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Chris2112

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Everything posted by Chris2112

  1. With regard to the Nuevo Spellbinder, I think a deal could be done as it looks like both have failed to sell. Alembic money but without the cachet. I'd take a Series II...
  2. A couple of years ago I got some winter tyres for my car through Camskill - an X308 Jaguar XJ so quite a rare wheel size these days. I think the tyres came through DPD, though only one of two turned up. I raised a complaint with the courier and Camskill ended up sending a replacement FOC, which was fitted to the car. I did wonder how something as big and expensive as a tyre could go missing, since they don't package them, they just have the delivery label stuck on. I never thought I'd see the missing tyre again, since the courier had already forked out for the replacement. A few weeks later, a driver turned up in the dead of winter and handed me the original missing tyre, saying it had been found in a sorting depot!
  3. That B-Quad is stealing the limelight!
  4. I remember looking at that Nuevo Spellbinder a while back and wondering how many had been built for customers. At $15,000 each, I didn't expect that even one would have been sold beyond the two prototypes. I suppose this confirms that. A shame that the project didn't get off the ground.
  5. I've never liked the look of those Loewenherz basses but that golden lion bridge piece is particularly foul. I think this one was gifted to Stanley and it was his first Loewenherz. I may be thinking of someone else, but if memory serves, the luthier gave it to Stanley at an airport in Europe.
  6. A Warwick Dolphin. My GAS for these is transient; I always want one but at times it's stronger for some unknown reason. I will have to get one some day.
  7. He's played a diverse range of vasses over the years outside of his obvious association with Alembic. It doesn't strike me as unusual that he would play a Fender because, knowing Stan, it isn't just going to be off-the-rack. I'd be interested to hear the new record more than anything. I've always found Stanley Clarke to be very inconsistent in terms of his output. He's written a handful of bangers and plenty of pretty average records over the years and has admitted that the quality of his records has varied massively over the years. I thought 'The Toys of Men' was an absolute screamer when it came out and easily his best work since Animal Logic II. However, that record is now a decade old and I wasn't that keen on the new Stanley Clarke Band album.
  8. Very smart! Absolutely gorgeous.
  9. I'm not typically much of an overdrive user but I do think every bassist should have something to hand to add that drive if you need it. The other week, I found my old Digitech Bass Driver in my spare room cupboard whilst I was cleaning it out. Bloody hell, that thing is the worst pedal I have ever heard and mercifully, it crapped out after about five minutes. I haven't checked since to see if it was just a bad battery. An old friend of mine in America very kindly saw a Facebook post of mine and offered to send me his Darkglass B3K free of charge since he had upgraded to a B7K. I've been getting grips with it this week and it's a really impressive bit of kit. It makes a really rich and natural sound. I prefer a mild helping of grit rather than full on distortion but there is plenty of both on hand. I've found it reacts better to my passive Cort Rithimic than my active Bogart Blackstone though I'll readily admit I need to spend a lot more time playing with it to learn how to really use it (and I should also plug it into my PJB Big Head some time, to see what it's like through headphones and a modelled preamp). My brother came round with his Yamaha Attitude bass the other day. It's modded with Lace Sensor pickups and sounds absolutely riotous. A rock-monster bass if there ever was one. It took the sound of the Darkglass to a new level.
  10. If they can't remaster the album because the original tapes are too fragile, then they should give Jason another crack at it. Sit him down with an Alembic and let him re-record it. The fans would love it and it would finally be the 'justice for Jason' we have all wanted. It's a shame that the band collectively pushed Jason out, and then took over a decade from that point to really honour his legacy. He brought a level of precision to the bass playing that Cliff just didn't have. Cliff is held up as sacred by the Metallica hardcore because of his untimely death but in reality, I have never found his loose, fuzzy bass sound to be very satisfying or effective. I hate to prescribe what a bassist should do but in the instance of Metallica, having a solid pick-player was the perfect tonic to lock everything together both on record and on stage.
  11. I've had to rein the tone in a bit since putting these new strings on. I always use stainless steels but I'm startled by how crisp and aggressive it sounds. The last time I heard a set of Barts sounding this aggressive, it was on a Spector. I have had to dial the bass frequency back a bit on the preamp just to tame it.
  12. Anaconda are amazing too. They probably make my favourite looking boutique jazz basses, I really must try one some day!
  13. I ran into my first minefield with this bass today, restringing! I had expected this to be the most difficult part of the ownership experience as it usually is, but learning a new system with the Bogart saw it's first casualty in claiming my brand new D string. I had bought a packet of cheap Spector strings (cheap for what reason, I don't know, they're excellent strings) for the purposes of getting to grips with this and knowing that it might go wrong. I have previously owned two Kubicki Ex Factors, so I know about fiddly restringing tasks that become a doddle when you've figured them out (and the Kubicki was tougher than this, but never cost me a string). I made the mistake of not locking the D string in tightly enough at the headstock. The result was, as I tried to tune it at the bridge, I unwound the string by putting tension on it as it slipped at the headstock. Stupidly, I had cut the string short by then and there wasn't enough left to get it securely locked at the headstock end. All the rest of the strings went on easy enough, though you must take care to lock them tight at the headstock. A short length and good lockdown at the start ensure you won't lock the tuning roller out at the bridge as you go. I can see with a couple of sets of practice this could nearly as quick as double ball end stringing. I now have super crisp, zingy Spector strings on and a dull D from the old set. I'll wear them out quickly and slap on another set and hopefully, avoid making the same mistakes twice.
