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Showing content with the highest reputation on 05/02/24 in all areas
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Played in Scarborough this evening, a return to ‘The Lookout on the Pier’ cafe restaurant which we do quite regularly. Always a great gig with a truly appreciative audience made up of many regulars. As usual we did the set list from written audience requests, and managed most of them including ‘This Masquerade’, ‘Make you feel my love’ and finishing the second set with a very extended version of ‘Another brick in the wall’. My guitarist partner Gary had a bad cold but still managed to sing all night, albeit more raspy than usual. We’re back there again in three weeks time.13 points
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Another good one at the Earl Haig yesterday. About 80 people in, which is good for the sunday slot. Quite a few came because it was us, which is great. Had plenty of dancing in the second set, which isn't bad for blues! Hopefully better pics to come!10 points
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I did a gig yesterday and during it, I was really wondering why I bother. Then my friend came along for the second half with his mum who has Parkinson’s and we had a great chat and she loved the music. Didn’t matter that there were about 8 of them in the audience.9 points
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Thought I'd change the pickguard on my Dakota Red P, really happy with how it's turned out.8 points
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Hello all Up for sale is the Warmoth PJ project that was finished 2020 and is built from solely highclass parts. It has only seen a few hours of playing in our living room and the practice room of my former band. The condition ist very good. Some micro scratches and two tiny scruffs on the neck but thats it. I am selling it now because I have too many basses, too many other hobbies and too many daughters. I just dont have the time to play all my instruments so I want to part with it. Warmoth Custom Body Model: Chambered P Bass® Orientation: Right handed Scale: 34" Wood: Flame Maple on Mahogany Contours: Contoured Heel / Tummy Cut / Forearm Contour Battery Box: No Battery Box Rout Top Finish: Transparent Purple Back Finish: Transparent Purple Finish Type: Satin Finish Warmoth Custom Neck Style: J Bass® Orientation: Right Handed Neck Wood/Hals: Roasted Flame Maple Fingerboard/Griffbrett Wood: Ebony Nut Width: 1-1/2" (38mm) Fret Size/Bünde: 6150 Tuner Ream: BML (17.5mm) Radius: 10" Scale: 34" Fret #: 21 Pre-Cut Installed String Nut/Sattel: GraphTech Black TUSQ XL - Standard Nut Inlays: Cream Face Dots Side Dots: White Side Dots Stiffening Rods: Standard Steel Rods I put several layers of TruOil on the neck and put one seal of wax on it in the end - Feels just awesome and looks amazing ! Tuners: HipShot UltraLite Bridge: HipShot Style A Aluminium Bridge Pickups: Sandberg Black Label Electrics: Noll TCM 4 XM (B 2083) - Runs with 2 x 9 Volt batteries = 18 V for more headroom Potis: 3 x Tandem Pins: Schaller Security Locks String retainer: Sandberg Weights around 4,5 KG This baby was put together by a professional luthier in Germany (Acys Guitar Lounge). It received the best treatment and all the routings and the electric cavity was shielded professionally. This is what it cost me: Pickups: 230 EUR Bridge: 130 EUR Electrics incl. Potis: 200 EUR Body and Neck incl. shipping and all taxes: 1500 EUR Tuners: 145 EUR Security Locks: 20 EUR Luthier costs to put it together professionally: 630 EUR In total: 2.855 EUR I put it up for sale for 1.050 GBP // 1.200 EUR + shipping wherever you are located. This price includes a basic gigbag that I will buy before shipment You can play and pick it up in Munich/Germany and pay in cash if you want to. You can also pay by bank transfer (You cover the transfer costs) or by PayPal (Family & Friends only) If you want to I can make more pictures.6 points
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Can't read music? Can't slap? Plays a P? With FLATS???? I hope he's got a day job.6 points
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I've not read the whole thread but thought it worth sharing. Probably the best drummer I ever played with had Alzheimers. It was a startup band of experienced musicians (god knows how I ended up there) and some of the best music I ever played. We didn't know about this initially. He absolutely nailed the songs of his youth but struggled with anything he didn't already know and the problem was with arrangements, his muscle memory was fantastic and all his licks were completely intact. That was 10 years ago and he is still playing but sticking to 60s and 70's standards plus a bit of blues. If he is struggleng with memory it doesn't necessarily progress quickly and being a musician is genuinely protective, yet another study reported in this weeks New Scientist It looks like you want to support your bandmate and that is terrific. Just playing will slow the advance of Alzheimers if that is what it is and he was probably really scared of telling you. If I had a tight band doing 43 gigs a year I'd definitely keep it going. It gets harder to find new bands as you get older, I'm in my 70's and still fit but you don't know what is round the corner. New bands can be so political too until everyone settles in. Treasure what you already have.6 points
