-
Posts
20,635 -
Joined
-
Last visited
-
Days Won
11
Content Type
Profiles
Forums
Events
Shop
Articles
Everything posted by BigRedX
-
But you can equally pick the opinions of a different luthier who says that it isn't really important. For instance Carl Thompson says that it is impossible to tell what a bass will sound like until he has finished building it. Both Jens Ritter and Bas Extravaganza have made basses out of plywood. The Ritter bass has probably had each body layer specially selected, whilst the Bas Extravaganza one was made from a couple of sheets sourced from his local DYI warehouse. Both apparently sound great. As I have said many times the problem with "tone woods" for solid electric instruments is two-fold: 1. Although it makes a difference, that difference is impossible to properly quantify because every single piece of wood is different no-one has done any serious scientific-based testing (mostly because it's near-on impossible to do. 2. Although it makes a difference, that difference is minuscule in terms of all the other factors that go to make up a solid electric instrument, and negligible once the rest of the band start playing.
-
I don't think the headstock is chipped - it's just badly photographed light reflections which should have been fixed by altering the studio lighting or at least Photoshopped out. It amazes me that these days photos like this are put out for public consumption, when they should have been spotted and fixed at the photo shoot. It says to me that the manufacturers don't care and makes me wonder what other things they haven't cared enough about in the actual construction.
-
The only thing you can say for sure is that in the case of these two bases (and only these two bases) the one with the Pau Ferro board is darker sounding (whatever that means). Nothing else. You cannot ascribe this property to just the fingerboard, as you have means of telling exactly how identical (or not) the other components of the two basses are.
-
I thought it was fairly expensive for what is essentially someone else's design. Also with my art-director's hat on, they should have removed the protective plastic from the scratch plate before taking the photos. With it on it makes the bass looks messy, and these photos are supposed to show it at its very best.
-
Run a DI output, into an instrument input?
BigRedX replied to DaleASmith's topic in Repairs and Technical
You could use a passive DI box in reverse. You'll need to have a special female-female XLR lead made up as you essentially connecting and output to an output. Then connect your cab sim to an instrument level socket of the DI box. -
I saw them in early 1980 when they were still young and fabulous...
-
You have £300 and you HAVE to buy a new bass today…..
BigRedX replied to Rayman's topic in General Discussion
A synth. -
"Parlance" and "Elder Statesman" both by In Isolation. These were the first two songs I learned for my audition for the band and the ones that made me hope that I would be chosen (and they are great songs irrespective of the bass lines). They have, for me, the right mix of busy and solidness.
-
The One You've Never Tried, But Really Want To
BigRedX replied to snorkie635's topic in General Discussion
I used to own the fretless version of that. I once took it to a practice for my Dad-Rock covers band. The fact that it was fretless was more of a hindrance than the fact it only had one string. -
I'd look for some suitable diameter pipe clamps to hold the in-line socket and screw and hot glue the whole assembly to the underside of the desk.
-
@BoomTing Don't worry, no offence taken, and besides I'm quite capable of scrolling past those posts I find unreadable. The reason I brought it up was because on another forum I frequent someone typed one of these (to me) incomprehensible posts asking for advice about about some instrument or software, and then someone else had tagged me as a person with the specific knowledge to be able help the OP with their problem. I had to point out that due to my dyslexia, and they way the post had been typed, I simply could not understand what had been asked, and if someone could re-phrase the question in a more legible manner I would do my best to supply the relevant information. It doesn't really apply to this thread because we were side-tracked into a discussion on the correct use of the apostrophe, and OP's original question was posed in a perfectly eloquent manner, however it is, IMO, always sensible if you have an important question to ask on a forum like this that you query is typed in the most comprehensible manner possible because that way you can engage with the largest number of people who can potentially help you.
-
For someone like myself who is marginally dyslexic it does matter, a lot. I have taught myself to recognise word, letter and punctuation patterns which helps me to be able to read and understand what has been written. This is fine if everything I read has been properly copy read, checked, corrected and edited. Unfortunately none of this exists on the more interesting parts of the internet (like this site and other music forums). There are several people here and on the other forums I read who probably have very interesting and important things to say but to me their posts just appear to be a collection of word-shaped letter combinations surrounded by random punctuation (if I'm lucky) and spaces. I simply don't have the time or energy to be able to decipher them (a lot of the time it would require copying their post into a text editor where I could manipulate it into something I can read and understand), and some are so bad that I have had to put the user on "ignore" because just looking at what they have typed made my brain hurt. This post has taken me about 10 minutes to compose and check and there are still likely to be mistakes in it!
