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skankdelvar

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Everything posted by skankdelvar

  1. [quote name='JTUK' post='1004529' date='Oct 28 2010, 11:04 PM']be able to speak their language, whatever it is, IMO.[/quote] "A facility for languages is a useful talent in head-waiters." [Otto von. Bismarck]. The value of an acquired skill is dependent upon context and circumstance. That is all.
  2. I liked Brow as well but somewhat unsure about the new gas smiley. Already seen used as a substitute for and Quite a promiscuous little smiley, when you come to think of it.
  3. I've gigged quite happily on and off for 30 odd years, love the moment of going onstage - get really happy and excited. But I can't sit on my own and play something to the Missus. Completely go to pieces.
  4. [quote name='spike' post='989378' date='Oct 15 2010, 04:03 PM']Wasn't there some sort of nastiness between him and Tony Goggle back in the 70s ?[/quote] Gibbler caught Goggle slipping his (Gibbler's) wife Libby the old French Mistake after a gig in Mannheim. When Libby Gibbler died in 2002 Goggle turned up at the funeral. The two men shook hands over the grave and peace returned to the world of jazz fusion. Ask Bilbo, he was there.
  5. AVOID THE FOLLOWING: Drummers: Billy Fanta - Leeds - Nasty alopecia, cover your pint. Terry Gibbler - Slough - Wears a ski mask all night, even during interval. Brian Filbert - Okehampton - Haemophiliac who plays all his solos with his hands. Bring paper towels. Guitarists: Ben Feesty - Colchester - Endless lies about his "big patio" - he hasn't got one. Matt Edgeless - Leith - Only plays in key of A. Gets sulky and leaves if asked to transpose Phil 'The Waltzer' Orm - P'boro - Gets pissed and beats on any midgets in the audience. Total twat. Keys Manny Boyes - Bicester - A junkie with only one arm. Obvious problems. Liam Monplaisir - Hereford - Great player, but steals carpet from gigs. Loose bowels. Use a wireless.
  6. * 5w valve combo > line level out > bass amp in or effects loop return * No line out? 5w valve combo > spkr out > hughes and kettner red box (or similar) > line out to bass amp in or effects loop return (send H&K RB spkr out to speaker) But probably easier to buy a dedicated valve pre-amp / distortion. Or something like a Tech 21 Leeds / SVT
  7. [size=4] ♫ ♫ ♫[/size] [b]BARGAINS BARGAINS [/b]- HI I AM ANDERS COME SEE MY ONLINE JAZZ MUSIC STORE BILBORIFIC.COM MANY GREATS INC ALL TONY GOGGLE VINYL LPS AND 'MONTREUX INCIDENT' DVD COMPLETE W/ DISC 2 SPECIAL FEATURES + 'RESTAURANT FIGHT' + 'PROMOTER BEATING' + 'KIDNEY TRANSPLANT SCENE' - [b]BARGAINS BARGAINS [/b][size=4] ♫ ♫ ♫[/size]
  8. Hi Austin7 and welcome You should definitely come visit the UK - it's only an hour's flight or so from Ireland or the NL. Before you set off, post on here and we'll point you at some things to do, places to go etc. Enjoy the forum.
  9. [quote name='risingson' post='981645' date='Oct 8 2010, 02:48 PM']I partially agree but there IS always good music out there[/quote] Possibly. But probably not. This sort of peppy optimism just sets you up for a life of black depression and a final, eye-catching public suicide. [quote name='risingson' post='981645' date='Oct 8 2010, 02:48 PM']you just need to look a little harder for it[/quote] Why should I go looking for it. It should come to me. Politely ring my doorbell, announce itself and run through the number. I'll let it know if it's any good. Which it probably won't be. Then I'll kill it and bury it in the back garden with the Avon ladies, the Jehovahs and that little f***er with the skateboard from up the road. [quote name='risingson' post='981645' date='Oct 8 2010, 02:48 PM']and approach it with an open mind.[/quote] Not a prayer. I'm staunch in my beliefs. And they're closed for business. [quote name='risingson' post='981645' date='Oct 8 2010, 02:48 PM']There is still talent out there.[/quote] Possibly. Somewhere in the rain-lashed Shetlands. Or Guadeloupe. [quote name='chaypup' post='981653' date='Oct 8 2010, 02:51 PM']I just don't like the myth that music was great at one time and it's not now. If that was the case then there would be no point playing anymore - just listen to old records.[/quote] Works for me, older the better. Bands of today aren't fit to suck the dangleberries off Ken Dodd's arse, let alone Max Bygraves'.
