Paris Paloma at Rescue Rooms in Nottingham last night.
Great show, brilliant drums varying from absolutely thunderous to very delicate.
Some very tasteful bass playing too, I couldn't see well but I think it was an SG style instrument.
Found myself at a rehearsal room last night that didn't have backline. Dug out my battered BDI21 from the bottom of my bag, plugged DI into the PA.
Worked a charm, sounded good to my ears.
I've sometimes thought about a cheap, headless, stick bass to have as backup. Small and light package to load and store on stage.
Something like this
Has anyone taken that approach?
My view is that if you want to and it makes you feel more confident (not necessarily younger looking) then go for it.
You clearly want the gig so I wish you the very best of luck.
I'd love to hear how it went.
1. The guitarist and I both moved away for work at around the same time. The band continued for a bit with a new guitarist.
2. Two of the members were nurses. One was able to arrange their shifts to commit to gigs. The other wasn't able to do that so booking any gigs became impossible.
3. I went to live in New Zealand for a year and got back to the UK but had to live in a different city. The drummer had multiple other projects on the go too.
4. The pandemic happened and when things opened up again our guitarist moved away. The singer lost interest and stopped replying to messages. I still jam with the drummer from time to time.
All reasonably friendly.
I wish all these great pedals had tuners built in. Then a player could more easily just use a single pedal for Di, drive, EQ and tuning.
I guess there must be a good reason.
Nice work, I've tried a few different options for tilting and lifting cabs over the years, and I agree, many are too shallow as they're designed for guitar amps.
Your solution looks excellent.
There's the Fishman Fission? Gives octave up, forth below and 5th above.
Very lightly dialed in might be worth a thought?
https://youtu.be/I2XKZNMR2Pc?si=Nru8jA1-zZ2A1wxi