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5 points
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Hurtsfall have two gigs coming up next week. First we are supporting Murdah Srvc at the Chapel (above the Angel Microbrewery) in Nottingham on Tuesday 13th February. Were on at around 9.00. Then on the Friday 16th February HRH Goth 2 is finally going ahead with a change of venue from Sheffield to O2 Academy Leicester on account of O2 Sheffield still being closed due to RAAC concrete problems. This has resulted in a changed but expanded line-up on both days, which for us has both advantages and disadvantages. The overall line up on the day that we will playing is now a lot stronger, so hopefully that will result in a bigger audience; however, we will be playing further down the bill and much earlier (7.00pm) than we would have been had the event gone ahead last year. The full line-up for Friday 16th February hen we are playing is: Fleisch 11.00pm The Danse Society 9.30pm Exilia 8.10pm Hurtsfall 7.00pm PLAY/DEAD 5.55pm Nox Pulso 5.00pm5 points
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Thanks Paul! We’ve done the requests thing for a while now. We put out request forms on the tables (say one per person) and then go through them to see what’s been asked for and if we can do them! If not then we try to maybe do another by the artist requested. We use iPads linked together which have literally thousands of songs my mate Gary has written out. We do a fair bit of material without using them, but it’s often more for lyrics than the music that we need them, especially for anything we’ve never or rarely done before. Of course there are some we don’t attempt, but because Gary is an amazing player of many styles as well as a great singer, we get away with most of them! We try to make sure most people / couples get at least one tune they request, out of a choice of 3 tunes per request form. Last night we probably had a 90% success rate - ones we couldn’t manage were ‘Boys of Summer’, something by Supertramp and ‘God only knows’! Our audience tend to be around our own demographic which makes things a bit easier- most popular stuff requested is anything by Simon and Garfunkel & The Eagles etc, but we try to mix it up as much as possible. Louis Armstrong into Miley Cyrus isn’t unheard of. 🤣5 points
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4 points
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I hadn’t given up, but I had taken breaks from time to time, more just time between bands. Now, at 60 years of age, playing is my release from work, and it keeps my mind sharp and me active.4 points
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1. Why you don't have any gigs? Singer quit our covers band at the end of last year, he gave us notice but we had the most dreadful time unearthing every poseur/wannabe/timewasting so-and-so under the sun from September-now. Only just now found someone with the requisite skills and more importantly attitude to move forward. Getting her up to speed now, next gig is in April. We've had to cancel/sub a couple of gigs at the start of this year because of the lack of singist talent up here. Originals band has a gig in March, but it doesn't gig very often, currently cooking up new songs, hopefully get some recording done this year. 2.Do you rely on an agent ? No, just another pocket to stuff. 3.Who finds coordinates and confirms gigs? Covers band - usually the guitarist. For the originals band, it's usually me. 4. Are you or any band members in this for the money? No, we've all got jobs, this is a side hustle at best. I personally use the money for guilt free spending on gear etc. The originals band - what effin' money? 5.How much do you want to gig? A few times a month, 2-4 times, average 2-3.4 points
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Well, it's been about 2 months and I am missing playing with people - but I'm not missing that band so it was the right decision. I'm actually starting to have more writing ideas now that the brain has cleared out a load of baggage. I've dug out my old lyric book and the 3/4 size classical guitar that I usually compose with. Hopefully I'll come up with the odd good riff.4 points
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4 points
