-
Posts
20,283 -
Joined
-
Last visited
-
Days Won
11
Content Type
Profiles
Forums
Events
Shop
Articles
Everything posted by BigRedX
-
How can I stay focused for entire set? Any tips please?
BigRedX replied to Graffspree's topic in Gigs
Does anyone other than people in the band notice? While playing perfectly is an admirable goal, you (and the rest of the band) need to acknowledge that most of us will mistakes. It's how they get dealt with that sorts the good bands out from the average ones. Most of the time unless the mistake is so awful that it brings the whole song to a grinding halt less than 60 seconds after it has started no one in the audience will even know it has happened. So what you need to do is to be able to pickup cleanly as soon as possible after making the mistake and do nothing to make anyone think that anything has gone wrong. Same with the rest of the band. They need to carry on playing as normal. Not look round at the person who has made the mistake. If you all play through it like it didn't happen then there is even less chance that anyone in the audience will have noticed. If you and the band can behave like that it will take the pressure off which is probably a contributing factor to making the mistakes. And if to eradicate them complete you just need to practice. The old adage goes that you don't practice until you can play something right. You practice until you can't play it wrong. IME this only comes with time. So relax. Play though your (and anyone else in the bands) mistakes and eventually you'll stop making them. -
I don't have a "feed" I simply view the forum in it's default form. I don't see how any other method would be any more useful to me. The biggest problem for me is threads that I have posted in by mistake or those that have descended into fish jokes will have a star next to them making me think that since I have posted in this thread previously it will have new content that I will be interested in, when this is most definitely not the case. I suppose for me a semi-workable alternative to being able to hide threads, I am not/no longer interested in would be to have my contribution(s) removed so it no longer looks like I posted in it. To that end @Woodinblack would it be possible to delete my single contribution to the "Daily Annoyances" thread? Thanks!
-
Non existent stage lighting making it impossible to see guitar neck
BigRedX replied to Stokey's topic in General Discussion
Luminlay. I have used stick on dots in the past, but IME they always wear off at the most inconvenient moment. -
Yes, but it's always visible and it's nearly always at the top of the page and has to scrolled past to get the threads that I am interested in. Because I am mildly dyslexic there a few members on here whose posts make my brain hurt trying to read them, and because of this I can hide their contributions. Why shouldn't a whole thread be any different. Once I've hidden it, it will be gone for me forever, and I won't be complaining about it ever again. And equally I ask why is it so important that I don't have the ability to be able to hide it?
-
And @Frank Blank Regarding DOI (and other off-topic threads) counting towards reputation, it hadn't really occurred to me until very recently that this was the case, and personally it doesn't really matter one way or another. I only really use the reactions to see if people are actually interested in what I post and TBH I would find it more useful to be able to get a notification when one of my posts gets quoted (as I do on another forum) than just a reaction. @ped However it would be good if there was some consistency to post counts reputation points etc. I don't have a problem with them all being site-wide, but if some are restricted from certain threads or sub-fora shouldn't everything be like that? OoI do the various "hidden" threads and fora that are only visible to contributing members count towards post numbers and reputation? BTW I have posted this here and not in the DOI simply so I don't have a contributing star next to the thread which will make me even more likely to look at it again.
-
I suppose it was a little bit over the top, bit I simply don't "get" the DOI thread. Every so often I dip in to seem what is happening, but to me as an outsider it just comes across as a clique with it's own set of in-jokes, and seemingly no connection between the various posts. I wouldn't even begin to know how to make a contribution. I suppose what I really want is the ability to hide the thread from me permanently. I would have said the ability to hide all of "Off Topic" is what is needed but very occasionally there are threads in there that I am able and want to, make a contribution to.
-
I've been totally ampless in one band and partially ampless (I have an FRFR for rehearsals and occasionally on-stage monitoring) in the other for 5 years now. I made money when I sold my traditional amplification and replaced it with a Helix and RCF745. Given how I'm now using the FRFR I could have bought a lesser (and cheaper) model and come away with even more profit. I don't miss my traditional rig. It looked good, but it was big and heavy and took up lots of room on stage and in the band van. On small stages I would have to turn down so much so as not to upset the FoH sound that it was all but inaudible and on big stages it really only worked as a personal monitor when I was stood directly in front of it. The rest of the time I was reliant on the PA monitors to be able to hear myself, so for me it made total sense to ditch the conventional rig as most of the time it was of no audible benefit to either me, the band or the audience. The sorts of gigs my bands play there is nearly always a good in-house PA in the venue. Since ditching the conventional rig I have done two gigs where I need to use the FRFR to provide bass for the whole venue, and IMO it coped far better - the improved dispersion of the FRFR meant that I only needed to be slightly louder on stage then I would normally choose, instead of being so loud that I could barely hear the rest of the band as had happened before. Also loosing the conventional bass rig means that the bands' transport needs have been reduced. Instead of a fully loaded van one band now gets everyone and all our gear including the drum kit and the merch into two average-sized cars, while the other band (which has no drummer) gets the whole band plus our roadie/merch seller into a single estate car. I can see bassists that play in bands with their own (mostly vocal only) PA not wanting to go this route. Personally from my experience playing in a band that owned its own PA, it was IMO an expensive hassle and I won't ever go back to doing those sorts of gigs.
-
You'll get greater variations in sound with two different cabs then you will with a single cab or multiple identical cabs.
