Show Posts

This section allows you to view all posts made by this member. Note that you can only see posts made in areas you currently have access to.


Topics - Chris P.

Pages: 1 ... 23 24 [25] 26 27 28
361
Gibson Basses / Mudbucker + two mini humbucker kinda T-bird copy
« on: September 05, 2008, 08:18:44 AM »
Did we already discuss this one?



http://www.fret-king.com/europa4_g.htm

or a cheaper copy:



http://www.fret-king.com/esprit4_b.html

362
The Bass Zone / De Bassist - Magazine
« on: August 27, 2008, 12:56:17 AM »
Hi guys,

A year and a half ago we started a new Dutch/Belgian bass magazine. There used to be one, but that only lasted for a year. We are around a year and a half now and doing fine! Lots of sales in bookshops, lots of subscribers and happy advertisers.
Since last issue I'm co-editor in chief, so I'm quite proud! Within a month the second issue with me at the wheels appears.

I thought it would be fine to share this with you:)

Front cover:


Me and the other editor in chief Willem. Check my ltd. ed. Weller Fred Perry:)


Nice contest: The Warwick CS builts a custom bass for a reader!


Two well known Dutch bass players test some basses:


Bass player of a well known Dutch singer:


I used my own P for this test:


Rhythm tandem of Dutch Britpopband Moke as centerfolds:)


Of course I did Weller for our sister magazine Musicmaker:


Amp:


Bass:


Just a local collector you won't know:


Yes, uprights too!


Workshops:


Vintage gear:


Yep, that's the '76 Bird:



www.debassist.nl
www.myspace.com/debassist


363
Other Bass Brands / New Dano Longhorns
« on: August 21, 2008, 01:04:15 AM »
Guys,

I can get a brand new Longhorn very cheap. It's the one with hotter lipsticks, adjustable metal bridge, two controls and a toggle switch. Any experiences with those basses?

Thanks in advance!

364
Gibson Basses / V
« on: August 09, 2008, 04:21:57 AM »
I nice variation on a Gibson Flying V.

The SpongeBob V ukelele!


365
Fender Basses / mahogany Precision
« on: August 09, 2008, 04:13:17 AM »
In a Fender book I read something about someone having a 60s mahogany P. Was that a one off, did it happened more often? And what about the sound?

Sometimes I'm drooling over German Sandberg basses. They make really nice P copies. Handmade, but for prices under an USA P. They also offer nice relics and you can choose bodywoods like mahogany. I'm curious how that'll sound! (Of course it's a bit 'Fenderbird')

Kind regards,

Chris

366
Gibson Basses / Early Explorer
« on: August 06, 2008, 09:19:03 AM »
There's a quite new German bass magazine called Bass Professor. We had the april/may/june issue at the office and today I took it with me too see what our German competitors do:)

They have an ongoing subject called 'The story Of Gibson Basses.' This time Part 8, the eighties (that makes one wonder if they started in 1900... This time they have some short background information about the Flying V, Victory, Q80/90, IV, V and yes: the 20/20. It ends with a Zebrabird.

But it's the Explorer part that's interesting. They feature three basses. A cream one with two black humbuckers, a red Piezo-only one and an Explorer which they call early 60s and probably custom made.

It has a Korina body, kahogany neck, 3 + 1 banjo tuners, three controls (!), a bar bridge, an oversized pickguard and a chrome mudbucker at the neck. I think I've never seen that before. It looks like Uwe's, but I think Uwe's has T-bird pick ups?
And one mudbucker and three controls?

367
The Bass Zone / Guy Pratt
« on: August 03, 2008, 02:55:13 AM »
Yesterday i received the biography of Guy Pratt. I can´t wait to start reading it!

368
Gibson Basses / Gibson Book
« on: August 03, 2008, 02:54:25 AM »
Some days ago I bought a Gibson book. I buy lots of guitar books.

Gibson Guitars - Ted McCarty's Golden Era 1948 - 1966

It's a strange book and I don't know what to think about it yet. It has interviews with former Gibson emplyees which aren't always that good-interesting, and it also has background stories which leave gaps. But there still is a lot of information in it.
As the title says it's more a McCarty biography and it also is about his years at Wurlitzer (before Gibson) and Bigsby and PRS after he left Gibson.

But some interesting facts:

- Seymour Duncan states in his forword Seth Lover designed the EB0 bass pick up. Did we knew that for sure?

- There's a lot about one Larry Allers. Though McCarty signed al the patent sheets, this book makes clear Allers designed the Les Paul, SG and EB2 bass almost on his own. This allers guy is a real unsung hero and we should errupt a statue for him!!

- Bass. Some quotes.
McCarty always thought the bas viol was the true musical bass. While he was quick to react to Fender's slab solidbody, he all but ignored Leo Fender's electric bass. Asked about Gibson basses McCarty would launch into a discussion of Epiphone's doghouse bass viol and his concern was to avoid competiting with Epiphone. He made several offers to buy the Epiphone bass viol technology.

