-
Posts
10,976 -
Joined
-
Last visited
-
Days Won
3
Content Type
Profiles
Forums
Events
Shop
Articles
Everything posted by mcnach
-
how do you get to that? If you have two overdrives, is it because the first one you bought is not good enough?
-
well... I'm going to be using a bass just like the one in the OP at one of my next gigs (my girlfriend's bass, she wants me to use it live)... I bet that because of this thread NOW it'll fail (don't think so I'll report back)
-
Ha! Yes, I guess we all find whatever works for us and stick to it. I like the semiparametric mids on the bass because once I adjust the basic sound, all I do is add or remove a bit of mids depending on what I'm playing... If I want to cut through a bit more... turn mids up a bit and sweep to get the right spot. If I have something a bit more 'slappy' I back off he mids a tiny bit... etc. I tend to play either a Precision or a Stingray, single pickup basses. If I have two pickups I start tweaking things too much
-
The Selector - Biggest Weekend Squier Content
mcnach replied to Hobbayne's topic in General Discussion
I didn't know The Bureau... thanks for that! I play occasionally with the trombone player from the Dexys, he's our 5th member although he only plays a few gigs each year with us. I didn't know the Dexys either until I met him (apart from the obvious Come on Eileen...). Anyway... thanks for the Bureau, that's really what I wanted to say but I get distracted a lot -
that sounds like a good idea. Generally it's mostly the mids where I want to adjust things on my bass, and the passive tone control is a good way to get me a "starting point" in my general sound. I rarely touch bass or treble on most onboard preamps. I've long toyed with the idea of combining a passive tone control (for treble rolloff) with the mids-sweep module from John East as a simple two knob solution. In fact, you could mount volume and passive tone in a dual pot, and mids/sweep on another... Useful for Precisions and the like.
-
I can't imagine it's that big of a deal... they sell Squier instruments by the thousands, and how many had their neck come off? As for the Maruszczyk... I was not impressed. I could not believe they would aim to save a few pennies that way. I was trying to undo one of the screws, and it was very tight... so I made sure I had the right head screwdriver so that I would not damage it... applied force... nothing... a bit more... and it started to move. Only it was the metal starting to shear. Cheese, I tell you, that screw was made of cheese
-
It's a tough call!!! If you ask me at different times I may give you different answers... but The Cat Empire will be in the list. They formed in 1999. Not sure which 4 bands I'd choose to be my top ones, I'd need a lot of sleepless nights to be able to choose :p but The Cat Empire and Muse would be in my 'greats' list, no question, together with much older stuff like Jethro Tull and AC/DC. I'm an eclectic type...
-
That's the thing... owner of multiple Squiers over the years and never a problem with their screws (touch... wood? steel? ) (Yet my first Maruszczyk... the pickup mounting screws were made of cheese)
-
My 4 bands of all time include at least one post 2000, and probably two of them will be post 1995... And I'm not a millenial exactly
-
Maybe. But from that list, I'd definitely put down Muse as one of the 'greats' of the current era. Some bands I like more and some I like less, and a few I consider special for their time. Muse are one of them. I think we tend to admire 'greatness' more in bands that we grew up with, perhaps because we 'discovered' music with them, and later bands do not impress us as much.
-
debatable... what you call greats may not look that great to others.
-
I bought one of those, same colour too (but original whiteish pickguard) last year [*] Really nice. It was incredibly light too. Good buy! [*] actually it wasn't for me. My girlfriend plays bass a bit and she's been looking for another bass as the one she had just wasn't what she liked. One day she told me she had seen a beautiful bass on the window of a second hand shop, went in and tried it, and she fell in love: it was very light, it played very nicely, sounded good... So she was a bit short of cash at the time, but she hoped to go in a week or so and buy it. She had taken pictures. I just made some appreciative noises without looking too impressed... but I thought I knew where the shop was, so next day I went on the hunt. I found it, tried it and bought it... then kept it for nearly 2 months until her birthday
-
Not at all. And he strikes me as someone who overestimates his own importance/contribution...
-
I PM'd you, but here's the link in case anybody else is interested: https://www.dropbox.com/s/bdmqmd23864g6xn/scan2-240 - thumbrest.tif?dl=1 I had good results with them cut from a 4mm thick black acrylic sheet. I smoothened the edges a bit with some fine sandpaper... and that was it.
-
Unfortunately I cannot help you there, I've never recorded with mine. There's some noticeable hiss on mine at low volume. It doesn't matter out on the street, you can't hear it... but if it's in your recordings because the preamp is what's hissy it can be a bit of a bummer. I wonder if you can process the signal to tame it afterwards. There's a number of hiss-reducing methods developed during the tape era, maybe some of those can help. Maybe even sampling the hiss on its own and phase-invert it then add it to the original? It won't work perfectly as noise is random, but if it is on a relatively narrow frequency band, it might be useful? (I have never tried). The short answer is no, I don't know how you could improve it at source. Recording was never something I was interested in from this box.
-
I am the same, I like to have a thumbrest where a Stingray pickup would be. I add them to Precisions and even to Jazz basses. I once bought an OLP Stingray copy that had a metal piece glued on the pickguard as a thumbrest where a Precision pickup would be. I removed it but kept it... and ended up using it on another bass: It is held in place with strong double sided sticky tape. It's solid, but not so solid that you cannot remove it if you try gently but with persuasion, and the sticky residue that's left behind is easy to remove and leaves no mark (on poly finishes at least! If yours is nitrocellulose I am not sure this would work well). A while ago, we had a thread about this kind of thing and the idea became popular enough that some BC member with access to the right machinery took orders and produced a bunch of them in black acrylic based on a scan of mine. Another BC member also made me a handful in aluminium. I do not have any spare ones anymore. I use them on various basses and have given away the rest, but it's a simple idea that definitely works for me (and a few others too). I can send you the scan if you want an exact copy and know where to have it made... but you could probably make one from a small piece of acrylic and files/sanding. At least that's my plan for when I end up needing another! Other shapes work, of course, but I liked this one as it is so that's why we copied it. I have no idea what the original bit was initially. It seems made or some kind of steel. I'm pretty sure it wasn't a thumbrest... but it has a really good comfy shape for one. It's only about 3-4mm tall, which is perfect. Here's my Classic 50 Precision with a black acrylic one:
-
Africa - like you've never heard it before?
mcnach replied to casapete's topic in General Discussion
Yup. -
Oh yes! I've just done the same to my white Precision fretless... I like it
-
Mine was originals...
-
Africa - like you've never heard it before?
mcnach replied to casapete's topic in General Discussion
On a flat Earth it would be seen easily, right? -
I played there last year, they actually treated us very well.
-
It depends on how/why you left I suppose... There's one band in particular I really like and I enjoy seeing them do well. I recommended their current bass player to them when I left and they're all happy. There was one band I left in good terms but slightly frustrated: music was great but there was a clear band leader who was a bit too much of a control freak for my liking. I see him out and about and we chat like friends, I just cannot play in his band. The first time I saw them with a new bassist it felt a bit strange. I heard the first song... "that's not how I played it" turned into "but this way is so much better!" They had a really cool bass player and I enjoyed the music even more now that I didn't have to endure being in a band with that guy
-
Africa - like you've never heard it before?
mcnach replied to casapete's topic in General Discussion
I'm afraid it was not a bad gig... The guy had a great voice and seems like a nice guy but... -
I enjoy not knowing the songs and being surprised that way. If it's good, new stuff is twice as exciting to me.