  10. Say what you like about the monstrous record companies of yore but they acted as a fairly efficient sh*t filter. Now that every self-deluding spod and his mate has got garageband, the netz is an arse-flood of derivative, badly executed material with all the appeal of a nasty case of projectile leprosy. I'd be perfectly happy to see a revival of interest in 'Originals' if the output was any good. It isn't.
  11. [quote name='Bidd' post='981504' date='Oct 8 2010, 12:49 PM']does anyone know Terry Uttley[/quote] Smokie's management company could pass on a message. Contact details here: [url="http://www.now-music.com/about.htm"]http://www.now-music.com/about.htm[/url] Currently touring Oz. Imagine the fun when they get to Alice Springs.
  12. I would have attended every Level 42 gig on this tour, but I have a backlog of towels to fold. That said, I hope everyone who goes has a perfectly lovely time.
  13. Nice work, Sir. May you have a lovely gig. 42 songs?
  14. [quote name='TimR' post='976230' date='Oct 3 2010, 06:16 PM']You'll still get your hands very messy and once your friends and family have unwraped and played with their gifts I doubt they will want any more of them from you.[/quote] I preserve them in resin blocks. Make for nice paperweights, fridge magnets, key chain fobs etc. My triumph last year was a curtain pole. Each Xmas, everyone gathers round to see what I've done for them this year. And there's never a shortage, so don't give me any of your sh*t - I just don't need it, OK.
  15. Hi I'm Skank and here's my early 70's retro cover band 'The Cover Ups'. The twist is that we only play songs that would have been in a covers band set in the early 1970's. So lots of Marmalade, Melanie, Pickettywitch, Englebert Humperdinck. And we do it in character, so lots of period jokes about Mr Enoch Powell, darkies and Concord (no 'e' that's for Froggies). Our fee is payable in pre-decimalisation cash, so pounds shillings and pence only, Mr Landlord! We are: Skank Del Var: Bass, B.Vox Derek Swarm: Singer, Guitar, Castinets Vince Felcher: Guitar, keys, sax, banjo, melodeon, chimes and frog Binky Statchworth: Drums, B.Vox and van The Binkster and I met while playing in Flat Mattress, a Noel Redding Tribute outfit. The Cover-Ups are playing a residency at The Pines Daycare Centre in Bicester every Wednesday afternoon up till Xmas. They won't let you inside but you can see us through a window if you look over the wall just by the bus stop. Give us a wave, eh!
  16. [quote name='TimR' post='975694' date='Oct 3 2010, 08:19 AM']You can't polish a turd.[/quote] True. But they [i]can [/i]be moulded into a variety of interesting shapes. Ideal for friends and family with Xmas just around the corner. The thing about this thread, anyone with half a brain knows that a gig's a gig. Amazed we even need to debate it.
  17. [quote name='keeponehandloose' post='974366' date='Oct 1 2010, 05:43 PM']Whats that little box Jamerson has plugged onto his bass in his photo??[/quote] If the chronology wasn't all wrong, I'd be wondering if was a Dan Armstrong plug-in effects box. A Jamerson expert may be along shortly.
  18. [quote name='Mr. Foxen' post='974385' date='Oct 1 2010, 05:58 PM'][b]Some people play music because they want to play music, as a form of self expression, especially the self part, to rationalise something into a form, if they are lucky, it will strike a resonance in someone else, and that is the bit that makes music worthwhile tome[/b] , not because a sound or chord sequence is familiar and comforting.[/quote] Y'know the first bit of that rationale could apply just as well to someone playing in a covers band. As for familiar, comfortable sounds and sequences, well, plenty of orig bands go that route. Which is why there is sometimes greater 'sonic variety' at covers gigs, compared to the linear homogeneity of originals bands output, saddled as they are with genre preconceptions quite as stifling as those of the plump, drunken lady yelling 'Play Mustang Sall-Ouch! " I would agree with you that 'challenging' music is a good thing when compared to 'over-familiar' music. Comparison is relative and not an absolute measure of worth, but we all know that.
  19. [quote name='bassicinstinct' post='974350' date='Oct 1 2010, 05:16 PM']Self penned would be a much more honest description I think.[/quote] And the stiletto slides gently between the ribs. Nice work, Sir.
