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Topics - Denis

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466
I've been messing around with this and it's much more technically involved that I thought it would be. Any of you guys ever play this one? What do you think?

http://www.youtube.com/v/r9jmozk11Fw&hl=en_US&fs=1&

467
Gibson Basses / 1977 Gibby T-bird on Guitar Center's used gear page
« on: January 11, 2010, 11:33:02 AM »
There's a black '77 Gibby T-bird on GC's used gear pages for anyone interested. It's at a location in PA.

http://used.guitarcenter.com/usedgear/index.cfm

468
The Outpost Cafe / Why animal rights activists don't pick on bikers.
« on: January 07, 2010, 10:21:29 AM »
I don't know if this is fact or not but it sure is funny!

Pennsylvania - ~Three Reported Missing After Animal Rights Activists Take "War on Leather" to Motorcycle Gang Rally.~

Johnstown, PA: Local and state police scoured the hills outside rural Johnstown, Pennsylvania, after reports of three animal rights activists going missing after attempting to protest the wearing of leather at a large motorcycle gang rally this weekend. Two others, previously reported missing, were discovered by fast food workers "duct taped inside several fast food restaurant dumpsters," according to police officials.

"Something just went wrong," said a still visibly shaken organizer of the protest. "Something just went horribly, horribly, wrong."

The organizer said a group of concerned animal rights activist groups, "growing tired of throwing fake blood and shouting profanities at older women wearing leather or fur coats," decided to protest the annual motorcycle club event "in a hope to show them our outrage at their wanton use of leather in their clothing and motor bike seats." "In fact," said the organizer. "Motorcycle gangs are one of the biggest abusers of wearing leather, and we decided it was high time that we let them know that we disagree with them using it... Ergo, they should stop."

According to witnesses, protesters arrived at the event in a vintage 1960's era Volkswagen van and began to pelt the gang members with balloons filled with red colored water, simulating blood, and shouting "you're murderers" to passersby. This, evidently, is when the brouhaha began.

"They peed on me!!!" charged one activist. "They grabbed me, said I looked like I was French, started calling me 'La Trene', and duct taped me to a tree so they could pee on me all day!"

"I... I was trying to show my outrage at a man with a heavy leather jacket. And, he... he didn't even care. I called him a murderer, and all he said was, 'You can't prove that.' Next thing I know is he forced me to ride on the back of his motorcycle all day, and not left me off, because his girl friend was out of town and I was almost a woman."

Still others claimed they were forced to eat hamburgers and hot dogs under duress. Those who resisted were allegedly held down while several bikers "farted on their heads."

Police officials declined comments on any leads or arrests due to the ongoing nature of the investigation, however, organizers for the motorcycle club rally expressed "surprise" at the allegations. "That's preposterous," said one high ranking member of the biker organizing committee. "We were having a party, and these people showed up and were very rude to us. They threw things at us, called us names, and tried to ruin the entire event. So, what did we do? We invited them to the party! What could be more friendly than that? You know, just because we are all members of motorcycle clubs does not mean we do not care about inclusiveness. Personally, I think it shows a lack of character for them to be saying such nasty things about us after we bent over backwards to make them feel welcome."

When confronted with the allegations of force feeding the activists meat, using them as ad hoc latrines, leaving them incapacitated in fast food restaurant dumpsters, and 'farting on their heads,' the organizer declined to comment in detail. "That's just our secret handshake," assured the organizer.

469
The Outpost Cafe / RIP Freya von Moltke
« on: January 05, 2010, 09:12:41 AM »
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/8438970.stm

A prominent member of Germany's anti-Nazi resistance during World War II has died, aged 98, at her home in the US.

Freya von Moltke, who had lived in Vermont since 1960, died last Friday after a viral infection, her son said.

She had belonged to a group of aristocrats, clerics and diplomats who backed a failed attempt to kill Hitler with a bomb in 1944.

The group, known as the Kreisau Circle, was led by her husband, Helmuth, who was later executed for his activities.

She told an interviewer in 2002: "To object and then to stand for what you believe in is one of the most important human activities to this day."

Von Moltke was born Freya Deichmann in Cologne in 1911 and met her husband when she was 18.

