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Skol303

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Everything posted by Skol303

  1. [quote name='xgsjx' timestamp='1395213872' post='2399724'] When's closing the date? I've got an entry, but it's just in the finishing off stages & I'd like to get an entry in this mumph. [/quote] Hi G, it'd be good to have you back amongst us mate! The closing date is [b][size=5][color=#B22222]midnight on Monday 24th March[/color][/size][/b]... y'know, written big and red just like it is in the first post at the top of this thread
  2. Yep! It's a fantastic resource. Very useful and well structured. I'm currently working my way through the various free lessons on offer. He seems like a thoroughly nice bloke too, which helps
  3. [quote name='Jono Bolton' timestamp='1394981656' post='2397306'] That's really nice, I love the subtle wear and tear on it, and the fag burn on the headstock too! [/quote] Cheers Jono! Yeah it's got plenty of wear without being worn out. The fag burn wasn't a deliberate choice, but as an ex-smoker it does have some 'resonance' with me PS: I think it's an A-size neck. Very playable whatever it is. [quote name='AntLockyer' timestamp='1395000026' post='2397651'] Looks superb, and having been born in the 38th week of 1974 I want that pot lol [/quote] Happy 40th for you this year! You can't have my pots... but you can have a sincere smiley from one '74-er to another [quote name='JapanAxe' timestamp='1395000427' post='2397661'] Looks and sounds great. I found myself thinking, 'Sounds like Scott Devine' - then I realised why [/quote] That's a huge compliment! Cheers. It's a cool riff and I'm a big fan of Scott - although of course he plays it way better than I do.
  4. [quote name='Lozz196' timestamp='1394897757' post='2396451'] Agree, looks it too. [/quote] Cheers Lozz! The photos don't quite do it justice... there are a zillion little dinks and marks that give it loads of 'character' (if that's the right word) and the patina on the body is great. It's certainly worn, but not knackered. Just like its owner
  5. [quote name='gary mac' timestamp='1394779998' post='2395080'] Great work Paul, great write up and great photos, it's all great I love the look and sound. Sounds like like it was a real worthwhile project for you and you've ended up with a rather lovely instrument. [/quote] Cheers Gary! And thanks again for those strings Allowed me to put it all together and test everything out whilst the LaBellas were on order. [quote name='Horizontalste' timestamp='1394795768' post='2395295'] Great work, I love the fact that your forty & still roped the old fella in. Dad's eh, they're great! [/quote] Damn right! My dad is getting on in years now and I wanted to make sure he had a hand in this project. We used to tinker with stuff together when I was younger (making amps and speaker cabs), so this was like old times. [quote name='BurritoBass' timestamp='1394810887' post='2395517'] Great article although I assume the pictures are on Photobucket as they are blocked at work. I did a similar thing with a late 70s bass although being born a year before you I missed a trick... and I think the trick was haggling as I tended to pay asking price for everything. I'll check this thread at home to admire the pictures [/quote] Yep, the photos are hosted on Photobucket (I always post images that way, as it saves bandwidth on Basschat). Friendly haggling was definitely the way to go for this project. It also helped that I found a couple of guys who had a lot of the necessary parts in stock, so I was able to negotiate deals on bundles of stuff altogether.
