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Everything posted by Muzz
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[quote name='Doctor J' timestamp='1320956831' post='1433823'] James Lomenzo's Yamaha is pretty nice - you could move a lot of air with that, I reckon. [/quote] Oh dearie dearie me, I need one of those. I could live without the mud bucker, but a maple board on the 2024x and two split-coils? Must, must have. I will sell the lot, and body parts, for one. The 2024 I played last year was so, so good, but the rosewood boards are a deal breaker for me.
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I've got a couple on my FrankenPs and one on my Fenderbird, and they're great. The quality is a little variable - the first P was better than the second, and the Jazz was about in between, but generally very good and nothing a quick fret dress wouldn't sort out to top quality. For the money, they're terrific. I like a satin finish to a neck, so they suit me down to the ground. Sold my US Ps on the strength of them.
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I look at it this way: I was in Amsterdam a while ago with some friends, and we were watching one of those street entertainers who do the football tricks, and every so often he'd pass the ball to one of the audience, who would try to do a trick and invariably look silly. He flicked it to my friend, who caught the ball and rolled it back to him, shrugged and said "I'm a keeper."
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[quote name='Deep Thought' timestamp='1320849469' post='1432224'] No prizes for guessing what gets my vote! [/quote] We have a winner...well, in my book, anyway...
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I've got the Big Combo in a P/J, and I love them - so much so I put a set in a Warwick Fortress, too. They're much higher output than standard, but still sound old-school. I'd suggest that for the money they're worth trying, and even if you didn't like them, you'd soon shift them on here second-hand. The J (84) is particularly good.
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One with really beautiful wood, one which sounds fantastic, one which looks fantastic, one with a great neck, one which is fretless, one which is acoustic, one which is a 12-string. That's about it, really, even for me - the next one in has to usurp one of those.
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[quote name='leftybassman392' timestamp='1320702882' post='1430405'] Every once in a while you get some cocky little tyke who wants to know why you can't play 'Through the Fire and the Flame' note for note, 'cos he's teachin' 'isself ta play i'. Last time that happened I did a bit of arithmetic with the kid, just to make sure he was aware that the average note speed throughout the song is around 14 notes a second. [/quote] I just watched that on YouTube, absolutely hilarious - couldn't get the image of the chase at the end of Benny Hill out of my head...
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Which Basschatters bass would you most like to own? (and why?)
Muzz replied to EBS_freak's topic in Bass Guitars
[quote name='Gust0o' timestamp='1320625734' post='1429214'] Clarky's black Alembic Spoiler - so I can pretend to be Jason Either of Lorne's 8-string Bichs. [/quote] Spookily, these two selections for me, too... -
I shouldn't be surprised (because I'm a bassist), but...
Muzz replied to Muzz's topic in General Discussion
[quote name='steve-bbb' timestamp='1320300244' post='1424944'] try something like "what do you want me to play in the middle 8 when you do the shouty bit?" see how that goes [/quote] I'm having that ^ ! Yep, the Vibrating G is bob-on (although the strings are t'other way up - the 'thicker' string is the bottom one in each set: I had a Washburn 8 years ago with the strings as in the photo, and I found it was harder to play that way), as is Happy Jack - not a completely earth-shattering difference in the way I'm playing the songs (and that's intentional; I don't want to change the songs, just replace some of the studio production overdubs and fill them out), but jeez, you'd have thought they'd have spotted it, at least. -
I shouldn't be surprised (because I'm a bassist), but...
