Jump to content
Why become a member? ×

Dad3353

Member
  • Posts

    19,048
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    93

Everything posted by Dad3353

  1. An excellent exercise in recycling, but they're real suds to play.
  2. Good evening, Steen , and ... Plenty to read and amuse you here, and lots to learn and share. Just a thought: what happens if you use a capo, at various frets..? Is that string still different compared to the others..?
  3. And to think he spade for that..!
  4. Good afternoon, Martin , and ... Plenty to read and amuse you here, and lots to learn and share.
  5. Dad3353

    hi !!

    Good evening, Joris, and ... Plenty to read and amuse you here, and lots to learn and share. As above, there are more than a few BC members from the Continent, including myself, from la Mayenne.
  6. Yeah, but you're old, innit..? ... Or, more kindly and to the point (I, too, am old..!), for now you have the choice. For an increasing number, here in the UK and Europe at least, that choice is fast dwindling, soon to vanish. Buy now, whilst you still can..!
  7. In days of yore, there were way-stations, taverns and lodging houses all along every highway of this island. Travellers would be compelled to stop at one or other of these inns, as travel was on foot, on horseback, coach or bullock cart, and there was a limit as to how far one could go without feeding and watering both the rider and the steed. With the advent of alternatives, (rail, cars, motorways...), some vestiges of these services remain, albeit much evolved, but anyone trying to do things 'the old way' would have a hard tome of it, I suspect. Times change, and the services one needed, even in pre-war days, are now redundant, or so changed as to be no longer recognised. Farriers are now rare, in a not-so-distant future, local filling stations will be just a memory (already the case in some areas...). It's the same with local commerce, whether music shops, book shops, cobblers... There will be a place for niche outlets, but they will no longer be dependant on local trade, I suspect. There's no going back any time soon, so best to leave the sentimentality and nostalgia behind and make the best of what's 'now' and tomorrow. Is it a Good Thing..? Does that matter, as it changes nothing..?
  8. The 'plus' that our 'local' shop had was the camaraderie and complicity with the blokes behind the counter. I worked for many years, myself, in a music shop, as technician, and always found that the 'rapport' between staff and the folks that came in was the key factor. I even repair, still, some 'customers' from those days, several decades after quitting that shop..! At that time, before t'web, having that personal interaction was what helped have them come back; I can only imagine that, with all the facilities of on-line stuff, it would be all the more important. It's really impossible for any retail outlet to have stock to cover what t'web offers, nor really match the prices, but the service and bonhomie can, and should, be a major factor. I can't see why anyone would make the effort to push the door if there was no personal interest in doing so, really.
  9. There are three of us at home (drummer, guitar, bassist...), but our annual consumption of anything at all, be it strings, heads, instruments... whatever... would be less than noticeable on the balance sheet of any local outlet. The nearest to us is fifty km away; I've not been there for... well, even longer than that. Our Eldest (guitar...) is making his own electric guitar; we even had to scour t'web to find the pick-ups he wanted; no chance of 'em being in stock. They came direct from the States in the end, even cheaper than Thomann. Loyal customer..? Yes, in the sense of, if they have what we want/need, we'd go there, but it's so rare as to not be worth considering. The shop survives thanks to the music schools and private teachers, plus their local musicians that live in that town, but there's no money to be made from our commerce. I'd say, too, that we're not, in general, 'consumers' (swapping 'phones, buying CD's, 'fashion' stuff, hair-cuts...), and already have all we want/need.
  10. Good evening, CC, and ... Plenty to read and amuse you here, and lots to learn and share.
  11. Here's how to make a five-string bass pick-up. Use a curved 'popsicle stick' to match the curve of the bridge and you're set... How to make a bass pick-up ... S'not that hard; worth a try..? Edit: just to note that the bloke winds by hand; I'd recommend attaching to a hand drill and turning the former (slowly, at first...), rather than fixing the former and winding manually. Much faster, and much less chance of breaking the wire. Just sayin'. Here's the Stew-Mac method for doing the same thing ... Build Your Own Custom Pick-ups ...
  12. There is no contradiction from me in saying that not all music is focused on the audience. I'd even suggest that most music is played with no audience present at all, if we include rehearsal and studio work. Yes, being 'aware' (sounds too much like Van Damme to me, but that's just me...) is what it's about, and, to me, communicating is the name of the game, and the whole point of playing, mostly. I would agree that one should not be dependant on any one partner, but building complicity is a huge advantage in many genres (I would hope, all genres, but 'shoegaze' may be an exception..!). I don't think we're at loggerheads, just using different terms for nuances of much the same thing. However, I, for one, get much more pleasure, myself, and 'play' that pleasure back into the mix, when I know that all the other players are in the same 'moment'. Indeed, even when practising alone, I'll try to imagine transmitting emotion, events, feeling... in what I'm playing.
  13. That seems a bit harsh and 'dry', to me. Listening is critical, but so is 'reading' the mood of the other musicians, by whatever means. Even seeing someone smile (or frown..?) at something going down is part of how and what one plays, as far as I'm concerned. It's possible to play in a 'vacuum', but better if all are contributing to the song with all of their senses, in my view. I'm not a machine.
  14. It's from 'The Hitch-Hiker's Guide To The Galaxy', recommended reading, as there are references to that work interspersed throughout this forum, and others. Here it is, in Pdf format ... HHGTTG ...
  15. "Hey, you sass that hoopy Bluewine? There's a frood who really knows where his towel is."
  16. I've no qualms with that if I turn the sound off. Leaving the sound on and closing my eyes, however, is quite a different story..!
  17. So would I, spelt like that..! ('Cue': giving the nod to someone, or playing pool. 'Queue': standing in line ...)
  18. So, (be truthful, now...) do you honestly find the sound of that video to be 'attractive', well recorded..? Would you be pleased if the drummer in your band sounded like that..?
  19. Unlistenable cacophony. One had to 'be there', maybe. A lesson in how not to set up a PA and record stuff. I gave it four minutes; I shan't repeat the experience. Sorry, no points from me for this one.
  20. Could I suggest explaining what the issue is, so that someone could offer some help..? The 'Report' button brings posts to the attention of the Mods systematically. Just sayin'.
  21. This may or may not be an issue. Try it out, and judge the results in the context of what you're doing, yourself.
×
×
  • Create New...