-
Posts
10,976 -
Joined
-
Last visited
-
Days Won
3
Content Type
Profiles
Forums
Events
Shop
Articles
Everything posted by mcnach
-
is that the same as a "Pleasure Board" but you feel oddly ashamed and dirty calling it by its name... or is that a different product?
-
I smiled reading that... I imagine you with a nice back garden where one night a new flowerbed appeared. Don't tell me the truth. Let me believe.
-
I'm a little slow, just to be clear... you kill the neighbours and then put their bodies between the wall and those boards? Simple as that?
-
Your current house sounds a lot like where I am now. I generally use my MarkBass LM3 into 2x TKS S112 which is always ready to plug into. But you just have to keep it low. I often play at 2 or 3am while my girlfriend is sleeping next door and she doesn't hear me. When I moved in we ran a few 'noise tests' (previously I was in a detached house where I was able to be really loud, and I was worried that I could misjudge levels), so we found at what level I could play without her hearing me, and then surely nobody else could either. During the day I play a bit louder, but not lots more, as it's quiet... except when the neighbours have their kids and friends playing in the garden or the teenage daughter plays her stereo Those that argue using an amp in a flat is antisocial remind me of the time I walked into a bar we were playing for the first time, with my two 212 cabs... the guy in charge of the sound gave me a funny look and said "that looks loud!" in a worried tone. I assured him my amplifier had a volume knob No kittens died and sound levels were as they desired..
-
oooh, "bass"! ok...
-
You're probably right. If things are vibrating in the room... your bass is going to travel quite a bit! I guess this is also the difficulty: one man's reasonable is another man's too loud
-
It depends how you play! If you can play your stereo or your TV in a flat, you can also play your guitar through your amp... just don't be a silly billy when you do it edit: "silly billy"... that's what the 'profanity translator' substituted my original text with, ha!
-
Lucky you. I never liked playing with headphones. Even when I'm playing quietly, I use my amp. But yes, you do have to mind the levels and remember just how much bass can travel through walls. However, to prevent someone from playing amplified at home (keeping levels reasonable) during the day is just not on either. Some people expect absolute silence from their neighbours, and sometimes the same people are the ones who think nothing of playing their home cinemas with sub-bass and yelling in the house at 3am when they come home after a few drinks... It's tricky. When a neighbour has unreasonable expectations and demands, at some point you have to say 'enough' and live your life too... but you're taking a gamble as to what happens next, so it's important that you remain 'reasonable' even if others aren't, so that if the time comes, you cannot be found to be at fault.
-
oh, she does sound high maintenance...
-
It's always tricky with neighbours because you don't really want to start having issues at your own home... Given it looks like it's just this week, I'd lean towards keeping very calm, polite and nice. It may be worth not simply just shut down bass entirely, but actually have a conversation as to what would she find acceptable... maybe there are certain times, or lengths of time, that she would not be so bothered by the noise, and you could both reach an agreement. In my view, that would be the best outcome, where you both feel you give a little, but also take a little: respect. And then cross your fingers. Good luck! Noisy or supersensitive neighbours can be a real pain.
-
the little one?
-
following! looking good!
-
Turning a Harley benton PB-Shorty into a JB-Shorty.
mcnach replied to blablas's topic in Build Diaries
I love it! -
But even the vocal line is near identical to that in Creep... unlike the other 'versions'.
-
Vintage Instruments: Quality or Psychosomatics?
mcnach replied to Frank Blank's topic in General Discussion
Not always. Some of the first CDs were indeed very good... but a lot of them, especially when they were reissuing older albums on CD, they seemed rushed jobs and not mastered properly for CD. It was very disappointing to buy CDs of albums I had had for years and find they lacked... 'life' , compared to what I was used to. The problem is not the medium, is what you put in it... Masters designed for vinyl are very different from those that are destined to CD, so you need someone to spend a bit of time remastering the thing to be issued on CD, and they didn't always put enough care, clearly. -
Vintage Instruments: Quality or Psychosomatics?
mcnach replied to Frank Blank's topic in General Discussion
and I was indicating one of several reasons why that might be. I'm not arguing. -
Interesting, thanks! I have never seen any other reference to a Retro 215. Could it be they planned to make it but changed their minds? Anyone has seen one of these Barefaced Unicorn cabs? Ooops, I did it again and changed the name
-
-
Was there ever a "Retro 215"?
-
lesson learnt... in Venezuela, use a fork for soup if you must...
-
what??? but... how???? !!!
-
it's ALWAYS something sexual, isn't it???
-
Well... interesting that you say that, because... in South America they have sometimes preserved a lot of words and phrases that in Spain we have either lost or "corrupted" into something else... so sometimes you could argue that there's a lot of "proper Spanish" on the other side of the Atlantic. As I said... it's a jungle.
-
there may be something there, I think in Mexico (and possibly some countries in South America) lana can be slang for money. We don't use that meaning in Spain, but I've certainly heard people say (in a movie) "uf, mucha lana" when they thought something was too pricey. There are a lot of differences in the Spanish spoken in different countries... sometimes with hilarious or embarrasing results. While in Spain you would "coger el autobus" (take the bus), in Argentina that would imply you want to have sexual intercourse with the bus. In Spain coger and agarrar mean pretty much the same: take, grab... so an Argentinian would say "agarrar el autobus". It's a jungle out there...