handle that wasn't held on with machine screws and Tee nuts. Matt3 points
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@agedhorse Thank you for posting that snippet of the Standard. It is now close to 15 years since I retired, and with retirement I lost my access to the Standards Library at work. I should also confess that whilst Audio was the driver that led to my career in Electronics, I spent just about all my working life designing and testing Video products. While having the basic grounding, I don't have the earned experience that you have. In case anyone wants to see the whole standard, it is 425 Swiss francs or approx £400.3 points
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Affordaboard makes buying effects a relatively inexpensive bit of fun. My latest dip included this little gem: £25. Delivered. Bonkers. I have it set to give me an always on 'thickening' with just a bit of dirt around the edges. It does get fuzzier if you want it to, and has excellent tone controls. There's no loss of bottom end anyway, but it can be enhanced rather nicely. Pros: looks neat, sounds great, responsive controls, crazy cheap. Cons: stupid placement of power socket, absolutely blinding led.3 points
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I really want a Charvel Pro-Mod San Dimas PJ IV. Not practical for me as can only do short scale basses nowadays but love the look of these. https://www.charvel.com/gear/shape/san-dimas-bass/pro-mod-san-dimas-bass-pj-iv/29630685953 points
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3 points
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I've seen 'How was your Gig' and 'How was your rehearsal', but could not find one for Jams (Apologies if this was simply due to my poor searching!) So ... I shall kick things off. A few weeks ago I posted a 'I play bass, can I come along' ... the response was 'We already have a bass player' 😕 Hmmm ... where in the rules does it suggest that only one bass player is the max!? Anyhoo, a week or so later I received a message ... "we need a new bass player weekly, might you be interested". Ha ... I was on it like a rash! So, last week I went along and whilst being a bit timid, I really enjoyed it. Feedback was good and the fellow who hosts it even suggested I should turn up the volume ... I like it!! This evening I went again ... OMG, WHAT a blast! About 10 of us, playing through a bunch of leadsheets for a couple of hours ... and all really nice folks to boot! I was not doing anything sophisticated ... root/fifth, with an octave now and then. Some chromatic approaches, varying the beat from time to ... time, even throwing in some thirds when it seemed appropiate. I really felt in the groove and it will take days for the smile to disappear from my face. Now I just need to find the magical sequence of plugins on my Dwarf to get a nice upright like sound ... Sam x2 points
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https://www.andertons.co.uk/search?search=sire z Z3 4 string - £399 Z3 5 string - £429 Z7 4 string - £569 Z7 5 string - £649 Haterz get your hate on...2 points
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I'm looking to move on my Elrick NJS 5, I love this bass but realistically don't play enough 5 string to keep this amount money wrapped up in it. This is NOT one of the cheap Korean built Cort NJS’s, this is one of the European (Czech) built Elricks (think Spector Euro), then setup by Rob in Chicago, so extremely well built, with US Bartolini Pickips and Preamp, as well as the following: Features: - 35″ scale - 24 frets + zero fret - 9.1 Lbs. - Gloss Piano Black Finish - 3-piece Quarter-Sawn Maple Neck Ebony Fretboard - 2-way adjustable truss rod - Bartolini Jazz pickups (Made in the USA) - Bartolini 3-band pre-amp w/2-way mid and active bypass (Made in the USA) - Fully shielded control cavity - Black Elrick Hipshot Ultra-light tuners - Black Finish Elrick bridge – by Hipshot (Made in the USA) - Dunlop Dual Design strap buttons (Straplok compatible!) (Made in the USA) - Currently strung with La Bella RX Steels 45-130. I think I have a couple of spare sets too. - Original Elrick hard case The bass is in excellent condition, with only a tiny little nick in the finish on the top edge of the body, see the very last photo. While cash is king, I am potentially up for trades or part-ex's along the below lines in no particular order, all 4 string and no heavier than 9lbs. I could potentially add a little money for the right bass: - Elrick NJS4 - Spector Euro P/J - 70's Fender Precision or Jazz - Lakland Dual J, 44-60 or HB-30 - Zon Sonus - De Gier Soulmate - Fender Japan Precision or Jazz - Rickebacker - Guild Starfire II Try me on other stuff for sure. Sold You can hear one of its slightly more livelier tones on this track: Cheers Si2 points
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Sculptured offset longhorn solid walnut body 5 piece Eastern neck through maple neck, purple heart stringers Fingerboard Pau Ferro Double truss rod 24 jumbo frets Scale 34” 4800 grams Neck width 2” at the nut, 3 1/8” at the 24th fret Schaller tuners Tobias bridge Bartolini TCT pre amp with 3 band EQ Bartolini Tobias proprietary MTCC dual coils pickups Tobias OHSC. 100% original and in great condition. Playability and sound are superb. A classic and timeless piece built by Mr. Michael Tobias and crew in Hollywood.2 points
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2 points
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I upgraded my main board to a spaceship power 50C which has the power pack built in and is powered via a kettle style power lead. I really like it and don't think there's anything similar on the market that touches it for the cost.2 points
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That's what I think too. Dating in the pickup cavity with pencil. Definitely no stamps. And like you said it probably shouldn't have a paint stick mark. Burst is also not correct. The other parts, if original; I think black bottom pickups? And a pickguard with wider bevel. Bridge is also consistent with late '60s/early '70s. I'm tempted to think that he doesn't have a partsbass, but that it's all original (based on the available pics).2 points
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2 points
