Jump to content
Why become a member? ×
Site will be going offline at 11pm Boxing Day for a big update. ×

Now..Your First Gig Rig Rundowns


Low End Bee
 Share

Recommended Posts

My very first public appearance, a lunchtime gig with the dreaded 6th form band in 1983.
- Höfner Artist II bass
- Homemade 30w amp (made with substantial help from my physics teacher)
- No-name 1x15" cab -- weighed as much as two sacks of spuds and sounded like them too.

First 'proper' gig, August 1986, a support slot at the legendary Red Lion in Brentford (RIP).
- Wal Pro II-E
- Roland SH-09 synth
- homemade A/B switch
- Pearl flanger
- Laney PB150 4x10" combo
- two Klotz cables, both of which are still going strong

Needless to say, the second gig sounded a lot better than the first..!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Kay precision bass copy
HH vs bass amp
A huge kind of orange/acoustic reflex bass cab type of thing that sounded fine closeup but would rearrange a persons digestive tract at 100 paces.
and quickly curtailed my career with that band as my dad selfishly refused to transport it on the roof rack as it was denting the VW beetle roof

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Hohner B2a > Marlin branded cable that came with the bass when I got it second hand > 10W Goodmans double cassette deck karaoke machine that belonged to the drummer.
Kinda glad there was nobody there but the barman to hear it now!

Second gig (which was my first paid gig - I got £10) Aria Pro 2 Magna Series > same cable > Laney Linebacker 30W combo.
By comparison that combo sounded absolutely amazing!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'm right handed for bass. I first played on stage with a perspex bodied, lefty strung guitar with a 2+2 wood grained headstock. I can't remember who made it, it belonged to a mate. I also used his combo, also nameless (sorry) which was solid state and DI'd to the house system. It was Dublin's city centre. It was 1986.

I was stuck in a rut at work. Having done a four year apprenticeship and qualified with additional engineering licences Aer Lingus had put me into a workshop that only handled aircraft wheels and brakes. Because of an ancient union arrangement with the company there would be no prospect of getting out of the shop they put you in and working on aircraft themselves for about seven years. I looked towards coming home to England and going freelance. It was a good move in retrospect. It paid for one of my houses.

Thirty years on; I am semi-retired. I have come out of a long period during which my sole occupation had been to care for my mother in her last years. Now I want to spend a lot more time with music. Although I did not make a bad decision all those years ago when I gave up the band I have a need to see where it might have gone now that I have the choice.

So thirty years later I got a second start. A couple of weeks ago I set foot on stage with a Steinberger fiver plugged into a portable house rig in Derby's Horse and Groom pub. Fellow BCer PaulWarning (guitar and vox) and Wendy (drums) had kindly invited me to join them as bassist. We did three numbers that Paul had clips of himself and Wendy performing. A brief practice with those clips during the preceding week and we were good to go. In addition, Paul and I had a tune in common that we had each learned independently. We did that without rehearsal. No-one was injured in the rush to go to the bar... Good times. I'm looking forward to more.

Edited by SpondonBassed
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Some people have better memories, or keep better records, than I do! First gig must have been around 1975/6, probably using a Framus Jazz Bass and Selmer TnB 50 into a homemade 2x15 cab. Lead, strap etc as required. All other details lost in the mists of time.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

My first private gigs (x3 of them) were:
Fender USA Precision.
Zoom multi fx.
NO AMP!
I somehow took an out from the zoom, into the desk, then went through the pa. to hear myself i stood right next to the main pa speakers!

First public gig in a pub was:
Fender Precision USA.
Zoom multi fx.
Trace Elliot Commando 12.
I think my back up bass was a Westone Quantam headless bass.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1986...My first gig was supporting the amazing Noseflutes at the City Tavern in Brum.

My "rig" was - A Carlsbro Cobra combo ( bought for £50 from the drummer of The Great Outdoors) and a custard yellow BC Rich Warlock. Jeebus knows what the lead was or how (or even if...) I tuned the bass. That bass would have been fine in a Poison/Crue type band, but I was in an REM styled janglepop combo. Oops.

[attachment=239340:cobra bass.jpg]
One of these...