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The drummer in the band I left now has a gong. There's a few things I cannot tolerate in a band; Gongs Wind Chimes Band members wearing their own merchandise. (I'll barely wear anything with conspicuous branding) Looks like my exit was well-timed.4 points
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Definitely this @SteveXFR Keep your amp head & get a smaller cab (or in future, maybe 2) But definitely keep a bass - perhaps your favourite one. Perhaps take a short break, and then look for a new band / project. I posted earlier on this thread, about how I was away from bass playing for almost 25 years - and now I'm back into bass and in bands. I'm enjoying it more now than I did when I was young. Plus, I'd really miss playing music if I had to give up now. Burns-bass's post above is a reminder of what live music can mean to others. As part of a Folk Club I sometimes play with, we played a couple of times at an old peoples home. The look on their faces, the singing along and some of them dancing with zimmer frames just made me smile. We did those gigs for free, to bring a little entertainment to some old folks, and I'm so glad we did. (reminder to self - must do that again sometime).4 points
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You need the darker times to appreciate the good times. Keep the gear, youll find something with less pressure when you realise you still need to gig.4 points
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I take them all off before restringing so I can give the fretboard a good clean.4 points
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Having the busiest week for a while (5 gigs) including these 3 with The ELO Experience. Started off with a 6 hour trek up to Dundee on Thursday to play at the magnificent Caird Hall. Not the easiest for sound, plenty of natural reverb! Our engineer managed to tame it though and the gig went well with a lively audience of around 800 all in good voice. I love playing in Scotland, always great audiences. The gig was to replace one booked late last year which was cancelled due to storm warnings. We had really high winds this time on both the journey up and back down which made the drive even more arduous, but still,worthwhile. Friday it was a drive back down to Darlington for a gig at The Hippodrome. Another great old theatre with a near capacity audience. Just a 2 hour drive home afterwards, again in high winds. Last night we played at Sheffield City Hall, a favourite venue for the band. Had around 1200 punters in, great crowd up for it right from the off. Had to use a flown PA so our guys had a job on but they got it nailed. Home by midnight, absolutely knackered. Am playing in Scarborough later today with the acoustic duo, so hope it’s an easy one!4 points
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**Price drop to £7150** ***I will be visiting in the UK at Christmas time so any interested parties let me know and I can easily bring it with me...*** For sale(no trades) is my 1986 Wal MkII Fretless 5 string. This bass was built in 1986 by the legendary Pete "the fish" Stevens it features gorgeous African Shedua facings over a mahogany core and chrome hardware. The bass is all original except for the strings and it functions perfectly including the hardware, electronics and the truss rod.The fretboard is perfect and the bass has just been setup with a brand new set of Ernie Ball flats. Weight is 5,25KG / 11,57lbs Despite the fact that this bass is 38 years old it is in near perfect condition. There are some very minor signs of wear as you would expect. However I would be very confident in saying that you are very unlikely to find another bass of this vintage in as good a condition as this bass. I have made an effort to provide photos from as many angles as possible so you can clearly see exactly what you are buying. I believe that my perfect feedback is a great reflection of the honesty and thoroughness of my descriptions. This sale includes the original Wal hardcase - the case is functional and is in fair condition but shows plenty of signs of wear. If you have any questions please let me know. Price is 7275GBP or 8500€ Shipping to UK and within the EU is is 225€ - fully tracked and insured with UPS3 points
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for sale is my Fender Jaguar Bass Crafted in Japan between 2006 -2008 used but still in very good working condition everything works as it should has wide range of tones sounds great has some signs of wear (few scratches, dings etc.) the neck has some lacquer defect which is purely cosmetic and doesn't effect playability of the instrument (see photos) The cavities are shielded with copper tape comes with padded Fender Gigbag Specification: Body Wood – Alder Neck Wood – Maple Fretboard – Rosewood Frets – 20 Scale Length – 34″ Weight – 9lbs5oz/4.2kgs Electronics – Active Pickups – Fender J Only selling because I have too many basses and this has not been played much as I prefer playing passive ones I am based in Leyton, London Thanks for looking3 points