-
Whoever is assembling the PJB units obviously has a suitable tool. I would contact PJB ask them where you can get one from.
-
Sticky Knob Syndrome (Fender Rumble cream knobs)
BigRedX replied to Jean-Luc Pickguard's topic in Repairs and Technical
This has come up a couple of times with regards to control knobs and there is a good chance that the problem is similar to the one the beset Hercules stands, in that there was a problem with the material used. If this is the case, cleaning with something like acetone will only be a temporary fix, and once the sticky layer has been removed/dissolved the newly exposed material will start to break down in the same way. If its a rubbery coating causing the problem eventually it will all be dissolved away and hopefully whatever is beneath won't exhibit similar problems. However in doing so you'll have lost the advantage of having a grippy coating on the knobs. My opinion is that this is defect that needs to be addressed by the manufacturer by replacing the knobs FoC with ones that don't go sticky. -
The problem with mixing cabs is that the decisions and how good they sound are made standing a couple of feet away, with no regard for what the combination sounds like elsewhere in the venue. Fine if your rig is simply a personal monitor, but potentially not so good for your audience.
-
I have an RCF745. These days it's used mainly for rehearsals and the occasional gig where the foldback is strictly for vocals only - everywhere else the supplied foldback is more than adequate for mine and the rest of the bands needs. On the two occasions I have needed it to supply bass guitar for the whole venue it coped much better than my previous very big, heavy and expensive conventional rig. Also because of the much better dispersion characteristics I only had to be slightly louder than I would use for on-stage monitoring, instead of so loud I could barely hear the rest of the band.
-
Jens Ritter
-
I'm partially left handed in that I do some things left handed and some things right handed. Learnt to write right handed and while that might be due to when I learnt at school (in the early 60s) I can distinctly remember that I had classmates who wrote left handed although the contortions that they put themselves through in order not to smudge what they had written did make me think that made learning to write right handed might overall be an easier option. Out of Interest for languages that are written right to left is there a larger proportion of left-handed people in their populations? When I first picked up a guitar my natural inclination was to pick it up "left handed". However it was obvious that this was the wrong way round. When I did start to learn to play, it was finger-style "folk guitar" which meant that I needed to be equally proficient with both hands, and since the guitar I learnt on was designed and strung for right-handed playing, I learned that way. In retrospect I'm glad I did, because it has opened up a far larger range of guitars and basses to me than if I could only play left handed. There is at least one luthier who won't make left-handed instruments because his right-handedness makes it impossible to feel for the fine tuning needed to complete a left-handed custom instrument to the standard he wants for something with his name on.
-
I wonder how long it would take before someone mentioned him.
-
Got to say the whole thing baffles me to. None of the "examples" on here have made it any clearer IMO. I never transcribe a score because the only music I play is my own. And when I'm composing I just pick notes that sound good to me. And note choice is as much dependant upon the sound of the instrument playing those notes as it is on the actual note itself.
-
Not any more. My first band's debut album (initially released on cassette back in 1980) was recorded on a Tandberg reel-to-reel that the percussionist's (we didn't have a drummer) mum borrowed from the school where she was a teacher. The last recording I made using compact cassettes was "Love Junkie" by SugarBox which was released on CD in 1997. The vocals, guitars and bass were recorded on compact cassette using a Tascam 238 8-track recorder and the drums and synths plus some additional backing vocals (via an Akai sampler) were were run "live" using a sync track. I think we were running 16 live and 6 tape channels at mix down. The final mix isn't quite what we wanted, but we'd run the cassette so many times doing the tracking and mixing that we wore it out, and what was released was the last decent mix we got before the tape would no longer play properly no matter how many times we cleaned the transport mechanism and wound the tape.
-
Build my presets and snapshot variations using the HX Edit application on my computer and then tweak them when I get in the rehearsal room. That's another advantage of the top of the range model, the display and device user interface is almost as user friendly as the edition app.
-
I don't know why you need to "open" the image. It should be right there in the post. Here it is again on the Basschat server:
-
The possible slight loss of top end from my passive EMO DI boxes is completely and utterly outweighed by the fact that they have for the past 30+ years been totally reliable and have worked in many situations where for one reason or another the DI box supplied for my use by the PA did not.
-
If you're on Facebook you'll know who is responsible for these. If not can you guess which now well-respected luthier made/modified them?
-
Can we make the Den Of Iniquity disappear permanently for everyone?
-
Essentially yes. It won't do everything I need, but then I have very fairly heavy-duty effects processing and MIDI control demands, and I use the large display and LED "scribble strips" as an electronic set list. I bought the Helix Floor on the assumption that if I bought one of the lesser models I'd eventually need something that only the most fully featured version had and I was right. Also in real terms it offers way more processing power and programming flexibility than any other multi-effects unit I have owned. Have a look at this comparison page as see if you think it will meet your requirements.
-
For some gigs I still use an FRFR cab which I run from the XLR output of the Helix. I also have the Helix set up so that the volume control only affects the XLR output. That way I can control my on-stage volume when I'm using the FRFR without affecting the FoH feed. It is relatively easy to change the volume control assignment but by always using a DI box it means that I don't have to, and also I don't inadvertently send full volume bass signal the the FRFR when I am using it.
-
Technical rehearsals. Including some in decent sized room with the sort of PA you'll be using at a gig.