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Everything posted by BigRedX
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If the cab has a front port as far away from this as possible.
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You really can't argue with the price, but in the long run it only works out as good VfM if you don't need to do anything complex with MIDI data and if you don't buy any 3rd party plug-ins.
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Thank You!
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In Isolation played at The Sal in Nottingham on Friday. Unfortunately it wasn't the greatest night - the gig clashed with New Model Army at Rock City and as a result was fairly poorly attended, and only a handful of people took advantage of the half-price entry for those coming from the NMA gig. It wasn't helped by Discord & Rhyme having to cancel at the last minute due to their singer loosing her voice. On the upside we played well and those that had come to see us were most appreciative. The new songs went down well as did out cover of "I Believe In Father Christmas" and we sold some copies of the single afterwards. Last gig of the year for me will be on Friday 22nd at The Fiddler's Elbow in London.
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Buying for beginners, looks might not be everything, but...
BigRedX replied to jd56hawk's topic in Bass Guitars
My first bass was bought pretty much on the strength that it didn't look like anything conventional. On my way back from a visit home during university term-time in 1981 and with a little surplus grant money during a hole in my pocket I dropped by the local musical instrument shop which was opposite the bus station. Hanging on the wall amongst the truly awful late 70s Fenders and a handful of Grant and Columbus copies was what I eventually discovered was an early 60s Burns Sonic Bass. Something about it spoke to me in a way that hadn't happened with the P and J basses. I spent half an hour trying it out, and had a quick go on one of the Grant copies as a comparison. It turned out that the bass came with the original Burns hard case and the shop checked in a Fender branded strap all for £60. This instrument ended up on most of my first band's recordings - although not the two that came out on vinyl and got played on John Peel's show. However it was on the demos my second band made that had CBS interested in signing us. This was my main bass until I bought a second hand Overwater Original 5-string (another unconventional looking instrument) in the early 90s for the bargain price of £350... -
If you want to make money out of your music, then playing live is the way to go. Even if your actual gig-fee isn't that great you'll be able to sell band merchandise. Unfortunately the sad truth is that T-shirts are by far the best earner for a band. Punters seem to be perfectly happy to pay £10-£15 for a band logo printed on a black T-Shirt that probably cost about £5 each to produce, but will hesitate over paying the same for your album in CD or vinyl where you may have spent several thousands of pounds on recording, mastering and actual production. Also if your not gigging your streaming and on-line sales revenue will decrease too. Case in point, while The Terrortones were out there playing almost ever weekend we would normally sell a couple of CDs or vinyl between each gig to people who most likely had run out of money to spend at the end of the gig. Were were also getting $10-$20 a month from downloads and streaming. Once the band stopped gigging our on-line sales and streaming dropped off fairly rapidly to the point were now despite our past popularity I only sell a couple of singles or albums a year and it takes over 12 months for our download and streaming revenue to pass the $10 threshold to trigger a payout.
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It is legal requirement for electrical goods being sold in the UK to come with a UK plug or adaptor. Get in touch with the seller and remind them of their obligations. Also for something that expensive I would expect it to come with the appropriate USB lead.
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Anyone else find Electronic Drums weird?
BigRedX replied to Lfalex v1.1's topic in General Discussion
There is also the problem of both the band and the audience listening with their eyes when it comes for electronic drums. I've mentioned this before but it bears repeating. I band I used to be in had over it's lifetime several different drummers as well as a couple of periods where the drums were supplied from programmed samples and loops. The line-up of the band our audience enjoyed the most was the one where the drummer had what looked like a normal drum kit, except the shells were filled with damping material and the heads fitted with bugs to allow him to trigger EXACTLY THE SAME SAMPLES that the other drummers with more obvious looking electronic kits had done. He was also by far the most metronomic of all our drummers based on his MIDI output. -
What course is this? If the marks are reliant on real-time pitch to MIDI conversion, then the whole concept is flawed since there will be a delay in the processing and the delay will vary depending on both the pitch and the "cleanliness" of the note. Playing ahead of the beat to compensate is wrong too, since you shouldn't be altering how you play in order to satisfy the laws of physics.
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If the end result is trying to turn your playing into an accurate score, it might be worth looking at methods that process the recorded audio instead of trying to do the conversion in real time.
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You need to be posting something interesting on the major Social Media platforms at least a couple of times a week in order to keep your profile up. Also you have a ready-made audience on here, so why not use it? Put links to your Bandcamp page, and/or wherever else your music is available in your signature (but keep the overall signature small or a lot of people here will hide it making it useless). Having a link to your music in each of your posts should also boost those pages visibility to search engines.
