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Everything posted by NancyJohnson
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I think it's more about keeping it traditional...it wasn't a direct, 'Oh you need to get a Fender,' it was more like, 'Have you got a Precision?' I've got my old Aria P-bass, but have an on/off hankering for a Hoppus and now just seems an opportune moment to investigate further! [Edit] Thanks for the kind words about my gear too Warren; I just figure a £5K bass is a bit overkill too!
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Any owners on here? I have some gigs upcoming and I've been asked to play a Fender (shudder), so I'd like an honest opinion of the Hoppus bass. I'd prefer a black one, but at a push pink. I really don't want to play a Precision or Jazz...this just seems like a happy medium.
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Do you think they were miming in that clip?
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500,000 irreplaceable master recordings destroyed
NancyJohnson replied to skankdelvar's topic in General Discussion
Reports now of $100m lawsuit being filed against Universal. Hey, on the upside at least nobody died, but on the downside the estates of a lot of dead musicians are now suing. -
500,000 irreplaceable master recordings destroyed
NancyJohnson replied to skankdelvar's topic in General Discussion
Could and might. I hear these fear-mongering words too often when there's some doubt in a possible future outcome. We could go to war. We might pay more for oranges post-Brexit. It's all supposition. This was the bit that alarmed me: The Prominent entertainment lawyer Howard King told the LA Times last week: “We have many very concerned clients. This has a potentially huge impact on their future, coupled with the rather disturbing fact that no one ever told them that their intellectual property may have been destroyed. There is a significant amount of discussion going on, and there will be formal action taken”. All I see from this comment is lawyers sniffing around Universal for a payday like vultures circling over the rotting corpse of a long dead antelope; this all happened more than ten years ago and nobody has leaked any information about this until now(ish)? If an artist signs to a label, surely(!) they get an advance and if they're lucky they may make money off the back of record sales. In the broadest sense, the label will put you up in a studio at their expense and whatever you record effectively becomes the label's property, master tapes and all. Intellectual property is by definition intangible; tapes are tangible, the content thereon isn't. If it were me, I doubt I'd be getting my panties in a twist about some old masters being reduced to ash; I'd doubt any of the artistes actually touch the tape once they disembark the studio and the contents of the tape go off for mastering. I'd wager most of the content was digitised many moons ago and most of the artistes quoted in the LA Times article are long dead anyhoo. It's not like the loss of the originals is like a total loss, the music is still out there and really, would we mourn the fact that there wouldn't be any more Chuck Berry collections? -
Hi Ade. Aah, the John Lydon avatar. Concerning the Thunderbirds, it was a case of when the mortgage got cleared the floodgates opened; I think I was in double figures at one point and (somewhat disturbingly) there were one or two instances when I couldn't actually remember what I had. On the subject of bridges, I did have Hipshots fitted to all of the them until the Babicz ones came out (afterwhich I swapped out all the Hipshots for Babiczs). As I tend to play close to the bridge, the Babicz ones just felt more comfortable when palm muting and aesthetically they looked more in keeping with the old three pointers...the Hipshot was just a big old lump of metal, it didn't need to be as big as it was, but adjustment-wise there wasn't really anything in it to be honest, they both worked very well.
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500,000 irreplaceable master recordings destroyed
NancyJohnson replied to skankdelvar's topic in General Discussion
I went through a massive XTC phase a couple of years back and it amazes me to this day that, singles aside, I didn't connect with them first time around. I was drawn to them more recently because of the recent reissues that were overseen by Steven Wilson and Andy Partridge (which leads nicely onto the masters...). I'd read an article detailing Wilson's work and he pretty much said that the label's attitude towards the masters was ambivalence...they'd deteriorated to such an extent that they were unusable, so Wilson went back to digital multitracks; at this juncture we really need to get past this nonsense about future mastering technology (sorry Skank) being able to pull more content from tapes that would be 40+ years old or getting melancholic about these artefacts simply being lost. I'm not wholly aware of the format the original audio would have been captured in back in the day, but listening back to the box-set of XTCs 1979 album Drums and Wires does make you question why there is any need to retain the original masters at all. Sadly, well with XTC at least - and this applies to other bands too - there's also the case that mastertapes are also lost by other means than fire or flood; they're just lost. Reels of tapes in unmarked boxes in dusty record company basements. -
500,000 irreplaceable master recordings destroyed
NancyJohnson replied to skankdelvar's topic in General Discussion
Fire or flood? There was allegedly a catastrophic loss this side of the pond about 20 years ago when the Thames arrived unannounced at the Virgin Vault. This wasn't limited to Virgin artistes, but nobody is getting all tearful about the loss of original recordings from Japan or XTC. Personally, I don't really feel any loss unless there was content languishing there that didn't see release, yes harsh, eh? You would like to think that everything had been digitised years beforehand, so it's not like total loss. -
JMB has the potential to be huge, but as Jack said, the main problem is that it's free, so any asshat can post there. Lutz/recording aside, I've been away from band stuff for about 18 months now, so posted up about three weeks ago. At least got some replies, but they're all from numbskulls. Might have another peruse now...
