The Last Bass Outpost
Gear Discussion Forums => Gibson Basses => Topic started by: Chris P. on December 19, 2020, 03:18:10 AM
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Sorry, this is in Dutch, from my website, but there's hardly any info, so check the pics:
https://www.debassist.nl/nieuws/artikel/3-24963/gibson-adventure-time
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Ran it through a translation engine... :o
Gibson has teamed up with Adventure Time: Distant Lands for the main character Marceline. The result consists of a guitar, but also two basses. We don't know the series, but the instruments are fun!
Epiphone once had the Emily The Strange SG and the Squier hello Kitty guitar and Badtz Maru bass have now become collector's items. Gibson now comes with three special models in collaboration with Adventure Time: Distant Lands (Obsidian) from HBO Max. The models - an Explorer guitar and an Embassy Pro and EB-0 bass have an appearance based on the show's main character: Marceline, The Vampire Queen.
Fans: Forgive us if we say something wrong, because we know more about bass than TV series.
Anyway: we think the result is very cool and as a total stranger to the series, we would play on it!
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Thanks! I was too lazy to translate my own text. :mrgreen:
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Interesting. Are the kids supposed to be into fuzz bass again these days?
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I found some more info. Since it mentions the song is performed by a Chilean artist, that explains why she started singing in Spanish while doing that song. So far this topic has covered Dutch, English and Spanish.
https://www.guitarworld.com/news/gibson-teams-up-with-adventure-time-distant-lands-for-a-series-of-marceline-the-vampire-queen-themed-guitars
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Dutch just because I run the bass mag and I like Gibson :mrgreen:
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Dutch just because I run the bass mag and I like Gibson :mrgreen:
I like both Dutch and Gibson. So that's fine with me. I will try to play Gibsons the best I can, but becoming fluent in Dutch is unlikely to happen. This Australian who is learning Dutch explains what it's like for an English speaker. She likes Dutch, but explains here some of the frustrating aspects of trying to learn it.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TxSvMgcCWbU
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Those are really fun!
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I very liked that video. For us Dutchies the Engloish language has the same strange things, like pronunciation of certain almost the same looking words:
Clear
Cleans
Heather
Heater
Yeah
Yeast
Early
Easy
Make up your mind! :mrgreen:
And then: Catch and caught. Watch and watched. Why didn't I waught a movie?
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I very liked that video. For us Dutchies the Engloish language has the same strange things, like pronunciation of certain almost the same looking words:
Clear
Cleans
Heather
Heater
Yeah
Yeast
Early
Easy
Make up your mind! :mrgreen:
And then: Catch and caught. Watch and watched. Why didn't I waught a movie?
The main difference is that in the Netherlands there is high quality foreign language instruction. I know this because I have seen it myself many times with many different people. The U.S. has never placed much serious emphasis on people learning foreign languages. The U.S. has some other strong points, however, like making Gibsons. Even that is debatable with some people, but I've always liked them.
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English is such a chaotic mash of other languages it's a wonder anyone can read or speak it at all, and no surprise that spelling is difficult even for native speakers.
Here's one of my favorite sets of words:
Cough
Tough
Through
Bough
Dough
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Thanks! I was too lazy to translate my own text. :mrgreen:
(Dave... still think we could do with a face-palm or a double face-palm emoticon...)
Tapadh leat ... throwing Gaelic into the mix... :mrgreen:
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(Dave... still think we could do with a face-palm or a double face-palm emoticon...)
Tapadh leat ... throwing Gaelic into the mix... :mrgreen:
As someone with the surname Powell, I can only suggest that a bit of Welsh in the group would add diversity, although it might use up certain letters of the alphabet prematurely. ???
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Rwy'n cytuno...
(means I agree, but in Welsh... just don't ask me to pronounce it...) :mrgreen:
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Rwy'n cytuno...
(means I agree, but in Welsh... just don't ask me to pronounce it...) :mrgreen:
As they say down South, "thass fahn, jess' fahn."
As Tom Lehrer quoth in It Makes a Fellow Proud to be a Soldier: "He's from Georgia, and he doesn't speak the language very well."
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There is no such thing as a "Dutch language". It's an ancient, coarse German dialect that has long been given up - und for good reason too - in the country of its real origin. Coastal tribes have retained it to some degree in their largely isolated, semi-aquatic settlements to the West of our current interim borders. Educational regression is nothing to brag about though.
Das gesagt habend :mrgreen:, I like the basses too. The look would be even better if these bite-/scratch-marks were real indentations via routing.
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Well that was fun. Some great playing there. We used to watch Adventure Time all the time when our daughter was younger. Weird and funny show. Marceline actually plays a type of axe bass BTW.
(https://img.favpng.com/17/11/12/marceline-the-vampire-queen-finn-the-human-axe-bass-string-instruments-bass-guitar-png-favpng-gRHsdcpXgQQSsW4e1NB2er1tZ.jpg)
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Marceline actually plays a type of axe bass BTW.
I'm surprised Gene didn't sue her for that!
(https://www.dropbox.com/s/dz2cid11pxaxozp/Gene%20Axe.jpg?raw=1)
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She let him have photographs for his collection instead. :popcorn:
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I like both Dutch and Gibson. So that's fine with me. I will try to play Gibsons the best I can, but becoming fluent in Dutch is unlikely to happen. This Australian who is learning Dutch explains what it's like for an English speaker. She likes Dutch, but explains here some of the frustrating aspects of trying to learn it.
