
Bigwan
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Everything posted by Bigwan
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[quote name='DIYjapan' timestamp='1501139227' post='3342710'] Is hot glue a feasible way of fastening the carpet felt? [/quote] I wouldn't have thought that was practical for a large surface area like a cab. I'd go with a roll on or spray adhesive.
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Stereo setup for bass practice AND listening to music
Bigwan replied to lurkingbass's topic in Amps and Cabs
I'm pretty sure what you're looking for doesn't exist in the form you want. All audio interfaces are are essentially ADC and DAC in a fancy box. Focusrite seem good, but there are plenty of other makers. With this setup your "amp" controls will be in software, adjustable on screen of your PC - not physically unless you have some way of mapping the controls to an external control surface. Do you own an ipad by any chance? I've just bought one and am using BIAS amp, Jamup and Garageband and the sounds available are VERY good indeed. Add a set of active monitors and you'd be set. -
Stereo setup for bass practice AND listening to music
Bigwan replied to lurkingbass's topic in Amps and Cabs
[quote name='lurkingbass' timestamp='1500986725' post='3341488'] Since there are stereo bass combos out there, such as that Ashdown mentioned above, there has to be stereo bass amp only, to which I could connect speakers. [/quote] You've already heard from 2 of the more knowledgeable members here. The reason you can't find anything on the internet is because stereo bass amps are as rare as hens teeth - Markbass Multiamp is one, but can't imagine you'd use it for what you're describing... To add my tuppence worth I'd go with active studio monitors. I had a set of samson rubicon 6a monitors a few years back and they sounded excellent for music and bass (especially with some sort of amp modelling in the signal path) -
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The Guma and Antique are excellent kits. I'm almost finished the Pumpernickel compressor. It's slightly more awkward, but still good.
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I went the other way, amp to pedal (Vintage Ultra) mostly because my ears are shagged and I'm going in-ears to protect what hearing I have left! It's a close call, but if somebody held a gun to my head, tonally I'd say I prefer the amp by a hair. The tone control in the microtubes section is the secret sauce of the amp and you can't quite replicate its effect on the pedal. Having said that I'm EXTREMELY happy with the Vintage Ultra and since you're happy with the volume of the Ashdown I'd stick with it.
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[quote name='BigRedX' timestamp='1500544131' post='3338557'] If it's for you own amusement then I'd look at getting a better keyboard than your current Akai and its mini keys. Alternatively get a bigger or second monitor (your Mac will support 2), especially if you are considering moving to Logic, where you almost never have too much screen real-estate - I currently run 3 x 23" monitors and even then I could sometimes do with more space! For doing anything more, here is a cautionary tale... I've always been a home recordist. My first band in the late 70s was a recording project only. A band that had to borrow its bass guitar and had only one (10 Watt) amp and no drum kit, there was no way that we could gig, but we could fake the lack of conventional instruments on tape, so we stuck to experimenting with recording at home and got pretty good at it. Come the 80s and I joined a synth band and we had 4 track cassette recorder fed from an HH 12:2 mixing desk and a handful of guitar effects pedals. We made some fairly decent recordings with this set up, but I couldn't help but think that the need for over-dubbing to get all the instruments and vocals recorded with only 4 tracks was holding us back in terms of sound quality and production. Something that was seemingly confirmed when we booked a proper studio with racks of outboard gear to make our last recording. Then in 1990 two things happened. I inherited enough money for me to go out a buy pretty much all the gear I needed for a decent home studio set up. An 8-track cassette based recorder, 12:8:2 mixing desk, a decent sampler and synth and some outboard. At the same time I bought a house that had a suitable room for a dedicated home studio. After that I pretty much spent all my disposable income for the next decade on the studio. Over the decade I must have spent at least £30k on the room and equipment to go in it. By the end I had moved over to a Mac-based recording system with a MotU interface, 40 channel digital desk, huge Tannoy monitors, racks of onboard