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Showing content with the highest reputation on 13/08/24 in all areas
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Friday we played Cropredy Fringe at the Brasenose Arms. I've done this gig before, depping with someone else, and this was pretty much the same deal. Great weather, a bunch of middle class families out enjoying the food and drink, and not seeming too interested in the music. However, about 3 songs into our set, the generator failed. Our singer is a master of this, and he went straight into an old folk song. He got everyone to join in, AND he got them to gather down by the stage making it feel like a proper gig. Once the generator kicked back in, everyone stayed down the front and had a good dance. Not a huge crowd, but good fun, and we sold some CDs and Vinyl. Saturday we played Gig In A Field which is a small outdoor festival near Doncaster. Maybe 500 people there. We did an hour set and they sang along to every song. We sold loads of merch and the pay was good. The only downside was the creepy female promoter (she was there as a punter but has given us gigs in the past) who insists on touching me up. It's so gross. I think I've mentioned her previously in this thread. Sunday we played at Grand Social in Dublin. We go to the ferry 10 minutes before sailing which was a bit nerve wracking. We had a few beers and a good laugh on the way over, then drove into town. We couldn't park by the venue but it was only a 2 minute walk from the van. They'd insisted we didn't bring any gear, just guitars and sticks. I (on drums) tend to break gear so I took my snare, stool, pedal, and cymbals just in case. In the end used all of their gear except for the snare drum. This meant I didn't have to pack anything away so I could go from stage to my brother (who lives in Dublin) and stroll out for a brief pub crawl round Temple Bar. Apparently we went down well and sold a decent chunk of merch. I went to meet the guys at the accommodation at midnight. Unfortunately the guy assigned to meet me with a key was very drunk and his phone wasn't working, so it took a cold and lonely 30 minutes to get to my bed for the night. I didn't get any photos from the shows but here we are on the ferry home20 points
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Totally one of a kind bass built by Docwood (Davide Palumbo), a brilliant luthier creating vintage-style basses out of Palermo, Sicily. This beast has a GUILD BISONIC pickup at neck position for the fattest, muddiest vintage tones (just take a pick to that 😍) and a LOLLAR T-BIRD pickup at "P" position. This was built for me in 2023 primarily as a recording bass and has never been gigged. It cost €2050 Euros. Almost immaculate except for very light belt buckle mark on rear (pic attached). Has Gotoh hardware and a Hipshot D-tuner. Would rather not post/courier this. Preferably to collect from Sevenoaks (on M25) or from London EC1 (near Farringdon tube). - alder body, matte olive/military drab finish - custom black pickguard - guild bs1 pickup - lollar tbird pickup - vol/ vol/ tone wiring - maple neck + pearl binding & blocks - hipshot dtuner - gotoh clover 70s style tuners - gotoh high mass bridge Check out Docwood's other guitars at https://www.instagram.com/docwoodguitars/12 points
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10 points
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Didn’t ever expect to be selling this.. ever. But Car and personal stuff means it has to go. The pics do most of the talking! These were very expensive new and this has had a lot of work done to it over the past year. It had a pro set up at ATB guitars and sports a customised Bartolini preamp from Dex audio with a very narrow range that just keeps it all super useable in the real world. Controls are: volume, bass, treble, with a pull for low mid boost and a switch for each pickup to toggle between series/parallel/single coil It has an almost Stingray ish sound from the humbuckers and is surprisingly warm and rich. Neck is slim and flat, like a jazz bass meets a status, the most comfy neck I’ve ever owned. (In Over 300 basses!!) The balance is spot on and the truss works fine etc. its collection only from Cheltenham, no postage possible at all I’m afraid. £700 or offers There are minor marks, mostly on the back and the weight is super light, just shy of 7lbs9 points
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Back at The Harley Motor Bar & Restaurant this Saturday! Enjoy the *bourbon and BBQ specials and we’ll provide the tunes! 5:30-8:30pm Daryl *Seriously, who drinks bourbon in Wisconsin? That's a down south thing.8 points
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Some stuff. In Absentia: DG AO900 and Behringer 8x10 are around at the rehearsal space7 points
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G&L CLF L1000 bass for sale Leo Fender’s final take on the P bass! This bass is in good condition, it’s light in weight (3.825kg), and similar to a P bass in character but with some added punch. It comes with the original G&L hard case and paperwork. These basses are hard to come by in the UK now, and dealers don't seem to stock them. £1325 collected from Newcastle Upon Tyne. Could potentially courier in the UK. IMG_4722.mov IMG_4723.MOV6 points