  14. The Americans have coined a rather irritating term for this: 'diming' or 'to dime'. That said, I have always found the Stingray to be a bit of a thumpy, scooped sounding bass. If Leo was looking for something of a midpoint between the Precision and Jazz, he had perhaps found it. The pickup, for all its connotations of being in a 'sweet spot', is just too far away from the saddles for my taste. The eye can be deceived by the size of the bridge plate but the measurements matter. I like pickups closer to the bridge, effectively in a jazz bass position or closer. I always thought that the Stingray 5 sounded better with its neodymium pole pieces. A wider adoption of those is a positive for the Stingray range.
  15. I've always wondered who it was that bought new Stingrays. EBMM have touted their consistency in build quality as their trademark for years. That, coupled with their massive production volumes, has meant that used basses have never been in short supply - unless you were maybe after an original Sterling model, before the lineup became confused as 'Sterling' also came to denote the cheap range and the Sterling model faded into the background. I don't know if they even still make it. That said, I'd never buy a used Stingray without playing it first, as they suffer from dead spots like nothing I've ever known, but the weak G string irritates me even more. I've read of people using mix-and-match string sets to use a heavier G for more oomph, that sounds ridiculous on a bass of that sort of price. For the price of them now, I can't see why anyone wouldn't just pick up a used Modulus Flea bass. Even if you don't covet the Lane Poor pickup, I find them to sound better than the Stingray, as they don't have such a naturally scooped sound.
  16. I would expect there to be very little noticeable difference in the tone over a solidbody, particularly at any sort of level where the room acoustics start to affect your tone.
  17. I'm one of those who loves a midrange control so I can gently push the upper mids when I need to. I very rarely, if ever, boost the bass control over flat on anything, unless the room is extremely poor. Regarding the response of the Sadowsky preamp, I haven't tried it, but there are few if any active systems that come to mind that would soubd good with the bass boost at more than a quarter turn. Modern bass amps will easily amplify those excessive low frequencies into an unpleasant boom. The secret is midrange, always midrange.
  18. I had the pleasure of playing this bass shortly after Mastodon bought it. It is an exceptional bass and one of the nicest fretless basses I've played. It is also incredibly light and well balanced and has a really natural, woody tone. Adamovic are becoming one of the top names in European luthiery and I can see why.
  19. Hi Gallery dudes, I bought this Bogart from you a couple of months ago, absolutely love it. Glad I checked the website when I did.
  20. Reminds me of an old Basschat/Talkbass user, Bassybill, who had two really cool Warmoth jazz basses, blue one and a green one IIRC. They looked mint and he loved them but admitted their monetary worth was far below their value to him. I haven't seen him post in a while. I hope he is well. The name on the hesdstock counts for a lot these days. Anything with a parts catalogue history takes a massive hit. Warmoth and Carvin were prime examples of this. Those Farida basses look brilliant. If they are as good as you say, hang on to them.
  21. It's really cool that this bass has a magnetic pickup hidden away in there. I've always liked the exotic appearance of these extended board fretless basses, but the lack of a magnetic pickup in the majority of them rather puts me off. I find piezos to be a novel sound, but I wouldn't want a bass that can only do piezo tones. Furthermore, a lot of the time I see piezo equipped fretless basses being played like an upright, with the player plucking softly around the 24th position. That's not a great sound to my ears. The magnetic pickup in this Shuker affords great tone and exotic looks.
  22. Very smart. That finish on the back looks very good.
  23. The Ibanez has finally went, ending my procrastination. In the end, it came down to an offer being on the table and my acceptance that despite being a lovely instrument, it would always be the last to come out of it's case. I'm determined not to just plough the money coming back in into another bass, as tempting as that might be. If I was in a position where something as good as the Ibanez is the least likely to be played, it doesn't make much sense to buy another bass, at least for now. I might just put the cash towards a new computer but I have been thinking of buying a synth or electric piano for my daughter once I've got my music room sorted out. I wasn't sentimental about basses in the past, but given that this bass got me back into playing after a few years messing round with guitars, I hope it continues to give enjoyment in new hands.
  24. SR's are great basses. I've just this evening boxed up my SR3006 Prestige for shipping on Tuesday after three years of ownership. Before I got that, I'd always liked the SR but that bass was was the lightbulb moment for me in terms of why they remain so enduringly popular. Just a superb mix of amazing playability, great tone and great construction. There is an SR for everyone, at any budget.
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