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Russ

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Everything posted by Russ

  1. [quote name='Lorne' post='588902' date='Sep 3 2009, 04:51 PM']That would be because Bernards and Chic parted ways in 1983 The Ironbird was designed in 1983 The Warlock 1981 The Bich,ok,1977 The Beast after Bernards death in 1996,the beast came out in 1999[/quote] Smartarse. Just making the point that Bernard Edwards' BC Riches weren't the extreme-shaped "metal" models. He played an Eagle, didn't he?
  2. [quote name='Doddy' post='588739' date='Sep 3 2009, 02:36 PM']If you are playing metal on it then yes,it's a metal bass. But, if you play country on one,it's a country bass. A Bass is not limited to any one style,it's the person who plays it that makes the difference. Bernard Edwards played a B.C. Rich.[/quote] He did, but he didn't play an Ironbird/Warlock/Beast/Bich, etc. They might have a versatile sound, but aesthetically, these more extreme BC Riches only belong in a metal band (and even then, I think they look cheesy). A Mockingbird or Eagle would visually fit most bands, though. Also, the cheaper BC Riches are not particularly good instruments. The US-made ones are great, but the import line are very subpar.
  3. It's not hard to spec up a new Alembic into five-figure territory. The cost for some of the options is insane. I have to keep reminding myself that five figures is pretty much the starting number for a good quality classical instrument, but when other luthiers are making bass guitars that are 95% as good as Alembics at maybe 25% of the price, I wonder how they get away with it. Stunning bass though. I do amuse myself occasionally by looking through the monthly specials on their website. There's some seriously stunning looking instruments on there.
  4. Russ

    Iceni

    Whatever happened to the original line of Iceni basses? I remember one being reviewed in Bassist magazine - they had graphite necks, a weird 3+1 headstock and a "unique" neck-body joint... the next thing I heard, he'd moved on to the Zoot basses, with nary a bit of graphite in sight.
  5. [quote name='XxBassMastaXx' post='587939' date='Sep 2 2009, 07:42 PM'][url="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E-ImKQ53C-I"]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=E-ImKQ53C-I[/url][/quote] Ah, from the old Flea bass instructional video... the bits with him being interviewed by a completely wasted River Phoenix are priceless.
  6. [quote name='XxBassMastaXx' post='587881' date='Sep 2 2009, 07:06 PM']thats the thing about stingrays. They all have great deep full tone that i love![/quote] Stingrays do sound great. Just don't think you're going to get the recorded RHCP bass sound with one. I remember when BSSM came out, there were lots of very annoyed bass players who went out and bought Stingrays after hearing it, and were disappointed that they couldn't get anywhere close to the tone on the album...
  7. [quote name='Linus27' post='587763' date='Sep 2 2009, 05:00 PM']Thanks, I am quite surprised by that list, especially the Spector, Wal and Alembic. I wonder why he never used the Spector live.[/quote] He used to, back in the day, before he started using Stingrays. Check out the videos for Taste The Pain, Nobody Weird Like Me, etc (should be on YouTube), and you'll see him with the Spector. He used a strange multi-coloured thing in the Higher Ground video, not sure what that was. Still want a pair of those teddy bear trousers though.
  8. [quote name='cetera' post='587670' date='Sep 2 2009, 04:48 PM']Corrected for you [/quote] *blush* As a fellow Spector owner, I am ashamed!
  9. [quote name='Linus27' post='587654' date='Sep 2 2009, 04:41 PM']Out of interest, what did Flea usually record with?[/quote] Different basses on different albums... this isn't comprehensive, but to summarise, the early albums, up to Mother's Milk were mostly a Spector NS4, BSSM was mostly a Wal (with a 5-string Stingray on two tracks), One Hot Minute was mostly an Alembic Epic (apart from Aeroplane, which was obviously a Stingray), Californication & By The Way were pretty much all the Flea Bass, and Stadium Arcadium was the Flea Bass and a '62 Jazz with flats.