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Reluctantly I'm listing this rather rare all original 32" scale JV Squier Precision. This is from the fabled 1982-1984 Japanese production run and it's clear to see why these basses are so sort after. The neck in particular has a really lovey vintage look and feel with the mottled tuners and honest play wear from 40 odd years of use. It has some knocks on the back of the neck but I'm sure these could be rubbed out if preferred. A great thing about this bass is that it features slightly scaled down body dimensions to match the reduced 32" scale. You only really notice this when it's next to a regular FSO (see pic below), but it really makes a difference when wearing the bass. It's also very light at 3.4kg/7.5lb. It's wearing a brand new set of LA Bella Low Tension flats and it sounds wonderful.3 points
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3 points
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Almost 64 i have to say this is the busiest i've ever been in any band. Not gigging every week but its getting close to it. Dave3 points
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3 points
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My old man joined his first band in his sixties, at which point I had been gigging for 15+ years, so I took great pleasure in volunteering my advice for youngsters starting garage bands. They called themselves The Gastrick Band and set membership qualifications at "owns an instrument and eligible for a bus pass". When he started gigging I turned up pissed and heckled a couple times just to even the score. 😅3 points
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I've left my band now, been thinking about it for the past year and decided to knock it on the head for now. With three challenging, neurodiverse children, now is not the right time to be in a band and I'm less reliant on the money than I once was. Got one more gig booked to end things properly - a private party at a big house we've played a few times - and then done. Hopefully I'll look at getting back into it in 2026-ish, when the youngest will be 9, but for now it'll be home playing and maybe some composition.3 points
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3 points
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Five kids? Good grief, the last thing that guy needs is more spare time at home! Has he worked out what's causing them yet? 😄 I went very heavy with touring between 2018-2020 and while I do love it it's been pretty rough on both the finances and home life. Looking at my notes I did about 20K miles and 120+ dates between May '18 and August '19, not including travel days. I was working as a session player but then came in as a full band member just before 2020 really kicked off (and chucked in the day job for bonus points) at which point I realised I hate nearly everything about being in a band except playing live - without touring it's just a crap admin job that doesn't pay. Luckily I wasn't expecting to make any money for at least 12 months after going pro anyway, so while did I burn through my savings pretty quickly the mortgage still got paid. My partner works in healthcare and they were piling up overtime hours during the lockdowns which really saved us long-term. After things opened up again I went out as tour crew a couple times and loved it just as much, except didn't have to worry about how I looked or being in photos and also I was being significantly better paid. I'm really definitely totally done with the original music career thing and wouldn't get back into the mainstream industry under any circumstances even if I wasn't too old and ugly now, but I've managed to self-finance a bunch of little EP's over the last two years and had more fun (and studio time) than I ever did during the push years. Took a while to get back to the idea of playing music being something you can do for fun, but we're getting there.3 points
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Currently only about 10 gigs in the diary for this year but I’ve gone back to university to retrain, so while the extra pocket money would be good I also don’t want to overcommit myself to too many gigs until I’m clear what I can manage. I do a mix of dep gigs, solo gigs and my own band each with their own arrangements for booking gigs. Its never been my full time job so the money is welcome rather than vital. First gig of the year next weekend. Happily do two or three gigs a month but much more than that starts to get too frantic juggling it all. The exception is summer (wedding season) and Christmas (party season) when I take as many gigs as I can!3 points
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I guess this form of memory loss is the brain's way of protecting oneself from past trauma.3 points