gear and synths. The quality of my recordings definitely improved, but no matter what I did and how much money I spent on new gear, they never really came close to sounding as good as those by my favourite bands. Also everything took much longer when time was no longer a constraint. Over the decade with various line-ups of my band I produced 3 demos, a 3-track self released CD EP, and was half way through recording a full-length album when the band split. Not a brilliant work-rate when you consider than my first band completed 5 albums worth of material in under 4 years. When I joined The Terrortones, recording at home was out of the question, because I had neither the Mics or the sound proofing to record acoustic drums, so we used a series of local studios to record our initial demos and then our debut single. One thing that struck me straight away was how quickly the engineer in each studio was able to get a great sounding track together, sometimes with significantly less equipment than I had at home. It was at that point I realised that the limiting factor in my studio wasn't the gear, but was me. I had reached the point where no matter how much more time I spent working on a track or what hot new piece of kit I went ought and bought, my recordings were never going to sound very much better. In retrospect, the band I was in during the 90s would have been much better served if I had saved up the money and spent it on a month in a good studio with a reasonably well-known producer overseeing it all (easily achievable within a £30k budget). At the end of it, if nothing else, we would have had a great sounding album with a name producer attached to it, instead of a handful of good sounding "demos" and the rest of the tracks in various states on unfinishedness. To the OP I'm not saying that you won't end up being a great recording engineer/producer, but the chances are you'll never be capable of achieving the results you hear on your favourite recordings. With what you currently have in your home studio you have the potential to produce results that are technically far in excess of what was possible when some of the greatest recordings in the history of rock music were made. It is my experience that a good engineer is far more important than the gear. Over the last 5 years I've sold nearly all my studio gear. I've down-sized to a Mac Pro a basic Focusrite interface and a hifi amp and speakers. I'm getting back into synth-based music so at some point I'll be buying a decent keyboard. I think I'm pretty good at writing and arranging music, but if I end up making music at home that I think is worth releasing to the public I'll be taking it to a proper studio for mixing. I hope that helps and is not too discouraging. [/quote] Not discouraging at all! Totally what I was thinking myself - don't think I've ever been in more agreement with anything you've said on here! I think in the meantime I'll carry on using garageband on Mac and ipad (bought a new 2017 ipad this week couldn't refuse a 20% off offer). The ipad in conjunction with the mac will be very handy for playing garageband osx touch instruments, as a simple control surface, maybe as a little extra screen real estate via USB. Will probably get bias amp on there too. And I can control my behringer mixer from it so a useful addition.
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Yes, but not intentionally, and possibly not to the extent Joe Hubbard is talking about! I expect he means flattened VERY close to the fingerboard, which might work just fine if the frets are well seated... The bass I had with flat frets had SHOCKINGLY bad intonation as the witness point (think that's the right term) was effectively on the edge of the fret instead of the center...
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The wibble... Sorry I've had a few...
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Maruszczyk Jake - Jazz (Precision with Jazz pickups) *** SOLD ***
Bigwan replied to mcnach's topic in Basses For Sale
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Sold. Orange Bass Terror 500 with handbag.
Bigwan replied to karlfer's topic in Amps and Cabs For Sale
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[quote name='wateroftyne' timestamp='1500326746' post='3337014'] Only one choice for my money... build your own. [url="https://public-peace.de/configurator/jake-c/"]Go nuts.[/url] [/quote] Hard to keep below budget nowadays though!
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What's your budget?
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If it were me, I'd be looking at Yamaha BB1024X or 5 string version, Fender 50's RW P or a used Dingwall Combustion (or NG2) for around that money. A used Spector Euro LX 5 could sneak on to that list too....