-
Slap on a Thunderbird, metal on a Beatle Bass
BigRedX replied to Rayman's topic in General Discussion
-
It's never "vinyls" (and certainly not "vinyl's"). Just vinyl will do. And anyway the proper term is "records".
-
Slap on a Thunderbird, metal on a Beatle Bass
BigRedX replied to Rayman's topic in General Discussion
But can you play a Thunderbird and dance like the bassist from Freddie And The Dreamers? -
Slap on a Thunderbird, metal on a Beatle Bass
BigRedX replied to Rayman's topic in General Discussion
I play in two bands and use a 5-string Gus G3 in one and an Eastwood Hooky (copy of the Shergold Marathon 6-string bass) in the other. At a push I could use the Eastwood for both bands although a few of the bass lines that use the low B would have parts that would need to be played an octave higher than I normally do. I certainly couldn't use a P-Bass as a substitute for the Eastwood as I go all the way up to octave G on the high E and I have the B string tuned to C to allow me to play some drone parts in C and Am. -
Unfortunately The Clash are a particular bad example to use, as they got a reduced royalty rate in an attempt to keep the price of their albums down for their fans, particularly London Calling and Sandinista, where they were only getting a single album rate. If you really want to support bands financially you should go to their gigs and buy a T-shirt or two.
-
Decent Soapbar Pickups that Won’t Break the Bank?
BigRedX replied to Chienmortbb's topic in Accessories and Misc
What sort of "soap-bar". On the bass other than it's a rectangular shaped lump of plastic (occasionally wood) that is wider than a standard J-type pick up, the term is meaningless. So long as there is room the pickup manufacturer can fit any coil configuration that they want in there, and unless it is specifically stated in the specification you won't even know what it is. Probably the most important consideration is the size of the pickups they are replacing because that might narrow down the options. -
The Gus G3 5-string meets every single one of those requirements. Here are my two: Passive with humbuckers Active with single coils (with series/parallel switching)
-
Guitarists... why are they such knackers
BigRedX replied to spacecowboy's topic in General Discussion
I resisted the temptation to type that... -
I'm not sure about the "history" - as I said I've been in Nottingham longer than Rock City has (I had tickets for one of the first gigs there which was cancelled on account of the venue not being finished in time); and its history isn't a fraction of that of the 100 Club (IMO). Maybe I'm just taking it for granted?
-
We're all old. Most of us grew up with physical media, and like what we know. I'd be happy to switch completely to streaming but, as I already said a lot lot of what I want to listen to isn't yet available here in the UK either due to geographical licensing constraints or because it's old and originally released on a small indie label. Also there's no guarantee that any of the streamlining services can ever be truly profitable and as a result may close at any point and then you'll have no music to listen to.
-
Rock City and the associated DHP venues are both blessing and a curse as far as the local music scene is concerned. As an audience member Rock City was great in the 80s and early 90s when they were taking chances with less well-known bands and there was a good atmosphere at gigs. These days it seems as though live music is very much secondary to getting the students in for club nights, and even gigs feel uncomfortably full and the moment the headliners have finished the last encore you're being hustled out. Maybe it's over-familiarity, I arrived in Nottingham just before Rock City opened, but from both a performer and audience member I don't really see what so great about it compared with any similar sized venue elsewhere. I've been to some good gigs at Rock City, but there really great ones in Nottingham, IMO, have been elsewhere.
-
Only if what you want to buy is fairly mainstream. Anything released in small quantities and no longer available new can be surprisingly expensive. I had to price up my CD and vinyl collection for insurance purposes about 10 years ago and some of the CDs were worth a lot of money (and those were actual sold prices on Discogs - not what unsold CDs were being offered at).
-
Anything that you bought from iTMS will already be on Apple Music. iTunes is not just the iTMS store. The advantage is for CDs that you own and have added yourself (and vinyl if you own the means of digitising it) that haven't yet been made available for streaming.