  10. [quote name='XxBassMastaXx' post='587625' date='Sep 2 2009, 04:20 PM']Mine is the Music man stingray. Mainly cos flea uses it and it looks the best![/quote] Just as a matter of interest, in your avatar, Flea is using his Modulus Flea Bass (now known as the Funk Unlimited)... he hasn't used Stingrays for years, and rarely ever recorded with one.
  11. Heard a few of the tunes off his new one, Of Fungi And Foe. Interesting instrumentation - Les on bass and vocals, a cellist, and a percussionist (lots of tabla, etc on there). Lots of Les's usual obsession with American redneck/blue-collar culture. Interesting. Not up to Primus standard though.
  12. Looks like a knock-off of those cheap Tanglewoods (same body shape, headstock, etc). So, what we have here is a cheap knock-off of an already-cheap bass. I'd say avoid. You can pay a bit more and get a Squier VM Jazz which is a far superior instrument.
  13. TFF are amazing songwriters. Their stuff has stood the test of time very well, despite the rather cheesy 80's-style production and tacky clothes/haircuts/Roland Orzabal's weird dancing. A lot of it was also surprisingly dark. So much good music was coming out of the UK back then. That's the big difference between pop today and pop back then - today's pop stars are products of producers and songwriters. Pop stars back then, more often than not, were also the songwriters and producers. Even the bands who got classed as "boy bands" back then (Duran Duran, etc) could sing, play instruments, and wrote their own stuff.
  14. Hope Chi pulls out of it soon. Shared a couple of pints with him and Abe at the pub over the road from The Garage (where they were playing) a good few years back, lovely guys. Although, it has to be said, Deftones are great on record, but Chino just can't pull it off live. Seen them several times, and Chino just can't sing in key.
  15. Wish it was a Primus show - I find Les' solo stuff a bit impenetrable. Still, I'll be back in Blighty by then, so I'll probably go anyway.
  16. [quote name='thodrik' post='582071' date='Aug 27 2009, 12:40 AM']Not bass related but I would invent a silent vacuum cleaner first. Then I would take the previously mentioned 'talent boost' pedal and see if I could modify it for football purposes in order to be used on the Scottish football team.[/quote] I've seen houses over here with "central vacuum" - basically, you've got sockets in the walls (like plug sockets), except you plug a hoover hose into them, then you can hoover silently, since the actual vacuum machine is hidden away in the basement or garage. Clever, but, as with most things over here, conspicuous consumption at its worst. Anyway, for me, I want a special glove with eBows in the fingertips.
  17. I think I mentioned this on another endorsement thread a while back, but, about 6 years back, when I was in my old band, I managed to score a Warwick endorsement. The band was doing pretty well at the time, we'd just come off doing a big festival, had the album coming out, and so on. We sent our press kit to M.A.D. (who were distributing Warwick at the time), they liked it, and offered me a bass at 50% off trade price. I ordered a Streamer Jazzman 5, played it for a couple of gigs, but couldn't really get on with it (yep, it was the horrible big fat neck). Ended up telling them "thanks, but no thanks", and sold the bass on eBay for double what I paid for it. Back then was quite a good time to approach Warwick if you lived in the UK - they'd lost a lot of their most visible UK artists at that point. Stuart Zender had left Jamiroquai and left the spotlight, One Minute Silence (Glen Diani was a Warwick endorser) had split up, Jack Bruce was being seen out with his old Gibson... they needed endorsees. The two guitarists in the band were also offered an endorsement deal with ESP, but they went along to the distributor's warehouse, and couldn't find anything they liked enough to promote, so they ended up doing the thanks-but-no-thanks thing too.
  18. [quote name='EBS_freak' post='573952' date='Aug 19 2009, 11:57 AM']Another on eBay - Russ' take on a Rumour (in that it's slightly differently shaped and has the modified headstock to allow for the dual hipshots)...[/quote] I'm gutted that I don't have a spare £1400 to get it again. I do miss my old Rumour! I think someone here should buy it, so at least then I'll know it's gone to a good home.
  19. My old Bass 400+ could be adjusted for different mains voltages by simply swapping out a fuse. Not sure how their newer amps work, but it might just be a case of getting hold of some new fuses and a plug adapter - a couple of quid, if that. I'll second asking Mesa though.