The book states there were all kind of LP spin offs, but no bass, cos Les Paul's bass player used a bass viol.

Gibson treated the electric bass as a spin-off instrument that would be fashioned after its guitar bodies.

If McCarty was directly involved in instruments like the LP and ES-335, the results were superior. If he wasn't heavily involved, as with amplifiers and bass guitars, the results were more average. Even with the ntroducion of the EB-2, it was Allers, not McCarty, who led the design and signed the patent.

- There's also an interesting part about the Firebird and Thunderbird and how McCarty asked Ray Dietrich to design it. It was Dietrich´s idea to make it neck through, while all other Gibsons had set necks. The book states the changed to non reversed bodies, cos neck through was very expensive to produce and the neck-headstcok joint was too weak in the original design. Engineers got fed up with it and production had to speed up and costs had to be lowered.
So nothing about Fender law suits...

- Kalamazoo had a very large Dutch population, and the book is full of Dutch names like the famous Jim Deurloo and John Huis, but also van Noorloos, Hoogenboom, Bos and Doorenbos. Those former Dutch people would turn their grave if they new all Gibson basses would end up in a German collection.

369
The Outpost Cafe / Quote + Book thread.
« on: July 27, 2008, 05:20:43 AM »
I'm reading a splendid book by sixties producer Joe Boyd, which I can recommend to anyone. He tells about a German record guy who was send from London to New York to open a US branche of a record company there. At the press conference they guy said: 
'I always wanted to live in New York since the day I saw the skyline through the periscope of my U-boat.'

:D

I believe the book is called 'White Bicycles' in English.

And another nice one I read on another forum:

I had the great pleasure of meeting THE man back in '88 at the London Bass weekend, He came across as a really approachable, easy going bloke.
I asked him ''what do you put your speed & dexterity down to?''
He thought for a moment & in that deep gravelly voice replied ''Cocaine!!'' with a wink!



Talking about music scene books. I love this Joe Boyd book. I have lots of musical books with dozens of biographies of British sixties bands, Who/Moon/Daltrey/Pete, Weller, Band, Small Faces, Kinks, Oasis, Beatles,etc.

My favourites:

- 17 Watts by Mo Foster. I'll post some quotes soon!
- All The Rage by Ian 'Mac' McLagan of The Small Faces, The Faces, Stones, Dylan, ...

 

370
Gibson Basses / SG3
« on: July 27, 2008, 04:48:21 AM »
My girlfriend loves this guitar:

http://images4.thomann.de/pics/prod/112645_large.jpg

And it's real cheap. Anybody any experiences with this one? Uwe: I believe your son has the V-version of this guitar? What about the pick ups? Hot or vintage sounding?

371
What about this:

i want to saw of the body wings of my '76 T-Bird, so I only have the neck through. It looks like a Steinberger then. I can mount the controls on the side.

372
Bass Amps & Effects / Pedal boards
« on: July 12, 2008, 09:44:45 AM »
Hi guys,

A question. My girlfriend already has a T-Rex Fueltank is she's looking for a ood pedalboard. She mailed a US company (http://www.rockboxpedalboards.com/) but the guy takes osme time off or something. Any ideas where to order one?

She wants something like:

- 40 x 70
- A second higher level
- No power supply
- In a hard case or flightcase.

Thanks!

Chris

373
Gibson Basses / Green JCS
« on: July 06, 2008, 01:23:58 PM »
I just discovered this at a Dutch bas forum. As you can see it's old and our Rob (Basvarken) posted a loy.

To cut a long story short: A guy bought a JCS which was already (badly) modded. This guy made it green. I think that's a thing I wouldn't think of, but it came out nice. I also kinda like the Fender cover over the new pick up.

http://www.basgitaarforum.nl/viewtopic.php?t=13523&highlight=casady

374
The Outpost Cafe / Bad chosen name.
« on: July 04, 2008, 12:27:02 AM »
I read an article today about a builder who made a hollowbody Strat guitar. He wanted to call it Hollowcaster, but in time he discovered this name could be bad for slaes in Germany...

375
Bill's Shop: Projects, Mods & Repairs / EB0 Junior?
« on: July 02, 2008, 06:04:55 AM »
I was reading an article about Gibson SG-shaped LP Junior guitars and I was also thinking of Drbassman and his great LP with Junior pickguard.

And I got this idea:

My painted black paper pickguard is very bad, but it's just to get the idea. I could make a Jr. bass out of my EB0.
I'm thinking of a Warwick bridge. Would that fit on a EB0 with its narrow string spacing Uwe? You used one...

As a pick up I could use a T-bird humbucker or a Duesenberg pick up. I tried both. I'm also thinking about one control on the pickguard or two on the body. I tried it out for the pics.
Colour. Still competition stripes or maybe just cherry or white?

You opinions please, gentlemen!

 
T-Bird pick up / two controls:



Duesnberg / two controls:



T-Bird / one control:



Duesenberg / 1 control:


Pages: 1 ... 23 24 [25] 26 27 28