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No update for a while, work has got in the way of this. I managed to find some time yesterday as t'other half and daughter #1 went to see Lucy Worsley in Kendal talk about Agatha Cristie. I have managed to get the motors to work the way I want them to now. I did rather feel it was a battle of wills between me and the motors and they were winning. Which is sad It does look like one of my stepper motots has been abused ine the past, the only person I can think of is <ahem> me, so some more are on order from Ooznest. However I did seem to get them working with some odd and small stepper motors I found in the a box from some astrophotography project that went nowhere. I ordered some 0.9 and 1.8 degree stepper motors. The 1.8 degree version gives me a 100% speed increase for £10 so thats a bargain. I like bigger motors as I have also found a 24V 4A power supply that will replace the bench PSU I currently use. I have now managed to write the code so: 1. The lead screw goes back and forwards correctly to lay the wire down. I did like that to be honest. It makes it look like its working. 2. Rewrote the LCD code to use a different non-blocking library to display information as its winding. The issue before was that when you write a small tiny update to the LCD, the motors basically stop. I hadn't realised writing to an LCD display was so slow that you can time refreshes with you stopwatch on your iPhone. Rewrote all the sodding code and cut out everything that wasn't needed. Not it still stalls but it's very, very, very small. 3. Started writing the code for the 'home' function. This is the code that moves the winder to the left, hits a limit switch, then moves a certain user defined distance to the right. This certain user defined distance will marry the edge of the wire guides to the bobbin and will be different for each bobbin and so it needs to be flexible. I did have a mad idea of using a laser to line this up and then discarded it as I'd be blind as I cocked it up. I wanted to use the Prusa method checking for stall guard and having a physical limit switch. Stall Guard is only available on expensive stepper motor drivers so back to the drawing board and am using a physical limit switch. This is the mounting plate and this is the limit switch Of course good wiring practise is that you wire it up so the switch breaks connectivity on contact, so that if there is a real break in the wiring it "fails safe", but no, all of the sodding pre made wiring is it makes a positive contact on the switch being closed. So if it breaks, you have no idea. Which moron designs the wiring looms here? So I need to make a JATG to DuPont cable and the only thing worse than wiring JTAG is wiring DuPont connectors. Once this is wired in, I'll write the homing code, mentally written as I walked the dog this morning, but lets see. That should be it and then I can start seeing if it works. Things still to worry about: 1. Wiring tension 2. Wires coming off the main holder and twisting and jamming or breaking. 3. Mains wiring. I hate mains as it can kill me. 4. Speed. 5. It just doesn't work. Rob Rob3 points
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We were at the very beautiful Voodoo Rooms in Edinburgh last night but this short clip is from Newcastle the night before. First two dates of the tour, a couple of minor gremlins but overall we're pretty thrilled with how it's shaping up 😀 ssstwitter.com_1707066066302.mp43 points
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The thing I love about his playing is that so many of his lines sound simple until you try to play them note for note, and only then do you realise how much is going on.3 points
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I'm often thanked for my fretless playing. Specifically, not playing it.3 points
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FINALLY got Thea back. Collected her at 10 this morning. Fast asleep on her bed.3 points
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Just a quick update. I put the side tape on today. Normally a Danelectro would be painted and the the white side tape applied, and it usually ends up shrinking and pulling away in valleys and edges. As I did on my Longhorn, I've used a wide centre tape with two thinner outer lines to look like a binding, the whole body including tape will now be clear coated which will seal everything in a help prevent any lifting of the edges. I really like the wood effect centre tape and I've gone for a very creamy 'binding' tape. It gives it a kind of hollow body vibe, which it is anyway. Just clear coat and a quick rebuild now.3 points