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a bit of progress today. While the neck seem to fit like that, I have started the shaping of the back control cavity which is not that easy I would say, but it is started at least. I plan to cover it with a 5mm deep wood cover screwed in (or maybe MDF would do?). I was also pleased that, even if the bridge moved a bit backwards as per previous posts, there is still a bit of room between the brodge and the end of the bas bottom, so that I, hopefully, won't be placed in the category "bass guitar serial offenders" hahahahahahahaha. So I screwed it in and checked the straightness of it and the neck the last and first string. And I put it in position. I will wait to route the pickups when I have them, to make sure I will not screw it up ... again!!! haha ... There is still a bit of work to be done in the shaping of the back cavity, and, obviously, in the overall shape of the body!2 points
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There are a lot more medium to higher range basses around. Looking at £1300-1600 that'll get you a serious amount of bass. Maybe that's what is skewing perspective. Still loads at £300-500, so I think it's just that there is a much wider range.2 points
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2 points
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IME there are two factors that affect the effectiveness of electronic kits with a more "traditional" band setting. Firstly there is the skill of the drummer in setting up the sounds and their responsiveness to the individual's playing technique. This is the area where I think most drummer with electronic kits fall down. How the sounds respond to the drummer depends on both the sound and how it has been adjusted to match that particular drummer's technique. The best sounding electronic kit I have heard from a "semi-pro" band should on paper have no been brilliant because of the old technology used for generating the sounds, but because the drummer had matched the responsiveness of the sounds exactly to how they played it sound fantastic. Secondly there is a tendency for bands and audiences to listen with their eyes. I used to be a fairly high-tech band which over the years had a number of drummers each with different electronic kits. The one that most people though was the best was the one whose kit was essentially a traditional drum kit but with the shells heavily damped and bugs for triggering the sounds attached to the heads. Interestingly he was playing the same drum parts triggering exactly the same sounds as his predecessors who used more obviously electronic kits. Also he was by far the more "metronomic" when it came to how closely his hits matched a quantised 16th note grid (as we discovered in the studio). So looks do count for a lot. These days there are commercially available kits that look to the average audience member just like acoustic drums. I'd say get your prospective drummer in for an audition and decide when you've heard and seen them.2 points
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2 points
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2 points
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In with a whole 2 hours to spare today! Stated about 2 this afty. Robots in the picture looking liverish after Christmas. A bit of dubby electronica should cheer them up! My good friend Phil Beavis kindly supplied some synth sounds and electonic drum loops. I'm playing newly arrived Rickenbacker bass, Telecaster and acoustic drums (including my rarely heard beastly china cymbal). gretsch drums, Rogers snare, Paiste 2002 and Sig cymbals. Recorded in Reaper. 1 take all parts!2 points
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Another vote here for it being the bridge being misaligned. Given the body would probably have been cut and routed using a CNC machine I think it's unlikely the pickups would be off, and the strings look slightly out on the neck as well. I imagine this will be relatively easy to remedy but it's still annoying.2 points
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From the vid in the OP, I get the new-to-me impression that Karn: - laid out the essence of the whole song in the bass part (making me hear complete songs when listening to isolated bass only), - left ample space for the other instruments. New to me, and I may have to reconsider, but my respect for him grew even larger now. Tmade me think of Bach's crafty and defining bass parts, but Karn took it up several notches as to the bass part itself. Luvverly stuff, and now I'll have to dig deeper into Japan and his solo output.2 points
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It is not what you play. It is what you play I have a great sounding and great playing bitsa bass that would not fetch much more than £150.2 points
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Or buy the Harley Benton MV-4MSB Gotoh BM with the higher spec. I love mine.2 points
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What a shame , a brilliant picture, but will have to leave this one out, not enough time in a day. Unless a 30 seconds intro I started would suffice. Rather than watching rubbish on telly or having an early night, here we go. Song called Baby Boom. EZ drums, various VST`s and heavily processed robotic singing. The song is about a family swapping a country side life for a rat race concrete build city. Lyrics: I was born through baby boom My life’s been like a hot air balloon My folks swapped our farm for a city Reflecting upon with a pity We swapped our land for a concrete field The rat race life's like a time machine I asked my mother why did we this She said my son, Ich liebe dich Rusted minds have frozen thoughts Our lives became a big fat nought You've dragged me to this so-called Wonderland I can't escape to motherland Baby boom You're living as a Baby boom Baby boom You're struggling as a Baby boom Baby boom You'll soon die as a Baby boom Baby boom Baby boom2 points
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I suppose I belong to this ragtag gang now that I've made my own pedalboard. Not much going on here in terms of pedals, but I made the board myself to keep me out of mischief over the crimbo break... T-Rex Fuel Tank Jr. hiding underneath, just in case anyone's wondering where the power's coming from...2 points
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It's all relative. How much did you pay for your car? Do you take it out on the roads?2 points
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In I go. About the song: The disintegration of the family unit due to overindulgence in technological quick highs can only be stopped by those who truly value and embrace the human experience... or forget to charge their phones. The tech stuff: Mostly done in Reason but a couple of different syths added and then mixed in ProTools2 points