Both she and Helmuth received law degrees and were married in 1931.

They were opponents of Hitler from the start of the Nazi regime and assisted Jews and other victims of Nazism through Helmut's international law practice in Berlin.

In 1942 and 1943, Von Moltke hosted meetings at the family estate, Kreisau in Silesia, at which the resistance group discussed plans for the democratic Germany they hoped would follow the collapse of Nazism.

The Kreisau Circle supported the failed attempt on Hitler's life in July 1944.

Von Moltke said later that she had fully supported her husband: "I never advised him to stop, but rather encouraged him, because I was convinced that that was the right way for him to fulfil his life."

Helmuth von Moltke was executed for treason in January 1945.

After the war, Von Moltke and her two sons escaped to South Africa where she worked as a social worker.

She returned to Germany in 1956 where she began her work in publicising the Kreisau Circle.

She settled in Vermont in 1960, where she published several books about resistance to the Nazis during the war.

The former family estate in Silesia, located in current-day Poland, is now used as a centre for reconciliation between Germany and Poland and as a meeting place to promote European integration.

471
Bill's Shop: Projects, Mods & Repairs / Wiring repair in T-bird. Success!
« on: December 20, 2009, 10:15:26 AM »
I've been trying to learn "I Put A Spell On You" and was trying it out on Thunderbird No 2 (the one with flatwounds) and noticed the input jack was loose as hell and would sometimes cause the bass to cut out. So this morning I tightened it and OILA! no sound at all.

I took the cover off the back and noticed that one of the wires had broken at the jack, probably from the whole thing twisting when I tightened it. It turns out that the wire had not been put through the hole in the tab but merely soldered to it, unlike the other wire which was done correctly. Whipped out the soldering iron, removed the broken end and all the solder on that tab, ran the wire through the hole, soldered it back up and presto bingo, we have sound!

Boy, those are some THIN wires. I used my smaller iron and the thinnest wire solder I had and JUST enough solder to do the job.

Interestingly, I noticed the input jack switch was stamped "Epiphone".

472
The Bass Zone / '60s Garage/Psychedelic Music from North Carolina
« on: December 16, 2009, 11:56:41 AM »
Earlier this year we got a new cd up at the radio station called "Tobacco A-Go-Go: Vol 3". Due to licensing restrictions I don't think the cd is available to the general public but you can download the music at the website below.
It's good stuff and some of the songs have great bass licks!

http://www.ncmusichistory.com/2008/11/tobacco-go-go-volume-3.html?showComment=1228879500000

473
Other Bass Brands / Anyone see this custom Non-Reverse T-bird on eBay?
« on: December 10, 2009, 05:32:37 PM »
He says this one is sold so I guess he's using eBay as an advertisement.
It's kind cool, even with the Rick neck.

http://cgi.ebay.com/Custom-Non-Reverse-Thunderbird-Style-Bass-Guitar-New_W0QQitemZ320455575233QQcmdZViewItemQQptZGuitar?hash=item4a9ca406c1#ht_1415wt_1144

474
The Outpost Cafe / Whoo hoo!
« on: December 09, 2009, 11:14:09 AM »
My girlfriend called me this morning and told me she "Passed with Distinction" her comprehensive exam for her Masters Degree! Since she wants to teach 8th graders in lower privileged public schools that ought to help her out quite a bit.

475
The Outpost Cafe / RIP Eric Woolfson
« on: December 04, 2009, 08:15:29 AM »
I LOVED the Alan Parsons Project!

http://www.3news.co.nz/Alan-Parsons-Project-star-dies-aged-64/tabid/418/articleID/132758/cat/55/Default.aspx

The Alan Parsons Project star Eric Woolfson has died aged 64.

The songwriter passed away in London on Tuesday following a battle with cancer.

Paying tribute, his friend Deborah Owen said, "Eric was very much a self-made man. He couldn't read music but if you asked him to play anything he could do it straight away. He had an extraordinary gift."

Woolfson began writing music in his teens and after working as a session pianist he was signed up by Rolling Stones manager Andrew Loog Oldham at the age of 18.