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I’m offering this stunning and all-original Ken Smith BT5 Elite from 1990. This bass not only looks incredible with its Quilted Maple top and back, but it also sounds phenomenal. Specifications: • Body: 5-piece construction (Quilted Maple top and back, Mahogany core) • Neck: 5-piece Neck-through construction, 34” scale • Fingerboard: Ebony, 24 frets • String Spacing: 18mm at the bridge • Year: 1990 • Weight: 4380g • Case: Original Ken Smith Teardrop Case included This bass hails from the earlier Smith era, known for its superb low action and exceptional playability. The frets are in excellent condition, and the neck is flawless. The gold hardware still shines beautifully, with only minor fading on the edges, which is expected from a bass of this vintage. There are a few minor signs of playwear, but nothing significant. The bass comes with the original paperwork and even the original Ken Smith strings (currently strung with DR strings). Price: €7200 €6600 Location: Mallorca, Spain6 points
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Recieved my new Stingray 5 Special yesterday, and boy is it great I'd been selling my Lakland DJ5 to fund an ADHD assessment for my youngest, but as it took so long to sell, shortly after we got a letter telling us she would have one on the NHS, which freed up some money. That coupled with being 40 soon meant I jumped on this, I've never had an instrument of this quality before, it's just brilliant The neck is so comfortable, I found my hand dancing over it, easily playing things I'd found more challenging before. The tone is clear, articulate and punchy without being thin or clanky; I'll need to spend a bit more time with the onboard pre-amp and my practice set-up to get the best out of it, last night I was pretty much running it flat The low B is excellent, articulate and big sounding, but still well balanced with the other four strings - something I've been searching for in a five string for ages That 18v pre is a monster though, a little goes a long way and you can get into clipping very easily. It seems a bass that's very responsive to your playing, the tone shifting a fair bit depending on your hand position and how much you dig in. I wasn't running any compression last night, but I'll experiment with that too. All in all, I'm a bit smitten and very glad I've bought it Technically, I received two basses yesterday as I also paid my colleague for the de-fretted Ibanez SR505 he leant me *ages* ago, so whilst it's not new to me, it is newly mine. I'd been having a lot of fun playing the fretless, I definitely need to work on my intonation though. Looking forward to dropping the tuning down a tone to play some Death and Cynic Anyway, I know you're mostly here for pictures, so6 points
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NBD 30.5” Passive Made by @Lukasz Chyla of this parish. Exceptional for the money when you consider it’s handmade in the UK. Plays really well. And yes, it has a fabulous B. Not for sale.6 points
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We did a corporate thing on Saturday afternoon, a manufacturer of road sweeping equipment had their annual summer do for employees and their families. We did an hour in the afternoon, nothing particularly remarkable other than it is the first time I have set up in a Sweeper Test Area. New vocalist settling in well and this sort of low pressure, short gig is good for building confidence between us all.6 points
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5 points
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I'll be using this setup at a low volume easy going blues gig this Thursday. The cab is a regular feature for rehearsal and small gigs and has proven itself with a few different amps. The little Ashdown class-d head was a fairly recent purchase as a back up/home studio use only but has worked really well with the R210 cab in particular. It's not my first class-d amp but is my first Ashdown class-d head. It's simple to operate and easy to get a usable tone from. Very reminiscnet of the MAG/Electric Blue pre-amp sections and i'm guessing might be like the Rootmaster heads although I havent tried them. The killer feature for me is the shape button which is just like the one on Ashdown ABM's. It gives the amp a surprising punch and low end presence. There's a curious master volume that goes up to 27 but around 13 or 14 is more than enough for a small pub sized room. Lovely warm fat tone and so far no sign of the class-d auto compression and limiting I usually associate with class-d stuff. I think its 300 watts but sounds about the same output wise as my TE GP7 SM130 head. Obviously one other bonus is that its very light.5 points
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Back to nano board going for a more compact setup and channeling my inner IMA. XD Here’s my utility board.5 points
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SOLD TO A HAPPY FRIEND OF A 'CHATTER Testing the P water... (heh) 2010 Nice piece. Has a bridge cover and black scratch plate. I can put the orig white plate back if it matters. £975 no case but includes delivery to 'normal' GB postcodes. I have the orig case, other cases, bags for extra but folk usually want to keep the price as low as pos so I have stuck it on at 950 'naked'. Any info - ask away - or for more pics, let me know, but please be specific.4 points
