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Paul S

⭐Supporting Member⭐
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Everything posted by Paul S

  1. I have to admit it is a lot of fun to play. We do it kind of rockabilly, which suits it. But, yes, we also do a lot of 80s stuff.
  2. This looks odd. The neck looks like it is from one of those Eagle basses - with the delicate bit intact by the look of it - as the inlays are the same. But what of the rest of it? https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Vintage-Electric-Bass-Guitar-read-Description/273795776321?hash=item3fbf7fff41:g:Me8AAOSwv9VcqHlK
  3. Its all about context isn't it. In my little band we play a highly respectable 2 guitar version of 'Shine On You Crazy Diamond' which I would personally listen to all day (slimmed down to a streamlined 6 mins) and which usually draws a little applause from the odd bloke at the back. We follow it with 'Walk Like An Egyptian', which I would probably switch off if it came on the radio, and that generally gets the whole pub going.
  4. Thank you Pretty reasonable, if it is an issue. I was hoping you'd say 5kg and cure the GAS at a stroke 😁
  5. What a fabulous looking bass. That neck is totally amazing Out of curiosity how much do they weigh, please?
  6. I have a Stagg, slightly modded so that it plays on a stand a la NS Design, that you could borrow as it is getting no use at the moment. Main problem is I am in SE Essex, best part of 100 miles away.
  7. Paul S

    RnRDave

    Dave answered my plea for a mustang bass. After a bit of negotiation we arrived at a mutually acceptable deal and the bass made its way from sunny Lancs to a dull Essex. Friendly guy, good comms. Beautifully packed and I couldn't be happier with the bass. Thanks Dave.
  8. I wondered who bought mine on eBay...
  9. Just taken this off my newly arrived Squier VM Mustang and replaced it with my preferred BWB, this rather flashy mirror pickguard has a few very light scuffs but otherwise in very good nick. New they are a shade under £40 so I offer this for £20 £15 posted to UK Mainland. Of course you are more than welcome to come along and pick it up, in which case I'll knock a few quid off.
  10. That was too easy. We were looking for other things.
  11. Not including the ones I have for sale I have 6, which is the least for about 8 years. 2 x 4 strings: Squier JV Precision, Squier VM Mustang (new in) 2 x 5 strings Maruszczyk Jake 5, MM Sterling 5, modded. All black/black/maple Sigma acoustic and Stag EUB.
  12. Depending upon where and when I'd like to come. Don't let that put anyone off though
  13. Just to clarify, this is on hold pending payment - just sorting out courier details.
  14. The first one is a Squire, the second a Squier. What do I win?
  15. I was reluctantly dragged into the 21st century by the rest of the Bon Jovi tribute lot and bought a tablet into which I put a copy of 'set list maker' and I now have that clamped to my mic stand. I have to grudgingly admit that it is quite useful and I use it for my other bands, too. But I always print a copy and have it nearby 'just in case'.
  16. I am putting up for sale my Yamaha BX-5. A distinctively shaped headless bass, not very often seen as the 5 string (4 string is the BX-1) and rarely seen in white – more usually black – which has aged to a beautiful Devon cream in the years since this was made – 1986 in Taiwan according to the serial no.. 34” scale, 24 fret through neck. Headless but able to use ‘normal’ single ball end strings because of the clamp at the head. Adjustment of the strings takes place at the finely engineered bridge, different in design to the Steinberger system. Very little fret wear. Passive electrics with two (hot output!) humbuckers, controls are vol/vol/tone with a push/push coil tap on the tone that does exactly what you would expect when reducing both pickups to single coil mode. Statistics. Weighs just 3.3kg (7 ¼ lbs). Very tight string spacing – nut width is 43mm, spacing at nut is 8.5mm, at the bridge 15mm. I find this very comfortable for pick playing, less so for fingerstyle. But then my fingerstyle is rather rudimentary Action is low by my usual standards – I don’t have the necessary gauges for accuracy but putting a ruler next to the neck indicates something like 3mm for the E string at the 12th fret, 2.5mm for the G. This is a quality, rare, eye catching bass that sounds fantastic and plays like a dream. Tone is a difficult thing to describe but this has an organic quality about it that the EMGs of the Hohner range lack. Not remotely honky or nasal. In a different league to the Hohner B2 series of which I have owned many and, indeed, this replaced. The extended upper bout eliminates the usual issues with playing a body-less bass in how it hangs on the strap. Of course the 2 octave neck and no head still play mind games at first but not for long. There are signs of wear – scuffs on the head, buckle rash a plenty, but no obvious signs of abuse or major dings. I would say it is in very good condition for a 33 year old. As far as I can see it is all original. Comes with the original fitted hard case which is used and marked but does the job perfectly. Which, given the shape, is probably just as well. Having said that I did find a particular rifle case fitted it almost perfectly for a gig bag. Link here. Selling because the band I used this with is about to fold and I see no point it sitting in the case unused no matter how nice it is. I bought it on eBay last year for a very good price and offer it for sale here for the same, which is £375 collected from Benfleet in SE Essex. I could deliver for fuel costs within a 50 mile radius or meet halfway. Overnight insured courier to UK Mainland would be something like £35 but I’d need to confirm that. Not looking for trades unless you have a black Mustang with a maple neck and might consider taking this PX + cash.
  17. Just need someone to invent electromagnetic gloves in place of pickups and we are sorted.
  18. Pretty much. I have a rather rudimentary pedal board in between the bass and the amp comprising wireless>tuner>compressor>'get-out-of-jail-free DI in bypass mode'.
  19. It just basically boils down to what *you* want. I started off with passive basses but found, when I bought my first active bass, that I became seduced when the door to all those different tones at my fingertips opened. Several years and probably many hundreds of £££s later I came to the conclusion that, actually, once everybody in the band has fired up the trusty old passive P bass is all I want, with a little judicious use of the tone knob. I found I became guilty of trying to overthink things until I had my epiphany. Why did I make my life complicated and expensive? Of course different situations call for different solutions - YMMV etc etc.
  20. With my Bon Jovi tribute we also model our set on either a particular live version or copy and paste bits from different live versions into some songs. The game plan being to play extended versions of the bigger hits rather than fill the set with shorter studio versions of more obscure stuff. I don't believe yer average Bon Jovi fan is particularly discerning, tbh.
  21. Its that old warehouse of Skank's again. Comes in useful.
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