  20. In my experience, Celinders "feel" nicer, but Sadowskys sound better. I love the necks on Celinders - they have that awesome broken-in feel. Joe - I am so jealous of that M5-24.
  21. [quote name='JimBobTTD' post='560503' date='Aug 4 2009, 05:40 PM']Would it be cheaper for you to buy a Warwick at retail price, have it sent over privately and pay all import fees than buy one locally? I'd be well interested to see if it really is the same the other way, although the European brands do not have such a huge market share as their American counterparts. And exchange rates have been all over the place this last year. As for amps and the like, there is the different voltages, so I can accept a different price. But sometimes I feel that manufacturers subsidise their US markets by skanking the rest of the world![/quote] For the amps I mentioned (Marshall and Markbass), the voltage thing is trivial - on most Marshalls, it's as simple as changing a fuse, and, on Markbass gear, all it takes is opening it up and switching over a jumper (I guess they did this to make life easier for international touring bands). As for Warwick and so on (oh, how I want to punch Americans who pronounce it "war-wick" instead of the correct "warrick"), the exchange rate with the Euro is not in their favour, but the likes of Guitar Center have volume purchasing power on their side. I doubt it's cheaper to go to Europe and buy one, but only just.
  22. It works the other way around too - in Guitar Center, anything imported from Europe (Warwicks, Marshall amps, Markbass amps, etc) cost a f**king fortune, way more than the US-made stuff. I guess we've got to remember that, for European stuff, we've got it pretty good.
  23. There's only two basses I regret selling - firstly, there was my "pseudo-Sei" - this was made by Chris McIntyre back when he worked at The Gallery, from a neck-through body blank from Brandoni. It ended up with a totally reshaped body and neck (my design), a flat transparent black finish, a Bartolini MME pickup and Schack circuit and a Kahler trem. I loved that bass. It felt great and had a very unique sound. It also got me through some very low periods in my life, but I ended up having to sell it to get me through a particularly low period. I wish I could track it down, if it's still out there somewhere. The other one was my custom GB - the tone didn't quite work for me, but I miss it because it was no normal GB - it had a custom body shape (based on the design of the pseudo-Sei), a redesigned headstock (to accommodate two Hipshots) and various other tweaks to the typical Rumour design. I miss it, but apparently Bernie still has the design we came up with, so making another one sometime in the future isn't out of the question. If anyone sees either of these basses for sale, please let me know! The GB: The "pseudo-Sei":
  24. Limp Bizkit... great musicians, awful band. All the instrumentalists are fantastic, but it's ruined with stupid, juvenile vocals and imagery. Props to Sam though, very good player.
  25. [quote name='Captain Bassman' post='548713' date='Jul 23 2009, 10:22 AM']Yep, I went to quite a few of their gigs in the Croydon area. F***king awesome! In fact, I still have a copy of their "7 Song Demo" on cassette tape in the car. It still gets played regularly! Dave Colquhoun was their guitarist. He also worked at RB and has also played in Wakeman's New English Rock Ensemble with Lee. I think Dave won the Guitarist of the Year competition many moons ago too. Very talented guys - glad to see they've managed to get carreers in the biz. For a while back in the early 90's I played bass in a band called Skittle Alley - it was kind of the Rockbottom 'house band'. Lee kindly got me the gig and was the only one in the shop, along with Dave C, who wasn't involved. Luckily for me it wasn't his kind of thing![/quote] Last time I saw Dave (ran into him in Bromley a couple of years back), he was playing guitar in the We Will Rock You house band. He's also married to Jay Aston, formerly of Buck's Fizz! Yep, saw Moondigger at the Cartoon loads of times. I've still got several of their demos, as well as their 423 album - still gets the occasional play, but I actually think the tunes on the old tapes were better! There was a great tune called "Dreams" that had loads of different parts (including a slap solo), and then there was that period where they had a lead singer (some bloke called Huck) - with him, they did a tune called "Family Song" that had an awesome picked bass part that was part of my warm-up routine for many years!
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