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NancyJohnson

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Everything posted by NancyJohnson

  1. I had an EMG active pickup thingie in an old Precision bass, ran it on an 18v loom. Allusion was that this would (somehow) allow the circuit to boost things. So of course, we were all running these on two 9v batteries. Uncertain how, if you have a circuit that works at 100% on 9v will work outside of it's specification if you double the input voltage.
  2. Pains me to say this, but I'd consider serious/close offers. I have some ongoing building work happening at home and could really use the £££ to cover an unexpected level of contingency. Given the rarity and the price, I'm really surprised it hasn't gone yet. Had a couple of enquiries, nothing firm.
  3. With the best will in the world, think about the size of the screws that are holding the neck on - they may only be 2 or 3mm in diameter - so you're not going have have much left to get once you've Dremelled out enough metal to get a flathead screwdriver in there. You're going to need to factor in the level of torque to get the screw turning AND the risk of shearing off whatever metal is left at the top of the old screw (at which point you'll be wondering why you didn't make a pipe tool as covered above!).
  4. We have it rammed down our throats daily that diversity is supposed to be a good thing. Personally, I'm of the belief that it's a good thing to have a broad musical spread, it certainly helps when trying to convey feel and and ideas, but that's probably too eclectic in these days of swipe-left/right mentalities. Played in a punky band quite a few years back where the guitarist's only point of musical reference was an album called Foot In Mouth Disease by a Canadian band called Gob. That was it. You made reference to populist punky bands of the time (Blink/Alkaline Trio/etc) and he'd look at you like a quizzical dog when someone says walkies.
  5. Delighted to get an email yesterday advising that XTC's 'The Big Express' has undergone the Steven Wilson treatment and gets a 5.1/Atmos release in mid-September. This will be the 7th release that Steven has curated and what makes this even sweeter is that Andy Partridge has gone on record saying there were no more masters available to generate 5.1 mixes (which is alarming, given that the Apple Venus and Wasp Star albums are only about 20 years old and we're overseen by Andy Partridge, so must be on hard drives somewhere). Anyhoo. A little bit of joy.
  6. Similar principal in this video, albeit with homemade tooling.
  7. Late to this thread. Simple fix. Drill out the screws with a plug cutter as shown below. These are effectively drill bits to make your own dowels. Just drill down through the body (put some tape on the cutters to ensure you don't go too deep). And repeat. Neck should then just come away from the neck with a collar of wood around the broken screws. Chip away the wood, turn/twist out the dead screws with a pair pliers. Next redrill the actual body with a wood drill bit to make the new holes up to a standard dowel size (6/8/9mm or whatever). Glue in a new dowel with PVA glue or Gorilla stuff, cut back flush to the body once the glue is dry. Redrill for new screws. Easy really. All this work will be invisible (hidden behind a backplate and in the neck pocket.
  8. Gotta say I prefer Lol and Eric's vocals over Kevin's, but it's very much horses for courses. Couldn't imagine Eric singing Donna or Rubber Bullets, any more than I could Lol singing I'm Mandy Fly Me or I'm Not In Love.
  9. There was always this thing that Queen said the last band they ever supported was Mott The Hoople, but the book lays claim that it was 10cc somewhere up north (wherever that is).
  10. Over the last few days (laid up/knee), I've been reading Liam Newton's rather excellent biography of 10cc; 10cc: The Worst Band In The World and in keeping with the Supertramp thread, I've been immersing myself in their back catalogue while reading. I'm enjoying this immensely. My brother is ten years older than me and as a kid fed me with cassettes of his purchases, the first 10cc album was in there, still buried deep in my conscience. More than aware of the do-wop and powerpop stylings the like of Johnny Don't Do It, Donna and Rubber Bullets, I've dipped into the catalogue beyond that previously (Sheet Music, Original Soundtrack etc.) and I'm more than aware of their singles. It's a phenomenal story, from Graham Gouldman's pre-10cc career (in his mid-teens he was writing for The Hollies, The Yardbirds, Herman's Hermits and Wayne Fontana), Eric Stewart's work with The Mindbenders and setting up Strawberry Studios in Manchester (with the fledgling 10cc effectively becoming the house band and providing music for a lot of Jonathan King's UK Records projects/gimmick singles). Did I mention Neil Sedaka? My heart pines for times when music was like this; I grew up on a steady diet of Sweet, Sparks, Mott The Hoople. I honestly wish I'd paid more attention to 10cc. There's a rather splendid BBC documentary from 2015 up on You Tube - link below - that's well worth the watch if you need a primer before exploring:
  11. Don't you remember that a six-string version featured in that horrific cough, custom, cough Bongo?
  12. If you look at the scope of 'metal', it really is a case of anything goes though. You could argue the genre is littered with Fenders (Precision, Jazz and to a degree Jaguars), Thunderbirds, Spectors, anything in general anything ridiculously pointy or covered in a bloody-looking paint job; there are almost zero sunburst finishes on anything. Oddly on the circuit I play within, you hardly see any Thunderbirds or Rickenbackers, which I would have expected to see.
  13. It's 2023, haven't we really gone beyond the, 'What's good for <insert genre here>?' Anything goes for any genre. It should be pretty easy in this day and age to dial in any tone, irrespective of the shape of the instrument delivering it.
  14. Fender: "Coming in 2025! The Vintera III series! Because you suckers will happily buy the same kit again and again if we give them a new name!"
  15. The original basses all had these - they carried a Hamer logo impressed into the string block.
  16. I've owned a handful of 5-string basses (Lakland DJ5/MM Bongo) and have an oversized Lull NRT. I don't play the Lull that much despite it being a fantastic bit of kit; it just doesn't lend itself to the whole punky/indie ethic, although the extra notes off the low-B do help when there's a necessity to drop down to a low-D once in a while (rather than using a drop-D tuner). In a world of Precisions and Jazzes, I think I'm pushing things using a Spector Euro-X in the current band, but the Lull might be stepping over the line a bit. Wouldn't classify 5-strings as being pointless. They're useful in the right circumstances.
  17. Ridiculously cheap Hamer (Slammer Series) Cruisebass on eBay. £85 or best offer! This is one of the very decent Korean ones. Samick factory. I think the only off-putting thing is the headstock logo (replacement decals are available, I suppose). If nothing, this would be a superb instrument to go the upgrade route. https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/314707091928?mkcid=16&mkevt=1&mkrid=711-127632-2357-0&ssspo=BFY3yHiJTKm&sssrc=4429486&ssuid=&var=&widget_ver=artemis&media=COPY
  18. I'm very much in the reinterpretation ballpark; our set leans heavily (70%) on material that our vocalist had some success with from the 1980s through to now. Some of the bass work leaves a lot to be desired; it's either too rooty, unnecessarily busy or inconsistent. I just don't want to be measured against these or end up playing other people's lines, so from the outset it was pretty much a case of saying I'm going to play what I want.
  19. Never fail to be amazed at RD Artist basses. Of the hundreds of bands I've seen, not one bass player using one, never played one or seen one in the flesh. Don't recall any positive reviews in Beat Instrumental (or other sources at the time), but obviously Krist Novoselic used one and interest went up (along with used prices). The reissue was pretty nasty, read a few comments about poor QC.
  20. Like many, I watched the Glastonbury performance with a degree of horror. Trainwreck stuff. Bass out of tune for a lot of it, they were under-rehearsed and it was a struggle. You'd think standing in front of 16 10" speakers he'd have heard things had gone awry. TJ's choice of bass did surprise me, especially as he's been using a Rickenbacker elsewhere (uncertain whether it's his original Generation X one); I too would love it if it was a Gear 4 Music one, the similarities are evident.
  21. Marina & The Diamonds. Again.
  22. Cough. PVC2. Cough. The Rich Kids (as Matlock/New/Egan) were already formed and courting several guitarists well before Midge Ure came on board; Mick Jones of The Clash was in the early lineup. Matlock actively pursued Ure and was rebuffed several times.
  23. I use a Gator bag for my Darkglass head and associated cables. Just bought a Ritter Bern gigbag for the Thunderbirds and I have a Fender bag for the Fenderesque shaped stuff.
  24. We had a lightweight backdrop (2mx4m) with reinforced loopholes in each corner; we just had a couple of feet of parachord looped into these and we just tied/hung the backdrop with these. There was ALWAYS somewhere at the back of the stage to tie it to.
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