  6. [quote name='gjones' timestamp='1394768604' post='2395063'] It sounds absolutely gorgeous. [/quote] [quote name='stinson' timestamp='1394782374' post='2395101'] Great job, looks and sounds just the ticket [/quote] [quote name='andydye' timestamp='1394797782' post='2395327'] that looks amazing mate! a superb p with a great story behind it [/quote] [quote name='Mr Anthony' timestamp='1394797813' post='2395328'] That is absolutely lovely! Enjoy it, I know I would. Really good write up, I rather enjoyed reading it. Happy birthday, have fun with your new bass! [/quote] Thanks guys! Yeah, I was nicely surprised by how good it sounds. I’m used to EQ’ing and generally playing around with the tone of my recordings quite a lot, but this bass just sounds good straight away. It doesn’t have the range of tones I can get with other instruments, but the tone it does have is solid. Can’t argue with that
  7. [b]And more importantly, here’s a quick recording of how it [i]sounds[/i].[/b] This isn’t anything fancy - recording or playing-wise - it’s literally just a couple of quick things I recorded on the first day I put the bass together (both based on some practice exercises by Scott Devine). No FX or processing applied here… the bass was DI’d straight into my computer with the tone rolled all the way off. Strung with LaBella flats. No more, no less: https://soundcloud.com/skol-mixes/p-bass Cheers folks! Paul
  8. Ok, that’s ended up being an essay. Sorry about that. And you probably just wanted some pictures, right? So here you go… [i]Naked body… ooh matron![/i] [i]Neck detail[/i] [i]Pickups[/i] [i]Pots[/i] [i]Finished![/i] [i]Rear view[/i] [i]Body[/i] [i]Knobs[/i] [i]Headstock[/i] [i]More headstock…[/i]
  9. [b]Here are some tips I learnt along the way for anyone considering a similar project:[/b] 1) The US is where it’s at for Fender parts, so you need to a) get comfortable with the idea of importing stuff and b ) make some friends over there that you trust. Some of the people I met initially on eBay, but ended up buying from them privately. Get to know these people… they’re enthusiasts just like you and I. Take the time to pick their brains, ask plenty of questions, request photos - and then some more photos - check every fact, compare each part against parts you know are genuine and then, only then, spend your money. I ended up getting some fantastic deals this way - and I’m still in touch with many of the people I bought from as friends. It’s worth the effort. 2) Haggle! I don’t think there’s a single part on this bass that I bought for the original asking price. You can save a lot of money this way, but… 3) If you spot the right part, buy it quickly! I had to spend money on a few parts at times when I’d rather have waited and saved a little more (the deal with Mrs Skol was that I funded the project using eBay sales of my own). But some parts don’t crop up too often and you may end up disappointed if you don’t grab them while you can. I’ve still yet to come across a ’74 sunburst body as good as the one I got, and I bought it nearly a year ago. Had I not grabbed it when I did, I’d still be waiting. [i]Carpe diem![/i] 4) Ask the sellers to tell you what they know about the parts. Some might just be parts they’re passing on. Others might be from instruments they’ve owned for many years. I had some great chats along the way with fellow bass players as a result of being nosy - and now the parts on my bass aren’t just ‘parts’, they remind me of the people I bought them from and the stories they shared. All good mojo 5) Don’t bust a gut over the small stuff. When you’re searching eBay for “pick guard screws 1974” then it’s time to have a reality check and a lie down. Trust me, it’s easy to get obsessive over this stuff! But some parts just aren’t worth the time or money.
  10. I’m 40 years old this month. The big Four-Oh! And for the past year or so I’ve been ferreting around, piecing together parts for a year-of-birth Fender Precision (1974). Here’s what happened… [b]Firstly, why a Fender Precision?[/b] Well, I’d previously owned a P-Bass copy that I used to enjoy playing. So that was a good start. But on a more practical level there aren’t many basses from the ‘70s that you can piece together, bit by bit, sourcing parts hither and tither. So the Fender P fitted the bill perfectly - it being a factory made, mass-produced instrument that I could piece together in the same way the factory workers at Fullerton would have done 40 years ago. [b]Secondly, why not just go and buy an ‘all original’ P-bass?