Muzz replied to Muzz's topic in General Discussion
[quote name='lojo' timestamp='1320244356' post='1424252'] Id love to hear an example of what you are doing with the said bass [/quote] Have a listen to 'You And Me Against The World' here: [url="http://www.tunecore.com/widgets/show/73154"]http://www.tunecore....gets/show/73154[/url] - it's the album version: this is what I'm using the 12 for live - fills the sound out really well. If I get a live recording of it, I'll post it up. They notice new basses OK, but their criteria seem to be like my Gran's used to be - if it's a bright colour or a different shape. The issue I'm burderned with is they seem incapable of actually hearing it... and it's a 4 with TWO octaves per string, and a bit of chorus to bring out the zing - a good way away from my normal tone. As a couple of people have suggested earlier, I just get on with it and amuse myself most of the time - I was just shocked that even for them, failing to hear the difference between a passive 4-string and an active 12-string was going some... -
OK, so I take the 12-string bass down to rehearsals for the first time this week - I'd been running through a couple of songs in the set which have had a big production job done on them on the album, but which were sounding a little 'thin' (for want of a better word) live, and the 12 seemed a good idea. There was some nominal interest when I got it out of the case (they hadn't seen the bass before), and it's a bit of a standing gag that I do rotate gear quite often, but then after we'd run through the set a couple of times with me using the 12 on three songs, I said: "Sooo, the 12 on those songs - any comments? Anybody like it? Hate it?" To a man they looked bemused, and mumbled along the lines of, "err, yeah, it was OK", "Fine, I guess", and then the singer put the hat on it with the classic line: "Look, it's just a bass, mate." I could understand if it was just a different 4-string, different pickups, etc (which I'm used to them not noticing - I just get on with it to please myself), but a 12-string? It sounded huuuge. Is being a bassist like being a dog? Do we hear frequencies no-one else does? I'm taking a fricking euphonium next week. Maybe they'll spot that.
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That's what he said when asked. I believe someone else on here had the same reply about a Thunderbird pickup. As I say, it's a shame. In fact, here's his reply verbatim: "We've tried to make one up to your dimensions and sadly it doesn't sound good - so don't think this will really be feasable - sorry."
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Yep, got Thumper and 84 in my Franken-P, and my Warwick Fortress. Love em. Only disappointed Andy can't do anything for my Fenderbird.
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Where are the UK Warmoth, Mighty Mite and Best Bass Gear?
Muzz replied to discreet's topic in General Discussion
Incidentally, I've had three packages from the States recently with Hipshot gear in, all well over the threshold value for import duty, and all sailed through . Are HMCE busy with something else at the moment? -
Where are the UK Warmoth, Mighty Mite and Best Bass Gear?
Muzz replied to discreet's topic in General Discussion
I'm gonna get the neck and body for my Ultimate Bitsa (tm) from Warmoth - nothing out there to touch them IMHO, and I'm after some bling wood in the shape of birdseye maple and black korina. I've got a mate in the US who I can get the bits shipped to who will then ship them on to me - I think some Xmas wrapping paper should do the trick... Shame the Warmoth T-Bird body is such an odd shape around the neck pocket, rules a Super-Fenderbird out... My two main basses have got MM necks, and they're as good as anything I've used out of Corona. The P neck is better than the J neck fretwise, so I think there's an element of pot luck involved (but nothing a fret dress hasn't sorted out completely), but neither are anywhere near what you'd expect for the price: they're so much better. It all depends on your budget, but I'd recommend them completely. I've got a real hankering for an all-wenge J-neck on my black P, too. Mmmm..... -
^ This. It was painful. I managed over a minute, and I wish I hadn't. Chops should stay in the butchers.