[attachment=239341:1980s-BC-Rich-Warlock-Bass-Guitar-Dark-Red.jpg]
And one of these, but mine was in a nuclear yellow.

The amp was OK, I think, but as long as it was louder than silence, I was happy. The BC Rich was brilliant, but totally wrong for the band. Hey ho.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

July 1987 - Shipdham Beeches Hotel. I played a Westone Thunder 1A. I had a Marshall Bass 60 (still have it), but I think I used the other band's amp which was a Marshall head + 2 x 15 cab. I have a photo somewhere. I'm wearing some absolutely terrible surf shorts and I'm easily the least 'metal' person in the room. The backdrop was that sliver foil strip curtaining, beloved of bad night clubs everywhere. There was an open fuse box behind it. Nobody died.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

[quote name='radiophonic' timestamp='1488354701' post='3248086']
I'm wearing some absolutely terrible surf shorts and I'm easily the least 'metal' person in the room.
[/quote]

We need to expand this to what people wore for their first gig! I suspect for most of us that would provide as good a snapshot of the times as the bass setup does.
For me (in 1996) it was a pair of those African dyed cotton trousers they used to sell to climbers at Tiso and an almost fluoro green t-shirt. I can't remember what the shoes were, but I wore Doc Martens a lot. Long hair tied back, no facial hair because I was 15.

Edited by Beer of the Bass
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Korean Squier Jazz > Laney Linebacker 50 watt 12” combo.

At soundcheck it was obvious the combo couldn’t be heard, so I think I borrowed a trusty Peavey TNT combo that WAS audible. Wonderful neck on that old jazz, I wish I’d known at the time that some decent pickups would have sorted out the thin sound before I regretfully sold it.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1980 I think!

Sattelite Jazz Bass copy, defretted by Ashley Pangbourne
Carlsboro Bass combo of some kind (150 watt, maybe?) hired from the fabulous, supportive and helpful guys who ran Gig Riggers in Reigate. Without their encouragement, support and help I wouldn't be still doing this, I suspect. What happened to music shops like that?

The Satellite was actually a pretty decent bass, had a really nice growly mwahhh to it. Shouldn't have sold it. I saved up my paper round money for that bass.....

Link to comment
Share on other sites

1963 Hofner 500/5 into a 1967 Selmer T&B into an Eden 210XLT cab (bit of a mis-match there).

How anyone can remember what bloody lead they used is quite beyond me!

I know I didn't use any pedals because I didn't have any.

And I do remember very clearly that I quickly discovered that a semi-acoustic large-bodied bass makes a very effective feedback generator.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

[quote name='radiophonic' timestamp='1488366824' post='3248249']
Laney Linebackers, Peavy TNTs, Carlsboro, Westone. HH. Seems like yesterday. Jumpers as goalposts eh? Old starter gear was [i]so[/i] heavy even when it was terrible.
[/quote]

I used to put my Selmer head in a big rucksack and lug it down to the bus stop, 10 mile bus journey then over the Cal Mac ferry to Gourock each weekend to rehearse. Fortunately the drummer had an old PA cab that I could plug it into, though I did take the cab over a couple of times. I would have loved some of the compact setups that are around now!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

[quote name='Low End Bee' timestamp='1488289600' post='3247557']
WEM Westminster 15 watt bass combo

The WEM only lasted one gig and was replaced by an HH VS100 head mixed with a 1x18 cab - Woof.
[/quote]

[Pedant alert] The WEM Westminster was never a bass combo - I reckon you're confusing it with the WEM Dominator. The standard Dommie with a 12" speaker could just about be used for bass, but the Dominator 25 with a 15" speaker was actually designed to handle bass. [/ Pedant alert].

Link to comment
Share on other sites

[quote name='Happy Jack' timestamp='1488367932' post='3248262']


[Pedant alert] The WEM Westminster was never a bass combo - I reckon you're confusing it with the WEM Dominator. The standard Dommie with a 12" speaker could just about be used for bass, but the Dominator 25 with a 15" speaker was actually designed to handle bass. [/ Pedant alert].
[/quote]

There was a Westminster Bass model, one of the black 70s ones. Not much of a bass amp, but it was called one.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Restore formatting

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

 Share

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...