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To the OP what are you doing to promote your music?
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The laws of physics dictate that in order to accurately detect the pitch of a given note, at least one and half cycles of the waveform are required. For low E on a bass guitar this means a delay of 37ms as a minimum between plucking the string and the pitch being detected. Even for the open G string this delay is around 15ms at best. On top of this there will be an additional delay for the MIDI processing and handling by the transcription software. Since for most musicians anything over 10ms is easily detectable, this will be your problem. It's compounded by the fact that the delay is not constant but variable due to the pitch of the note being detected and the preciseness of the playing technique.
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Approximately 200 quid to spend frivolously. What are you getting?
BigRedX replied to lidl e's topic in General Discussion
It would be put towards one of the following: 1. A Behringer XR18. 2. 100 T-shirts for one of my bands. 3. Printing and pressing the debut Hurtsfall album. -
Hurtsfall release their Gothic Christmas song "December Snow" today on Bandcamp. It will be available on all the the other streaming and download platforms from Friday December 15th.
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Really weird how respected Traynor are these days. Back in the 70s my local musical instrument shop here in the UK which mostly sold home organs and had a handful of Kimbara and Grant badged electric guitars and basses on display was for some reason also a Traynor dealer. No idea why. In those surroundings it made the brand seem like cheap rubbish. My band would on occasion hire one of their 6-channel mixer amps which did nothing to dispel this impression.
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No Peter Hook or Mick Karn?
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Isn't metal supposed to sound like that?
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If I was running a commercial studio, all the work areas - control rooms and studio rooms would be faraday cages and there would be no WiFi. If you are in the studio or control room you are there to work. If you want to play on your phone go somewhere else.
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This may or may not be a fantastic bargain - XR18 on AliExpress
BigRedX replied to tauzero's topic in PA set up and use
Why is the link in German? -
Your choice of string should be entirely down to the sound you want to get. I've used round wounds, fait wounds and tape wounds and they all have their own strengths and weaknesses when it comes to sounds I could get out of them. If you are after that early 80s fretless "mwah" there really isn't any alternative to round wounds IMO. The biggest cause of fingerboard wear on a fretless is using the wrong kind of vibrato. Roll along the string rather than pushing the string up and down across the fingerboard. However I found that tales of fingerboard war from round wounds to be over-exaggerated, and if you do get wear that affects the playability you can always get the fingerboard reshot smooth. No different to getting a refret.
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The latency figures are still wrong. The very best pitch detection systems require AT LEAST one and half cycles to accurately track a note which adds a minimum of 50% onto your delay time. And there are loads of things that guitarists and bass players do (a lot of the time unconsciously) which simply don't translate when doing pitch detection. If you are going to have to play a different instrument (guitar) or play and octave higher or modify your technique, then IMO you are better off investing your time in learning how to play a bit of keyboards where you'll almost definitely be able to do the same thing with far more accuracy and repeatability. For me the whole point of using a guitar or bass to produce synth sounds is that I can can use all of my guitar or bass playing techniques and apply the expressiveness I get from these techniques to synthesised sounds. @Al Krow One of things that is important to me is the ability to assign different synth sounds to different strings which rules out the SY200 and SY300 and that currently leaves just the SY1000 which requires the now outdated 13-pin connector cable system. Plus I'd need a custom 6 way pickup to cope with the string spacing of the Eastwood Hooky being much wider than a guitar and other Bass VIs but narrower than a 6-string bass. From what I've seen the new bass version of the pickup will accommodate my needs. I'll just have to wait until Boss/Roland release a new version of the SY1000 that works directly with the GK5B pickup.
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This is from personal experience as a punter. In the bigger venues (I'm talking Rock City main stage and upwards) it might have sounded OK if you were stood by the mixing desk, but down the front the vocals were bordering on inaudible. In smaller venues like The Boat Club it was just a barrage of loud sound.
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GK system just refers to the multi-way pickup being used. Technically the new pickup should be better as it uses a far more robust 3 conductor cable with jack leads instead of the fiddly 13 Pin DIN leads of the previous versions. However the sound generation unit is IMO a step backwards because we return to pitch detection and all the issues associated with it. Hopefully there will be a new version of the SY series of "guitar synths" which will offer modelling and signal processing options, that uses this new pickup and then maybe there will be system that I can actually use.