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Hi folks, Bought this recently as I'm moving over to in-ears... then bought a Darkglass Vintage Ultra the following week. The Darkglass fits me slightly better, so this is up for grabs. Condition is well used but not overly abused. Velcro on the bottom. Sounds the part! £150 including UK postage. [attachment=249238:vt deluxe.jpeg]
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[quote name='Dad3353' timestamp='1500105088' post='3335604'] I think I'd respectfully disagree on this point. Using myself, humbly, as an 'example', I can't play the trombone, nor Hammond B3, even less a string quartet, but I manage to compose a few modest ditties which please the ear of some (and sometimes myself, too...). One can learn a lot from learning; this includes not only the technique of playing an instrument, but also how various instruments fit together (or not..!). I play drums, and dabble (a technical term...) in guitar, bass, some keys, but mostly Vst instruments of all sorts, including singing voices. It costs little; there are many free, or quite inexpensive, packages out there waiting to be adopted. Virtuoso..? Certainly not, but most folks with a grain of 'noddle' would be able to find inspiration somewhere in there, and more than half the fun is in the experimentation, including the failures..! I'm not sure that Sibelius or Mozart were experienced players of all the instruments they wrote for, either, so I consider that at least I'm in good company, even if not (quite, yet...) up to their mark. Just my tuppence-worth; no malice intended. [/quote] What would you buy Dad?
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[quote name='bazztard' timestamp='1500097841' post='3335565'] if you can't play any other instrument then it's pointless trying to record on your own. Spend the 500 to buy people free drinks til you find some musicians to record with. seriously. You can't be a one man band if " Bass is the only instrument I can "play", and I use the term loosely" meet other musicians and collaborate PS please post pic of your puppy [/quote] Not sure I entirely agree, and I may have been doing myself a slight disservice! I can play guitar passably enough for my purposes! A band is the goal of course but I want more of a creative input than I've had previously. I should add that one of my long term projects has been gathering gear to form a silent rehearsal space for just such a band as I'm done with the whole volume wars nonsense. So I have a Behringer X18 desk and have been converting an acoustic drum kit to an e-kit over the last few weeks (must get back to that!). Here's Bella (15 week Saluki/Lurcher cross). You could literally watch her grow... Our Jack Russell cross is not amused!
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Own amusement primarily as I'm sans band at the minute. Having said that I've never been one to be satisfied with "demo quality", whatever that even is nowadays... Eventually I'd like to be releasing my own material, so that's always in the background. I know I don't have the best interface, so I've been eyeing the Audient ID4 too...
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Only a little Akai MPK Mini at present. As I say I'm not a keyboard player and I've never played piano. Bass is the only instrument I can "play", and I use the term loosely... even have my electric guitars tuned in a variation of open C to keep things simple. I agree the sounds in Garageband are excellent!
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Hi all, Not quite sure where to start here... Current setup is a Line 6 Toneport UX2 into a mid-2011 Mac Mini (2.3 i5, 16Gig RAM and SSD) running Sierra, Garageband and Pod Farm 2.5. I have EZ Drummer 2 with a few expansions, EZ Mix 2 and EZ Keys Upright. The only MIDI controller I currently have is an Akai MPK Mini. I also have an iphone 6s (work phone) and Focusrite iTrack Pocket with Garageband iOS which I love, but ultimately find frustrating as the screen is so small (and I haven't got the daintiest fingers!), there's perceptible latency when playing bass into it and you're restricted with available time signatures. I'm writing (trying to write!) downtuned, atmospheric, progy, almost industrial hard rock/metal (think a cross between mellower Rammstein and Devin Townsend Project). So I'm finding myself drawn to sample packs I see in threads here and elsewhere like Sonic Forest or Project Alpha/Bravo (most need the full version of Kontakt as discussed elsewhere here, which I don't have) Bass is the only instrument I can play with any proficiency and with 2 young kids, a busy job and a new puppy I have very little free time to learn to be proficient with another instrument at the minute (hence the Garageband touch instruments and EZ Keys, etc.)... With that in mind what would be the best way to spend my hard earned reddies for writing and recording? I'd toyed with the idea of something like a Komplete Kontrol keyboard and Komplete 11 but... well, it's a MASSIVE learning curve, and effectively a new instrument to boot (mapping chords to keys on the Kontrol looks like a cheats dream though!), but the sounds available look fantastic! Expensive though... I'd also played with the idea of Logic Pro as it looks like great value for what you get and, as if by design, it builds on my Garageband experience. My other thinking was to buy an iPad and spend more time on Garageband iOS on more usable hardware. If you were in my position and had 500 quid to spend, what would you do?
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Komplete software and hardware bundles on offer at absolute music, ends today (10th July)