[/b] The thought did cross my mind. But I wanted this bass to be something a bit special. I liked the idea of piecing it together myself. Of every part having a small story behind it. And the romance of that idea just got the better of me So the first thing I did was draw up a parts list, which looked something like this:[list] [*]Tuners and bushings [*]Neck [*]Neck plate [*]Body [*]Volume & Tone pots [*]Jack socket [*]Pickup shield [*]Pickups & screws [*]Thumb rest & screws [*]Pickup foam [*]Pick guard & screws [*]Volume/Tone knobs [*]Bridge [*]Strap buttons & felts [*]Strings [/list] Armed with my list, I began sourcing parts on eBay and elsewhere. It was a slow process that required a lot of patience! Luckily I made some good friends along the way and managed to negotiate some real bargains. My general rule was that the parts had to be dated as close as possible to 1974, but of course some pieces of the jigsaw were just impossible to date accurately. I got lucky with the body and managed to get hold of a genuine ’74 sunburst from a friend who builds bitsa Precisions for a hobby. He also sold me the neck - a one piece maple from ’73 together with the machine heads (also from ’73). So that was a good start. I got lucky again with the pots/jack and pickups - both coming from a ’74 bass being parted out by a guy in New York (the pot code is 1377438, which puts them in the 38th week of ’74). I also managed to get a ’74 neck plate (serial number 545673). The strap buttons, pick guard, thumb rest and volume/tone knobs were dated ’somewhere’ in the 1970s, but that was good enough. The knobs were bought on eBay from a fellow Basschatter, although I still don’t know the guy’s username here (but thanks, whoever you are!). The knobs are different types and one of them needed drilling out to widen to aperture, but that wasn’t a problem. The pick guard screws I got free from a mate in the US (thanks Mike!) and the strap button felts I got free from our very own KiOgon (cheers John!). Thanks also to BC’s Gary Mac who donated a set of strings for me to use while putting the bass together. The thumb rest is the dark maroon/brown type and was donated by a friend who used to build bitsa basses in the US. Yeah, I love free stuff! The bridge I got from a new friend of mine in Brooklyn. It came off a fretless ’74 P-Bass (natural finish), which he later sold on Craigslist with a different ’74 bridge fitted. It has an extended G-string screw, which Fender stopped using in ’73 (but of course they continued fitting them on basses in ’74). I’d had a geeky obsession with these bridges from the get go and was really happy to have found one. So that was that. It took about a year to source all the parts, after which I put the bass together with my old dad one weekend not long after Christmas. My dad is an artist with a soldering iron (far more delicate than I am), so he did the soldering while I screwed everything together. All very simple, just as Fenders are designed to be. The end result is well… amazing. At least I’m very happy with it. It plays and sounds great. It’s chock-full of mojo and little stories I picked up along the way from the people who donated and sold parts to the project. It’s been put together by me and my dad, and when I leave this mortal coil (which hopefully won’t be any day soon!) it’ll be passed on to my son… by which time it’ll be an instrument spanning three generations of our family, which he’ll probably sell for beer money if he grows up to be anything like I was. But whatever. A BIG thanks to Scott, Mike and Trevor in the US; Gary and John here in the UK, and the mystery BC’er who sold me the knobs at a great price. Speaking of which, I’ve done the sums and I reckon this project has worked out at around 1/2 to 2/3 the price of an ‘all original’ 1974 P-bass. So I’m happy with that
  11. [quote name='thisnameistaken' timestamp='1394747319' post='2394856'] Tapping never sounds good though.[/quote] I beg to differ. Well, I don't actually beg... I just differ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sAmX3yDkx2M
  12. [quote name='charic' timestamp='1394440752' post='2391235'] I've actually got something on the go this month! Here it is so far! Please excuse the dodgy guitar playing [url="https://soundcloud.com/thebrokensky/at-sunset"]https://soundcloud.c...ensky/at-sunset[/url] [/quote] [i]Wh... what?![/i] Since when did hell freeze over?? CHARIC HAS ENTERED A TRACK!!! Not that I’m making a big deal out of this but… [size=6]CHARIC HAS ENTERED A TRACK!!![/size] Someone check his temperature. Feed him those happy pills. Subdue him. This just isn’t natural. The apocalypse must be coming. Run! Run for your lives!! [i]Ahem.[/i] Yeah. Sorry Rik. Caught me by surprise there mate Just had a quick listen and it sounds ace. Well back, amigo. And about bloody time too!
  13. £100 per track seems reasonable for a pro mix, as it's typically a very time consuming job. I can also vouch for Ironside (above). A very talented chap and a very kind offer. I'd personally bite his arm off...
