Jump to content
Why become a member? ×

Stub Mandrel

⭐Supporting Member⭐
  • Posts

    8,017
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    85

Everything posted by Stub Mandrel

  1. I think learning a bass line and learning a song are different. It's one thing to learn a bass line off by heart, and practice improves my playing and phrasing. Last weekend I met up with the guitarist and drummer from the 'weekend warrior' event I've signed uyp for. My first time playing with people who aren't family for a quarter century! I was pleased to be able to more or less run through some of the songs we had lined up. I was more pleased that we managed to jam our way through some songs we hadn't planned on trying. To me knowing those songs well enough to improvise a bassline and anticipate the changes was more satisfying than rote learning.
  2. Look at Squier basses. I bought a Jaguar VM SS and I've hardly put it down since.
  3. I think it's a distinction between means and ends. The prime objective is to make sure band and audience has a good time. The attitude here doesn't preclude making things more complex or challenging than the original. In my first band the keyboard player and I used to do some of the lead guitar lines. Is that invalid? (Hmm, Jim lea was well known for being an ace interpreter of Jimi Hendrix songs on his bass...)
  4. Just a philosophical thought. Someone made a good distinction between tributes and cover bands. A tribute is like an impersonator or an impressionist -and those two different words imply different things. Outside 'popular music' it is the norm for the performer to put their personal stamp on a performance. In classical music, orchestras vary in their composition and conductors vary in their styles. An classical soloists have their signature styles. Bach's Tocatta and Fugue sounds very different on depending on the organist and organ. Jazz is all about improvisation developing the themes in a piece. Folk music is all about a huge canon of music that gets continually reinterpreted. Perhaps the question should be 'why do covers bands try so hard to sound like the originals'?
  5. Think about the alternatives - Sky Sport or Jive Bunny on the juke box...
  6. I can imagine the awkward conversation... "OK, we've sorted out red, orange, yellow, green, blue and violet. That's leaves you with, err... pink?"
  7. My brother's band makes a point of playing everything in their own style and audiences seem to love it.
  8. I've been learning Stay With me. I've seen at least six different bass tab and a video, all different. The Faces played it live differently from the record and there seem to be two different studio versions with long and short endings. These all have inconsistent bass lines, especially at the end. Aside from getting the introdsuction spot on, I think hat for most of teh song its the distinctive rhythm that matters. There' also Feel Like Making Love, where there a very distinctive riff with a pronounced slur, this is followed by a little pentatonic run. The first bit needs to be spot on to get the feel of the song, the second bit it seems to be largely improvised and is much quieter anyway. So my thought is to decide which bits define the feel of the song or set up changes, and get those right.
  9. Narrowly avoided a Hofner travel bass. It was only £99 and it felt rude not to but I managed bit of self control.
  10. I peed in the same trough as Noel Redding - at the same time! It was at De Barra's Folk Club so hardly an unusual incident. Good gig too 🙂
  11. Good gig! Apparently true anecdote I once heard. Two legends meet at a big event: "Hi Bonzo!" "Hiya String!" P.S. Not sure I can forgive you for dredging up deep subconscious memories with that last comment...
  12. Oh well - that wasn't very productive. The McKenzies have a black on white label "Mackenzie Professional series' and no other markings, not even a power rating. They are 12", dual cone with a voice coil perhaps 2 1/4" or 2 1/2" diameter and a seep crimson crackle finish frame. And how on earth do spiders get inside a cabinet that is to all intents and purposes airtight and fill it with web?
  13. Well Loudspeaker System Design seemed an obvious solution to the acronym!
  14. I was very impressed by my brother's Ukelele Bass. I made this monstrosity in the 80s from an old bed - can't see it inspiring anyone's GAS! The ultimate SSS bass?
  15. Anything called WinLSD deserves downloading... 🙂
  16. Think of the kudos when you do the big reveal "it's only a box to keep one in - I hadn't realised how valuable basses are becoming as long term investments, so I thought I had better keep them safe." (The risk is she tells you not to play them and put them ina lockup)
  17. I bought a pair of Superdry daps (pumps) with orange soles just for leaning into a monitor wedge! - Pretty much an act of faith in my future 🙂
  18. Hmm... the Celestions are probably well pre-1980, they are in a Phoenix cab. I was given the Mackenzies in the late 80s, but they were probably quite old then - I just copied the Phoenix cab's dimensions. I'll open them up and see if they have any useful markings.
  19. Is it possible to find parameters for old speakers anywhere? I'm thinking of porting a couple of closed cabs but don't want to take apart if there's no point doing so. What information would be needed to guesstimate the parameters - this would let me make a port and experiment with tube lengths.
  20. But then the basses would have to rotate anti-clockwise. It would all become horribly complicated.
  21. Interesting claim in response to negative feedback on a Lemmy autograph... " I WAS LEMMY KILMSTER SIDE MAN GUITARIST WHEN AUTOGRAPHS WERE ISSUED TO ME (REAL) "
  22. Could be a useful investment. He'll probably win the Turner prize. If not, it's useful firewood.
×
×
  • Create New...