  20. Why covers? Well, why originals? * Greater financial rewards from song publishing, etc? Unlikely in most instances if you're 'only the bassplayer'. * Moral superiority? Unproven * Increased likelihood of being 'signed' - possibly, but only if you're a pretty boy to start off with * Greater social cachet? Sigh. Frankly, any collateral 'value' one assigns to simply plucking a bit of wire is entirely in one's own head. Which is why threads that ask "Why don't people like what I like and do what I do, [i]it's so much better[/i]' inevitably come to grief. The scale of the ensuing disaster is dependent on the initial degree of goodwill and humility exhibited by the OP. If this is absent or lacking, they should prepare to taste leather, reprehensible though such an outcome might be.
  21. [quote name='daz' post='972196' date='Sep 29 2010, 11:03 PM']Any clues as to why its persona non grata in some quarters.?[/quote] It is whispered that there was a sharp difference of opinion among the titans of bass who set up this site and / or its predecessor. So someone went off and launched his own bass site. Every so often, a BC-er is seized by the conviction that they'd be happier hanging with the Finnbass crew and crosses the Great Divide. Some would maintain it's a Devil's Island for naughty BC-er's. Others aver that it's a Paradise where there are twenty virgins for every poster. The truth may lie somewhere in between, but mythology has it tha[font="Courier New"][b]CLEARANCE DENIED - ACCESS TERMINATED - REFER ENQUIRIES TO SECURITY SECTION [/b][/font]
  22. [quote name='Marvin' post='970991' date='Sep 28 2010, 06:31 PM']If the other two don't look at all similar the whole thing's off. This despite not even having played a note together. [/quote] That's the ticket. Musical compatability is [i]so [/i]over-rated on BC. A nice blazer and cravat combination goes a long way in this business. Either way, have fun, mon petit choufleur.
  23. The thing about auditioning as bassist for an existing band is that all about [i]them[/i]. Joining with any expectation of realising one's personal technique-al agenda is only going to end in tears. In 99% of bands, the bass-player is a subordinate and 'self-expression' should be ruthlessly stamped out. Basically, one has to fit in on a number of levels, including image. If one auditions wearing inappropriate genre overkill it is foreseeable that one probably won't get the gig. That an auditionee demonstrably lacks the commonsense to anticipate this outcome is the [i]real [/i]indicator of trouble in store. Stupid people are a pain in the arse*. [i]That's[/i] why I wouldn't hire them, no matter how talented they might be. [size=1]Edit for: * Not a ref to the OP.[/size]
  24. [quote name='essexbasscat' post='967357' date='Sep 25 2010, 09:47 AM']Heard that they produce some really nice, creamy tones, but the volume may be on the low side...THe circuitry seems to have changed a bit over the years. Were there any real differences in the sound over the years ? were there better years than others ?[/quote] Indeed. The Bassman amp in tweed and brown/blackface config while tonally yummy is rarely adequate for modern gigging levels. A monumentally pricey original tweed open-backed 4x10 combo might be a holy grail for guitarists, but is known to fart bass out at volumes that would not trouble a nervous maiden aunt. In the early 60's there was something of a stepchange in circuitry when Fender introduced the piggy-back Brownface amps, shortly followed by the Blackfaces. Around 1968 Fender switched to the Silverface look and cleaned the circuit up a bit later still, but it was always a pretty quiet amp. Hence the eventual introduction of the Bassman 135, using an ultra-linear transformer, IIRC. Being in fortunate possession of a 1966 Blackface with an appropriate 2x12 cab, I can affirm that it exhibits a juicy roundness which, while ideal for recording, puts out a quiet 40w suitable only for 'Unplugged' gigs, unless augmented by an external PA. The 135 is an admirable gigging tool and, lacking the guitard-driven 'cachet' of the earlier examples, can be obtained at a surprisingly low price. If buying older Fenders, try to get an 'export' version with switchable mains voltage - external 110/240v step transformers are such a hassle. The Blackface mains transformer can't be rewired for UK voltage, AFAIK.
  25. [quote name='wateroftyne' post='966592' date='Sep 24 2010, 12:33 PM'][/quote] Mr Fender - pioneer of electric guitars and basses. His first name? Clarence Mr Birdseye - pioneer of frozen fish. His first name? Clarence. Too spooky.
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