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Everything posted by Muzz
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I play a lot of gigs without back line, and tho I've never been a pedalboard junkie I've had single multi-units like the Boss ME-50B, the Zoom 60 and B3, and a HD500x, but I have a Stomp now which does everything I need (and a whole lot more). I should add the B3 and HD500x were good units, I just needed the pitch shifting to be a bit less warbly down to D (or even C), which I found the Stomp to be ideal for; it's not cheap, but it's brilliant at what it does...
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Played a 29-year anniversary/reunion gig with an originals band which split, erm, 29 years ago. We'd all got chatting at a wedding a year or so ago and decided to do it, so we had half a dozen rehearsals and went for it. Great venue - well, soundwise, anyway (great house PA and engineer), but the stairs were a bit of a trial - Gullivers in Manchester. We'd shifted tickets and it was busy. Had a ball, the crowd loved it, it was great to play the songs live again, and good fun to take the full rig (Walkabout, Super Twin and Compact) for once. I played my white BB414 (I had a white BB3000 back in the day), which is the best sub-Β£200 bass I've ever owned. All in all a terrific night
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Yep, had something similar recently: 40-something chap sees us in an Irish bar while he was with his mates and full of Guinness, books us for the following month. Gig is 25 people in a posh suite in a posh hotel for his parents' 50th wedding anniversary. He was the youngest person in the room. Was still a good gig, though, as we just turned right down and played an appropriate set of songs. They enjoyed us, but it was a bit like playing for your Gran and her friends... ππ
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I've had the MB 112 (and a 115) combo, and while it was a while ago, so I'm going off memory here, judging from the volume available from the Rumble 112, I'd say if the Rumble 200 is of a size and weight you can hoick about comfortably, then it'd do as good a job as the MB 112...
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Fair point Blue, but when you work with deps (or as a dep), you get what/who you get on the night, and if it's the wrong guy, there's your gig in the bin...
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The giddy ten-year-old in me loves Jens' more OTT elements (50,000 year old mammoth ivory nut, anyone? Wonder where that sits with the whole Tonewoods debate?*), but his blobby shapes just aren't me. Possibly just as well, as they're not something I'll ever afford. Plus, a pal of mine** kinda calmed the whole thing down for me when I showed him Jens' site and he said "It's all a bit vajazzle, tho, isn't it?" π * 'Gives an old-school vibe, but not as well as proper 60,000 year old mammoth ivory...' π ** Same pal who ruined Corvettes for me by looking at the top horn and saying "That looks like a nob". I can't ever not see that. I've stopped showing him basses now. π
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As with all these sorts of situations, it very much depends on your band - I've got a Rumble 100 for the small trio gigs when there's some PA support, and for smaller bars with vocal-only PA, which is even smaller and lighter than the 200, although with a giddy drummer I've found myself on occasion driving it quite hard. I'm seriously considering spending Β£65 to put a much better speaker in there (and another tenner to line it: it's an unlined cab, and I've experienced it feeding back when I'm standing close and cranking it), as I like the weight and small size. I should add that I have a Walkabout and two BF cabs, a 115 and a monster 212, so if I need to step up I've got lots of options, it's just the verrrrry small Rumble combo is great to grab and go... I would say that the 'lightweight' part of the cab has nothing to do with the whooomph, heft, grunt or whatever - the BF 212 weighs 39lbs and will drown any drummer - I used to use it in a Rawk band with a shedbuilder and two Marshall/412 halfstack guitards, and it comfortably ran with them with headroom to burn...
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We avoid multi-band bills unless it's the occasional charity festival-type thing, I've found people are much more relaxed about it all under those circumstances, so it usually goes OK. Pubs are a mixed bag, but the bad stuff is very rare compared to the good stuff. The worst ratio of bad to good ones are agency gigs, culminating in an derrière-clencher of a NYE gig last year when we turned up as a guitar/bass/drums trio to be greeted (sic) by a landlord who said "I was promised a seven piece soul band". And he'd advertised it and sold tickets as such. It was never gonna be a good one after that... The thing about the bad drummer is absolutely the case across the board, though: if I had to pick a single worst factor, it's that...