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The biggest problem with homebuilding (or, as has been pointed out above, home assembling) basses, is that you can actually get what you want from a bass, without compromise, which kinda ruins the appeal of 90% of off-the-shelf stuff. Once I'd been through a lot of basses, from cheapo stuff through the midrange to the top-end luthier-built stuff (all secondhand, I might add), I was able to identify what worked for me and what didn't, and now there's very little out there which would tick all my boxes. I can, however, put together (with some luthier assistance - fortunately I have a very good, very reasonably priced luthier at my disposal) what I want pretty cheaply. I wouldn't swap my FrankenP for any US Fender P (I had a couple of these when I built the main FrankenP, and subsequently sold them), and I'm currently having a ball with my Fenderbird. I'm not sure I agree about depreciation being so bad, either: homebuilds can always be parted out and the bits either reused or sold on without much financial pain, especially if the bits have been bought second hand. If everything's bought new, then yeah, you won't see your money back, but you go and buy a new Fender (or worse, a boutique bass or a Warwick) at list price and see how much of that you get back after 12 months. I see plenty of things like Hipshot Xtenders flying around on here, and people don't lose much on them. I think far more emphasis is placed on bitsas depreciation than any other bass - would we really have a discussion about the next Fodera for sale on here along the lines of "Oh my God, he's losing £3500 in depreciation on that bass! New Foderas are SUCH a bad idea!". Having some experience of bitsas now means depreciation isn't much of an issue for me anyway when we're talking about £200-300, which is where most of my builds lie, and because I buy the bits carefully. It's a market like any other, you can spend wisely or not. I'll still buy off the shelf stuff, mainly to satisfy my curiosity, and I'll do this second-hand with one eye on the resale value. Inevitably they get moved on, but I'll learn from them. All that said, I have a decent budget available at the moment, and I'm looking for a very special bass. It might even end up being a Dingwall or a Lull. But I'll be changing the pickups from standard...
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OK, well, that's me out. Just found out Mark / Bass Direct won't be there, so that's a major shopping attraction out anyway, leaving the prospect of paying £25 for a browse round the other stands being deafened by slap, which just doesn't sound like much of a deal for me...
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Schaller 463...the most comfortable bridge for palm muting I've found.
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OK, can anyone answer this one - would I have to pay £25 to get to the trade stands? I'm in the market for a good bass, having just sold the last of my valuable basses, and it'd be handy to have a look/try of various basses in one room (if, in fact, there's anything I'd like, and to be honest there wasn't much rang my bell last year), but I have no interest in Mr Miller or any of the other performers (and Nige I'm more than familiar with (in a good way) ) so £25 to go shopping for an hour seems like a lot of money.
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Since I went back to serious playing (rehearsals every week, gigs as much as poss, etc) I've been borderline-obsessed with the weight of all my kit. I've slimmed down to the rig below, which weighs in total probably 50lbs, and I look very carefully at ways to lighten my basses, or I look for lighter ones. I've just sold my boat-anchor 78 Jazz (a sniff under 12lbs) because I simply couldn't use it for more than a half an hour, and anything over 9lbs is looked at very carefully these days - a good example is from another thread I posted here: I've replaced my tuners on the Fenderbird with Gotoh Ultralights, and they are a fantastic upgrade for any bass. I'm not suscepible to the juju that is 'heavier is better tone' or any of the related nonsense, a good bass is a good bass, it doesn't have to be heavy.
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And as an addendum to this, got home tonight and the Supertone bridge was waiting for me. Fitted it, and I was initially taken aback by the change in the bass - helps the balance that bit more, comfier on the heel of the hand, but the increase in sustain was startling. The whole bass resonates now - OK, it's not mahogany like a Gibson, but it's really, really good, and feels alive. The FrankenP's off the go-to top spot, and my plan to make a Warmoth super-P is now on hold. Now if I can only find some chrome covers for the pickups...
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You're not the only one...although now I've got the Hipshot Ultralights and the Supertone on my Fenderbird, it's keeping the £3k+ GAS away...
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...and they're great. Originally fitted (inc the Ultralight Xtender) to cure the neck dive on my Fenderbird, and they do this admirably. They're a little shorter in the shaft* than the originals, so the keys sit lower on the head, but that's more to do with the fact that they're in a much-used and abused MM P-Bass neck rather than something designed for them. A bonus is the great feel to the neck now, I really like the lightness of the head: if you move the neck around a bit when playing (as I occasionally do), it feels much more like an extension of your hand than before. I'm tempted to fit them to all my basses now. * Oooer missus, etc, etc, write your own punchline here...
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Welcome Dunc - I think we have a contender for Strongest Back On The Forum!