He went on to pen tracks for artists including Marianne Faithfull, Frank Ifield and Joe Dassin, before going on to work with musical duo Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice in the 1960s.

Woolfson branched out into artist management in the 1970s, launching the career of Kung Fu Fighting hitmaker Carl Douglas and Beatles engineer/record producer Alan Parsons, who he later teamed up with to form The Alan Parsons Project.

The pair wrote 10 albums together between 1976 to 1987 and sold more than 40 million records worldwide, with hits including I Wouldn't Want to Be Like You, Games People Play, and Time.

After wrapping up work with Parsons in the late 1980s, Woolfson went on to indulge his love of stage musicals, writing a series of productions including Freudiana, about Sigmund Freud, which was first intended as the eleventh album by the duo, and Gaudi, about legendary Spanish artist Antonio Gaudi. His last musical, a production based on the life of Edgar Allan Poe, premiered in Berlin, Germany earlier this year.

Woolfson is survived by his wife Hazel and their two daughters.


476
Bill's Shop: Projects, Mods & Repairs / BaCHbird HSC finished!
« on: December 03, 2009, 06:16:18 PM »
Here's the Epiphone case upon arrival. Brand new, off eBay for $79 with shipping. It's huge!


I mean, its HUGE! Left to right: Epi T-bird case, Victory case, '74 P-bass case, G&L molded case, Epi case for the NR, two Ripper cases. It's 4 inches longer than any of the other ones. I believe it was intended as an Explorer bass case. The body cavity was square and even the NR slid around a bit, with several inches of open space on all sides.


Here's the home insulation foam I found at a local auto interior shop. They gave it to me stating they used it seldom and only for blocking out windows in police surveillance vans. Neat! Because the case isn't very deep and the headstock on the NR sits at an extreme angle, the body had to be angled down towards the rear strap button so the weight would be off the headstock itself and instead be on the neck and body. Still a tight fit.


First attempt at cutting the fur lining which I bought at a local fabric shop. It's 100 times nicer than the original fur in the case. Cutting it with scissors was weird because little pieces of fur went flying all over the place. I felt like I was scalping a big, freshly washed and shampooed rat. The original intention was to cut 3 pieces; one for the bottom, one for the vertical edge of the cavity and then one for the top surfaces. I quickly gave that up in favor of one larger piece which I slit at the corners.


Here's a closeup of the single piece, cut and glued into the case.


Here's the whole case interior. Sexy! I wasn't ABOUT to replace all the fur in that sucker.


Here's the NR in its new home. Snug as hell.


I'm pretty pleased with it. I wish the case was an inch deeper though, but at least the NR won't slide around! Now I can take it out of the house! I think total this case modification project cost me about $90.

477
The Bass Zone / Bass weights
« on: December 03, 2009, 04:43:40 PM »
I've been convinced for a long time that my '80 Ripper is a lot heavier than the Victory Std because it doesn't balance as well as the Victory. Not so! They were pretty close in weight, so I got curious.
I put an 11lb weight on my scale and made sure that the scale confirmed that (which it did) so I pulled all the basses out and here's how they stacked up.

G&L LB-100 = 8
'80 Ripper = 10.1
'73 Smurf Ripper = 5.5 (bare body with tuners) - don't tell me that the electronics, strings, bridge, pg, etc add over 4lbs!
'84 Victory Std = 10.2
BaCHBird = 9
'74 P-bass = 9
Fender Cowpoke = 7.25
Danelectro = 6
Epi T-birds = 7.5 each

479
Other Bass Brands / Martin electric bass
« on: December 03, 2009, 06:15:01 AM »
Anyone know anything about them? I was thinking about going to check it out.

http://raleigh.craigslist.org/msg/1492532477.html

480
Gibson Basses / Ripper II pickups
« on: November 30, 2009, 11:35:27 AM »
I was just on Gibson's site and read that the pickups on the Ripper II are wound by Seymour Duncan especially for this bass. I also noticed that they mount via 2 screws going through the pup itself (like the early Rippers) and not with 3 screws like the later Rippers. I wonder if a) these are obtainable through Seymour Duncan, b) if they are more powerful than the originals and c) if that 2-hole pattern is the same as the earlier pups and would mount in an original Ripper.

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