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I'm gonna be contrary and say I can't see much point in preamp pedals. Perhaps they are useful playing through a PA with no backline and not wanting to DI from an Amp, but multi-fx would seem a more flexible option to me for that most of the time. Even a cheap multi-fx unit will do a better live job by having Amp/Drive/Cab/IR/EQ/HPF/LPF and presets all available. And if playing live at pub sort of level then most players still go through an actual Amp which includes a preamp so not much need for a pedal version. And if home recording then a clean signal generally seems best (to then edit later) - multi-fx can act as an interface to your Laptop for that whereas many preamp pedals can't. I dunno, but they kind of seem to be a solution to a problem that doesn't exist for 90% of situations.........perhaps why so many are for sale on here?!4 points
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4 points
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With our duo we have a policy of never letting people get up at all - once you do then you’re forever getting people wanting to have a go. In the blues band I play with, it’s a touch more relaxed - had a couple of drummers get up with us at the weekend ( see previous post above) , one who was pretty grim and the other bloody amazing - ex Status Quo drummer Jeff Rich. Lovely bloke too.4 points
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I’m in the house band for a Sunday blues jam , and just recently was informed I’ve been doing it for twenty eight years. … shameless4 points
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I seem to have too many schecter model T 5 strings ..so I’m moving this one on it has upgrades of USA hipshots and a Hipshot bridge ..I will supply the original bridge as that has an option of string through though you then require extra long scale strings as it’s a 35”scale .. it’s a swamp ash body and weighs approximately 4.3kg ..it’s fitted with EMG pickups and 18v EMG preamp so it’s quite high spec . It has a couple of cracks in the lacquer around the neck pocket which has been looked at and I’ve been advised it’s purely cosmetic..includes hard case and insured UK postage . It’s a great bass and I will probably regret this . £450.00 inc uk postage4 points
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WITHDRAWN Bought new from Andertons a few years ago. These are fantastic basses - a solid, well put-together instrument which weighs approx. 8.1lbs/3.65kg; well balanced and feels good to play. Great sounding pickups, excellent fit and finish, and lots of tonal options with the blend knob. In my opinion this is one of the best colours Reverend ever did but it has since been discontinued, so this is a rare opportunity to pick up a very cool looking bass. Roasted maple neck with some nice flaming. Please note this sale is for the bass only - no case or gig bag is included. I have gigged this bass extensively and is In very good condition with a few little marks, the usual swirling on the scratchplate and some genuine buckle rash for that extra mojo! Selling to fund a new purchase and it's strictly one in, one out. Not interested in any trades, thanks. Option to collect in person (about 20 miles from Belfast) or happy to post to any UK address, with buyer arranging their own courier. Will be posted in its original box with all the case candy. The details from the Reverend website: Body - Korina Solidbody Pickups - Thick Brick Bridge, Split Brick Neck BridgeString-thru-body or Top-load, 3/4" spacing Neck - 5-Piece Maple/Walnut, Satin Amber Finish Scale - 34" Neck Profile - Medium Oval Fingerboard - Roasted Maple, 12" Radius Frets - 21 - 0.110"W x 0.050"H Truss Rod - Dual Action, Headstock Access Tuners - Hipshot Ultralight, 1/2" Dia. Shaft Nut - 42mm width, Boneite Controls - Volume, Tone, Pickup Pan Happy to answer any questions.3 points
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The temptation that is Chimike's place, has struck again. Was after the DB750, as just can't seem to find a 751 that anyone wants to sell. Day off work, and drove from Norfolk to Worthing (Sussex) - I don't know how people do the M25 every day, I really don't. Had a remarkably close shave with a car spinning off after hitting the concrete centre right in front of me on the way back- no idea how I and others missed him really, but there you go. So went down to get the Aguilar, and ended up depleting all that money I had after selling two basses, by buying the Trace too. I'm sort of glad that I'm now out of dosh completely, and that Mike is so far away, or I'd be helping him in his quest to clear out the hoarders paradise that masquerades as an engineering unit. Just a quick pic3 points