  14. [size=5][b]TASCAM US-144MKII USB Audio MIDI Interface[/b][/size] [color=#008000][size=5][b]Reduced to £70 including postage[/b][/size][/color] A 4-channel USB audio interface that's perfect for any home studio. Allows you to connect your bass (or other instrument) to your computer and start recording. Very quick and easy to set up and use. [b]Features:[/b][list] [*]2 x high quality XLT microphone inputs (with 48V phantom power for condenser mics) [*]2 x 1/4" (jack plug) balanced line inputs, featuring a switchable guitar level for direct recording of electric guitars and basses [*]1/4" stereo headphone output [*]MIDI input and output for connecting synths and drum machines [*]S/PDIF stereo coaxial input and output [*]Individual line and headphone out level controls [*]Up to 96Hz/24-bit audio quality [*]Powered and connected using a standard USB 2.0 plug [*]Windows and Mac compatible [/list] [b]Includes the original box and [u]all[/u] paraphernalia, specifically:[/b][list] [*]User manuals (English, German, French, Italian, Spanish) [*]Original installer disc (up-to-date drivers are available [url="http://tascam.com/product/us-144mkii/downloads/"]here[/url]) [*]Free copy of Cubase LE4 software (on disc) [*]USB cable [/list] I've had this interface for a couple of years and it's worked perfectly with no problems at all. It's been very well looked after and is in 'as new' condition. Here's a link to the official product page: [url="http://tascam-ca.com/product/us-144mkii/"]http://tascam-ca.com...uct/us-144mkii/[/url] And here's a review on the Sound On Sound website: [url="http://www.soundonsound.com/sos/jul07/articles/tascamus144us122l.htm"]http://www.soundonso...us144us122l.htm[/url] ...there are plenty of other positive reviews of this interface online, so don't take my word for it - Google for yourself! Normally retails somewhere around £90-150 new. I'm looking for £70, which includes UK postage (happy to arrange overseas shipping at a little extra cost). Message me if you're interested [i]Top view:[/i] [i]Front view:[/i] [i]Rear view:[/i] [i]What you get![/i]
  15. My dad use to play lots of Val Doonican, Nana Mouskouri, Roy Orbison and Travelling Wilburys, amongst others. Mum liked Cliff Richard and Culture Club. I grew up rebelling against all that with Iron Maiden, then Metallica and Slayer. After which I took a lateral jaunt into Beastie Boys, followed by early house (Bomb the Bass, S-Express, etc), rave music, techno and jungle. I now dress like Val Doonican and listen to mostly electronica and hip hop. Go figure.
  16. [quote name='Zenitram' timestamp='1394211221' post='2389231'] You 'sculpt' the tone? Come on. We twiddle some knobs to get a sound we like. [/quote] I have a lot of knobs and most definitely sculpt Pretentious as that sounds it's all about subtractive EQ'ing for me. Taking away what you don't want so as to emphasize the sound you do want. Hence sculpting rather than twiddling.
  17. I'm probably in a different situation most folks in that I don't play live in a band but record at home. Most of the time I record direct into a computer and shape the tone afterwards; but I do occasionally mic up my practice amp and record that way too. ...but I definitely don't have a single bass tone that I aim for. I sculpt the tone to fit whatever I'm working on.
  18. [quote name='Lord Sausage' timestamp='1393788308' post='2384389'] Not gonna enter again this month. No disrespect i just can't get into these 'Still' pictures that are being used. Just doesn't do anything for me. But best of luck to everyone. I will listen and vote at the end! [/quote] That's interesting... we generally get feedback that people prefer landscape photos because they allow for lots of different interpretations, rather than being too 'literal'. But it's something to bear in mind in future
  19. [quote name='AL-the-Bassman' timestamp='1393709245' post='2383688']I shall be brushing up on the fridgian and meloncholic minor scales[/quote] Whilst I shall be Googling those terms and reminding myself to make more effort learning theory
  20. [quote name='Dad3353' timestamp='1393708226' post='2383675']Think 'Andalusia', maybe..?[/quote] Yeah, you got it. I think a literal photo of Paco de Lucia may have been a little, err, constraining for those of us not versed in flamenco guitar. Which I'm assuming is most of us
  21. [color=#b22222][size=5][b]March's challenge is now on![/b][/size][/color] [url="http://basschat.co.uk/topic/231095-march-composition-challenge-get-recording/"][size=5]GO HERE >>>[/size][/url] Deadline for entries is Monday 24th.
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