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Kay reissue of the short scale (31.25") model famously played by Howlin' Wolf bass player, Andrew “Blueblood” McMahon. Excellent condition. Very light and thumpy and with cool white art deco (?) case. In exact same condition as when I bought it from @kristo nearly a year ago as the Americana band/project it was bought for never came to fruition (common BC story ....). Prefer handover in SW London as don't currently have a box. However, willing to post at cost if given time to source something protective enough. Bit cheeky (hope he doesn't mind) but the picture is one of Kristo's (as alluded to, its not left my house or been used since I acquired it so is in exact same condition) and I attach his FS link with other pics. kvrcatalogmodern.pdf2 points
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So, had some time free yesterday and a few really dull Teams calls, so kept on playing about with the design for the bass guitar. Its getting there and I have deliberately not printed anything yet, or even worked out how I'm going to print this beast or burden. I focussed too much on printing the six string, I feel I compromised the design a little. Hopefully this one is better. I'm also pondering what the wiring will look like. I don't know yet what pickups to use, I'm intending to make my own, coz I have so much spare time on my hands (not). I might make it a Jazz like or something completely off the wall. One of the lessions learnt from the six string is not to do tunnels with the printer as they need to be big and compromise the body, so the control panel here will have a surface 6.25mm socket. At the moment I'm thinking of a Telecaster like control panel with a volume/volume/tone. That also frees up the bottom left for any lead plates to put in to counter neck dive (if needed). I'm interested in any wiring that gives me lots of options to try out. I did see this on Talkbass <gulp> which led to this beauty... Possibly overkill, but it did make me think, how do I wire it? I know how to wire it as a P or J-bass, but I'll throw the question open, if I can wire it anyway at all, what would be "interesting" and fairly sensible (not sure what that means TBH). What would you do? Thanks Rob2 points
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Thanks @SumOne! Tho Bugg3r! I've just hit the button on a P2 + Pedal from Thomann. I've a B1Four & B1XFour ... they are OK, but the P2 is just so small! Oh well, I'll give it a go and with the Thomann return policy am not too worried if it turns out to be unsuitable. Sam x2 points
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2 points
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I'll be there Sunday as it's in my hometown ! I used to work about 200 yards from the building. Find me loitering around the Ashdown stand on Sunday. This show has been in Birmingham for I think 10+ years, it was previously at New Bingley Hall (city centre) until it spontaneously combusted in 2022.2 points
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I can't give you any recommendations, but if it helps any I can say is that the JC is pretty easy to work on because the thing is completely hollow - no centre block getting in the way. Also, I rewired a semi-hollow bass (with centre block), and if an amateur, ham-fisted dorkasaurus like me can do it, then I'm sure just about anyone could once they lose the fear.2 points
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These days* I hear with my lower back... When I switched to BF cabs, I made an effort/commitment to re-EQ, and made a leap of faith to consider the cabs as capable of producing anything I put in...and it worked. * Well, not so much these days; I've just mentioed in another thread that this weekend I realised I've not used my 'big' rig (Mesa/BF) more than a couple of times since before lockdown: I'm all IEMs and DI'd Stomp...2 points
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Are not most NBDs totally unnecessary? I know the majority of mine certainly are2 points
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2 points
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Really good practice last night despite being a man down. Got the first gig lined up and it's a competition! We're going to be playing Metal 2 the Masses, where the winner will get to play at Bloodstock. We've got to have a 25 minute set. We ran through what we proposed over Whatsapp a few times and it was always within 25 minutes, so that was perfect! I also got to have a go on the guitarists Les Paul. Yep, I want a LP style guitar for knocking around on at home. Might trade some pedals in at PMT and get one of their Antiquity ones. I played one a few months back and it was really decent. Just needed the polishing compound wiping off and a bit of oil on the fretboard.2 points
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2 points
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Its been a while, was just checking the new HX Stomp patch levels with the BT to make sure nothing I'd set up has gone completely bonkers and thought, that needs a wee piccie that does2 points