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After some thought, one rehearsal and one gig its obvious to me that I'm very much not a modern, active bass enthusiast at all so I'm putting this up for sale... I've only uploaded one pic as I'm sure everyone knows the shape of the bass, it's in perfect condition and a superb bass but just not for me. I can supply more pics if required. Owned for just over a month, comes with a Spector gig bag, a new set of Rotosound strings and some gold Schaller straps locks fitted.. I can't seem to find any of these for sale in the UK at the moment so this is a good opportunity to grab one. Im more than willing to courier the bass if you're not far from the M25, i'm also fairly regularly in the Coventry area. If not im sure we can sort something out about posting. TRADES NOW ADDED.. I'd be interested in the following, Black or White Fender P bass (maple or rosewood neck) Duff McKagen PJ in black or white Shuker JJ Burnel P Bass Thunderbird3 points
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I’ve just caught up with the thread because I’m borrowing @johnbiffa’s YI200 (with matching neo 4x10). Good to see you on here @Stoneham I’m looking forward to testing the amp. Cool that it fits under my desk, too!3 points
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I've had and gigged both. Both great amps. Different amps, but both great. The 3 channels and the tilt wins it for me. You can really get a lot of drive and distortion if required, or a nice valve sound, and then flick to a clean when required. Or mix both. The tilt is great and a very easy way to get a great sound. Works really well. Looks really cool too. Light as a feather as well. Saying that, if you really know how to use eq to get the sounds you want the abms are great. I'd have either and be really happy.3 points
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That's the intended use (not the knees) - outdoor gigs on sunny days. The debut ([Eddie Waring] and first appearance also /[Eddie Waring]) will now be on 25th August at MarlowFest with the RBL.3 points
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So this has taken a back seat. Partly being winter and couldn’t spray in winter so trying to get to some spraying this summer. I wear my bass high ish, so the slab body wouldn’t be great for me so I’ve carved a tummy cut into it. Very much a hybrid thing but has elements I like/need with the look I’m going for. Still some final shaping and details to sand but it’s pretty much there. 🙌 I worked from a photo, but I think it’s pretty much a fender looking tummy cut.3 points
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I love this board. I'm scared of the stomp though, but well interested in a capo....albeit it looks pretty pricey! Think Ian Allison uses a similar set up?3 points
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I can definitely handle sit in singers, blues harp and guitar. I get the willies playing with an untested drummer. Lol Daryl3 points
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That’s wonderful to know. Might take the bad boy to Chinatown later (love that song)3 points
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3 points
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I loved their early stuff. Freaky Stylee was my first introduction to them & BSSM being their last good album. Californication is where they got stuck in this mould & start to make every song sound the same, so I’d listen to them, but get bored very quickly (I really tried to like Stadium Arcadium, but it sounds so bland). Then more recently, they decided to show their support for apartheid & the pervy singer is not someone I’d ever want anything to do with, so I don’t even listen to their early stuff anymore. They’re on my boycott list.3 points
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3 points
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I guess that YT is the new way to get known, have fun and pay the bills. The hours are good and no travelling so you can still have a life. It's not like there's an abundance of sessions like the old days anymore. There's an abundance of musicians instead. Any musician who can do their thing, enjoy themselves and give up the day job has my respect.3 points
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Check out his profile on Soundcloud, it's examples of his session work. Not flash, just very accomplished. You can criticise his YouTube if you wish, but don't assume he can't do what we try to do.3 points
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We were up in the wilds of Northumberland again plying our Americana trade. Great gig, well attended and received, which is all the more note worthy given it was about 25C and sunny outside. For the first time, we had the drunk punter, an older guy who ‘wanted to get up and play a song he’d written’. No amount of explaining that we couldn’t do that, that the audience were there to see us and not him etc could dissuade him. Fortunately, shortly after the start of the second set he got the message and left.3 points
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If you allow yourself to be the band dad once you will always be the band dad. Keys player - "I've forgotten my iPad" Me - "Well just download the Behringer app for your phone then." Keys player - "Which one is it?" Me - "I have no idea, I don't use it" He finally downloads one... Keys player - "How do I use this?" Me - "I have no idea, I don't use it" Keys player - "Well that's not very helpful, is it?" All this while I'm setting the PA up and he has already got a pint in his hand.3 points