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I never got on with the three-pointer at all and I went through a lot of Thunderbirds, a couple of which underwent bridge changes within a few minutes of them getting home. Bridges aside, I'm hoping that next year will finally see a short run reissue of the 20/20 bass and a proper Les Paul Junior DC guitar.
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The Lambourne place was part-owned by our guitarist...from memory it was called Sounds Good? The exterior resembled something off Dad's Army, right at the back of this old trading estate. I have video somewhere.
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Hmmmm....Shell Pink Jazz, rosewood neck and headstock...?
NancyJohnson replied to lou24d53's topic in Bass Guitars
It looks nicer than the Flea...I'd like to see a readable logo on the blumming headstock though. -
I was on holiday in Minorca a few years back and this guy walked past me and said, 'You look familiar, I think I know you.' We had a beer that evening and tried to work out from where. We didn't live in the same area but after a few minutes, we both admitted to playing bass; turns out we both used to frequent the same rehearsal place in Lambourne, near Swindon and he recognised me from load in/out periods.
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Name that Bassist from Their Sound
NancyJohnson replied to Stub Mandrel's topic in General Discussion
I'd completely forgotten about this Max Webster ('Flex Lobster') track. I saw them supporting Rush at Hammersmith, they were promoting A Million Vacations. Good band. -
Compressor yes or no. If yes, which one?
NancyJohnson replied to Delamitri79's topic in General Discussion
I had an EH Black Finger. Everybody telling me how it would revolutionize my tone. Couldn't tell the difference to be honest. -
Name that Bassist from Their Sound
NancyJohnson replied to Stub Mandrel's topic in General Discussion
I'd concur Mick Karn, forget Japan here for a minute, but you listen to Polytown, JBK or even the stuff he contributed to Gary Numan's Dance album, he's instantly recognisable. I often wonder to myself what Hesitation Marks by NIN would have sounded like with him rather than PP. Of the rest? Billy Sheehan. Ummm. I'd love to hear what Geddy Lee would be like in a non Rush/solo band. -
No sweat...I suppose with my huge gorilla hands, neck sizes, width at nut, radius and profiles etc. don't make a lot of difference for me. The only thing I'm not a fan of is necks with a high gloss finish.
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Can I ask the obvious? Why not just source a ready made one? Surely the costs are going to comparable, if not lower than going through a luthier? A genuine loaded Fender from somewhere like The Stratosphere is going to come in shipped at less than £300.00.
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The fundamental issue with active basses - well for me at least - was that the signal chain got muddied; you're piling an active signal from the bass into an amplifiers pre-stage, which is adding more tonal characteristics to the signal path, before you're actually amplifying anything. By virtue of what the active bass does means you simply don't dial up everything to 100% like you would a passive bass. I've owned two active five strings...a Streamer and a Bongo, plus a Fender Jazz with a John East fitted. When I was recording, these had a nice tone straight into the desk, but in a live/rehearsal environment you just end up tweaking and tweaking until everything was full on and it's just mush. Irrespective of whether it's bass or guitar, god knows how people run mutli-FX/boards into the front of a head and wonder why it sounds awful; I played with a guy once, nice guitar into a Fender Twin Reverb. He bought a processor of some kind, Yamaha I think, and ran an overdriven sound from that into his already overdriven amp and he went from great to horrific in one jam. He just could grasp that distortion into distortion just didn't work.. Its really a case of less is more...small tweaks; it's a fine balancing act.
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Has anyone here actually purchased a bass through DH Gate or these Ali-Baba sites? I'll admit a fascination with these You Tube Chibson/Chickenbacker unboxing videos; the pre-opening excitement through to the post-unveiling disappointment.
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Can we get past the fact that Rickenbacker copies are not actually Rickenbackers? Same goes with Gibson Thunderbirds; your Tokai or Epiphone copies are just that. Right, after getting that off my chest, I owned a 4003 for a while; like all my gear, I tend to play with everything full on, for convenience more than anything else. Taking this as my start point, it became more about tweaking the bass set up to accomodate this, so pickup adjustment, rattly low action. It did sound delicious. Incidentally, the OP alluded to using a Sansamp into a choice of amps. I'd always favour running a BDDI (or similar) into a power amp or the effects return on a head otherwise you're colouring the Sansamp tone by running it through a secondary on board pre-stage.
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I've never seen a Telecaster that I actually liked.
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They do make them in the classic guise. While I have little intention of ever owning a Stingray, I do like what MM are trying to do with finishes...the Stealth one (all black) looked beautiful and, on the subject of MM, the St Vincent in Stealth Black is specfeckingtacular.
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If it were me, the rosewood one, BUT man alive, that is a huge slab of pickguard. It actually detracts from the niceness of the sunburst.