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Why are so many metal/hard rock lyrics such merda?
Muzz replied to Barking Spiders's topic in General Discussion
I think that's almost certainly the case; furthermore the sweep of the narrative arc and the thematic focus recall another sublime high water mark in the librettist's art, Dan's Underpant. Marvellous. More lager, anyone? -
Why are so many metal/hard rock lyrics such merda?
Muzz replied to Barking Spiders's topic in General Discussion
Quite. Anyone who can rhyme 'Macclesfield' with 'knackers feeled' should be in with a shout to topple Carol Ann Duffy as Poet Laureate.... π -
Bass from the word go (see (or rather hear) 14 seconds into Hanging Around by The Stranglers), I have a couple of guitars, more for faffing, and as I'm right-handed and left-footed, drums are...interesting. Still bass. π
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Tips on setting up your Bass Guitar by Sheldon Dingwall of Dingwall.
Muzz replied to Dood's topic in Repairs and Technical
A great set of videos, plus the bonus, thanks to the title, is that forevermore I will think of Sheldon as 'Sheldon Dingwall of Dingwall'... -
I use a Stomp, so I went through a Helix they had lying around. I was looking for a one-box solution for when we gig with the small tops and the small sub. Really didn't have any confidence in it as a gigging solution. I picked up a Rumble 112 cheap which still isn't quite enough, but a change of driver should sort that. I'd say try one definitely, but the only real test would be on a rehearsal/gig, so if you can get one with a returns policy, then do that. I should add I tried a QSC K12.2 which was in a different league, and would have done the job fine...but it's more than twice the price, so I guess you get what you pay for...
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I tried the bigger Headrush FRFR (the 112) in PMT a few weeks ago, and I wasn't at all convinced it would keep up with a drummer, therefore I'd say the 108 wouldn't have a hope, unless your drummer is verrry quiet.
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I have JE pres in all my gigging basses, they're simply the best in the market, and any time I've contacted John with dumbass questions he's been a real gent.
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Onboard I have East U-Retros in all my basses, Externally I use a Stomp for everything, backline-based or DI.
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I've had one full custom (another one on the way) and I've bought other customs and modded them to what I wanted, and it's a long road to learning what you really need/want, and what's just wish-fulfilment and Shiny Thing GAS. I absolutely won't sell my full custom, ever, and the ones I've modded are keepers, too. I've made many more expensive mistakes buying mass-produced basses which I ultimately knew wouldn't suit me (two Alembics, four (to date) Stingrays, two Ricks, and Buddha knows how many Jazzes) but I'd convinced myself this one would be different.
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I'm good for 4s with my Shukers, to be honest, but yeah, the slimmer the better for me...
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So do I, although my 34-36.25 scale Dingwall ABZ4 is actually the lightest of my basses, at a sniff under 7.5lbs...
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When I try a 5 that's 7.5lb, with a slim 38mm neck (think Geddy Jazz slim - all my basses have these dimensions), I'll consider one. I'll wait. π
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When our BL was making a living from playing full-time, he got some afternoon solo acoustic gigs at Old People's Homes. I giggled a bit, and was set to send him up as a crooner, until he told me the most popular stuff was Beatles songs*. * And with the added benefit that he could play the same set every week, with nobody complaining they'd heard it before... π
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All this +1: I play with a few younger deps (drummers especially) and the amount of overplaying can be bizarre. I think it's an age/confidence thing. I can barely manage just 'playing', so overplaying isn't a problem for me...
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I've just listened to the Something bass part, and I'll never complain about my bass tone again...gawd, it's awful...
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My only expensive ones go way back, but both involve selling basses which I should have stashed, tho I was in my late teens/early 20s and new shiny things were irresistible. Since you're wondering, a Jetglo 4001 and a 73-74 black and maple precision. sold both for less than Β£200. I knowwwww....π