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Played our monthly Sunday late afternoon gig at The Sun Inn in Beverley. Very quiet when we arrived so we were worried the great weather had kept people at home having BBQs in their gardens. However around 4.30pm people started to come in so by the time we kicked off at 5pm it was getting full. Plenty of requests, ranging from Tony Bennett through to Del Amitri and George Ezra. Some old friends in too so great to have a catch up in the breaks. Fortunately I also remembered to take my big electric fan otherwise the heat would have been a problem- as it was I’d just restrung my Ibanez bass and had to tune every couple of songs. Ended up doing a couple of encores before finishing around 8.30pm. Really enjoyable gig.3 points
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So after the show yesterday I rushed back to Hereford to see my band playing at the gig they had! They were booked for a party in the bar at the theatre and used the A guitarist on bass and the B guitarist on guitar, the A drummer was available, and the B trumpeter was as well (our hottest hot lips was on the show with me) so they took the gig. Really great to see them all play. But it was nice to back in the saddle this evening. Pleasant wedding at Stone Manor just outside Kidderminster, a nice gig, just Sunday evening vibes after a warm day, some were in the mood for partying but I think a lot had an eye on the clock. Still, enjoyed it and it was nice and rowdy from about half the crowd by the end.3 points
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OK, last few bits and bobs with this one. Setup first. I like to be able to get the action pretty low. 1.75mm for the E string at the 12th and 1.5mm for G string. That's with only a touch of relief on the truss rod. I've stopped using nuts and instead have a zero fret. The fretwire is the same for the zero fret but I don't level it when I'm doing the other frets. All this means that the action is incredibly light. Particularly the first 5 frets. My daughter's guitar teacher (who's a far better bass player than me) came round the other day and said it felt like playing a fretless! That's definitely my goal. Most people probably will want to raise the action a bit, particularly since this is an acoustic, but it's nice to know it can go low if necessary. My setup routine is probably similar to everyone. The only thing slightly unusual is that I level the frets under string tension. First step is getting it to tension (or actually a semitone below), then using a straight edge on top of the frets to get the neck as straight and flat as possible: I then use an aluminium C-shaped beam with 400 grit sandpaper on the bottom to level all the frets (as mentioned above, apart from the zero fret). More or less the final job is the pickup. I'm using a fishman matrix Infinity piezo which is under the saddle. This means I need to drill a hole in the top for the cable. After countless hours of work this was definitely a job not to do with a hangover. Or given I've got an eight year old, high on gummy-bears. Mark up the bridge location with tape, then a 2.5mm through the top, praying that my plans are accurate and I'm not about to drill through the X brace..... Phew. Done. Tomorrow I'll string it up again and plug it in for the first time.... One thing that has turned out beautifully on this build is the finish on the top. It was an epoxy seal coat then 5 or 6 wipe on/wipe off coats of tru oil. As a finish it look stunning. The last one had a french polished top which was nice, but dare I say it this one is better. It's hard to see in my rubbish photos, but the wood glows....3 points
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I bought this from the classifieds here. My old friend @shug has one of these, and, despite being a remarkable human being, and probably the best bass player in the north west, he also sounds very good. At a festival gig a couple of months ago, his band were on after mine. My wife Jan and I stayed for the evening and enjoyed the show. This amp, through Barefaced 10's, and Shugs playing, combined to be simply sublime. So, I have to try one don't I? Anyway, it's here. It's not the best example you might find. It had loose DIY rack ears mounted with pop rivets which have now been removed, and the case is a bit battered and scratched. But it's functional, and I've spent a bit of time with it over the last couple of days. I have other splendid amps, some quite expensive, but this thing has me scratching my head. It sounds bloody marvelous! It's so present, so right here in the room, so hefty, weighty and toneful. It's got me wondering that modern amp manufacture has taken a wrong turn somewhere. Why didn't they just stop here? I actually can't believe that tomorrow night I'm choosing to take the cheapest bit of kit I own out for a gig, and I'm really looking forward to using it. Yours, puzzled, Rob2 points
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Freddie is a monster player and has the talent and ability to shred. Obviously you won't hear that on a Whitney Houston song (etc) because for him that's not where the money is, but it doesn't mean he can't.2 points