Thanks for posting, I'm one year into learning Dutch now. It's tough, but I expected it to be tougher. Makes sense when I see the video,
many of the difficult things there like the time and words with double meaning are the same in Norwegian.
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There is no such thing as a "Dutch language". It's an ancient, coarse German dialect that has long been given up - und for good reason too - in the country of its real origin. Coastal tribes have retained it to some degree in their largely isolated, semi-aquatic settlements to the West of our current interim borders. Educational regression is nothing to brag about though.
Das gesagt habend :mrgreen:, I like the basses too. The look would be even better if these bite-/scratch-marks were real indentations via routing.
Does Germany, German, and the German even excist? Around 80 to 90 years ago you guys employed all kinds of failed, fired, and fraudulent academics and scientists to rewrite your culture! :mrgreen:
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Thanks for posting, I'm one year into learning Dutch now. It's tough, but I expected it to be tougher. Makes sense when I see the video,
many of the difficult things there like the time and words with double meaning are the same in Norwegian.
When in doubt, ask the Dutchies here. Always glad to help you!
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Does Germany, German, and the German even excist? Around 80 to 90 years ago you guys employed all kinds of failed, fired, and fraudulent academics and scientists to rewrite your culture! :mrgreen:
You little Kraut-spawned dike worm!!! :mrgreen: How does your national anthem go again ... ik van duitsen bloed, "I am of German blood"? Try to explain that one away, I know there have been - failed - Dutch attempts to do this before. ;)
But thanks for keeping us in the loop about Gibson affairs! Your ilk were always good at espionage. 8) 8) 8)
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I know a Dutch girl with German parents. She always says she likes to have her period, because she loses some German blood.
And the anthem. A serious answer is of course that Dutch, German and British royalty are very intertwined. The grandfather of our king even had an SS membership, before he married a Dutch princess and turned to the allied side during WWII. The Ferrari driving, Spitfire flying playboy Bernhard, with at least two daughters with other women. Love the guy. We need more of such people :D
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Thanks for posting, I'm one year into learning Dutch now. It's tough, but I expected it to be tougher. Makes sense when I see the video,
many of the difficult things there like the time and words with double meaning are the same in Norwegian.
You're welcome. I studied Spanish in school, but in time became more interested in Dutch and German. However, German grammar and Dutch pronunciation seem to elude me. They're more difficult than the Romance languages to me. Because I also studied some Portuguese on my own for a while and found it easier than Spanish. Of course, I'm not sure if there really is such a thing as an easy foreign language.
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The main difference is that in the Netherlands there is high quality foreign language instruction. I know this because I have seen it myself many times with many different people. The U.S. has never placed much serious emphasis on people learning foreign languages. The U.S. has some other strong points, however, like making Gibsons. Even that is debatable with some people, but I've always liked them.
This is true. I studied Linguistics in college and around puberty is when humans lose the ability to easily learn languages. It's about this time that most US schools seem to start teaching students foreign languages.
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"I know a Dutch girl with German parents. She always says she likes to have her period, because she loses some German blood."
:mrgreen: :) :) :mrgreen: THAT IS BRILLIANT!
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You little Kraut-spawned dike worm!!! :mrgreen: How does your national anthem go again ... ik van duitsen bloed, "I am of German blood"? Try to explain that one away, I know there have been - failed - Dutch attempts to do this before. ;)
But thanks for keeping us in the loop about Gibson affairs! Your ilk were always good at espionage. 8) 8) 8)
It is actually "Ben ik van Dietschen bloed". Guess it's the earliest misheard lyric?
Diets is not the same as Duits.
Diets is Midden Nederlands. Middle Dutch.
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She let him have photographs for his collection instead. :popcorn:
:mrgreen:
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This is true. I studied Linguistics in college and around puberty is when humans lose the ability to easily learn languages. It's about this time that most US schools seem to start teaching students foreign languages.
I's also good to learn to play bass and sing at the same time at an early age. That was easier for me as a teenager than it is now. There are probably quite a number of skills that would be easier to acquire during the formative years.
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When discussing inbred royals, let's not forget Russia and Denmark. Prince Philip is descended from both.
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It is actually "Ben ik van Dietschen bloed". Guess it's the earliest misheard lyric?
Diets is not the same as Duits.
Diets is Midden Nederlands. Middle Dutch.
Never believe your own propaganda, deutscher Blutsbruder. :mrgreen: That particular "explanation" for the lyric was a scrambled last ditch (or Dutch) effort to underplay the moffe-connection - at a time when Dutch-German relations were, uhum, somewhat (re)strained. It's been historically disproven.
It's like saying Jesus wasn't really Jewish. ;D
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Never believe your own propaganda, deutscher Blutsbruder. :mrgreen: That particular "explanation" for the lyric was a scrambled last ditch (or Dutch) effort to underplay the moffe-connection - at a time when Dutch-German relations were, uhum, somewhat (re)strained. It's been historically disproven.
It's like saying Jesus wasn't really Jewish. ;D
So you're saying that explanation is lying in a ditch somewhere?
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Or rolled off a dike, who knows? ;)
Let's put it this way: Given my fatherland's historical excursions into Western terrain, I have all sympathy for the somewhat labored "Dietschen"-interpretation. Who wants to be related with people who attack out of the blue and seize the country? The unfortunate thing about relatives is that you don't really get to choose them!
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Or rolled off a dike, who knows? ;)
Let's put it this way: Given my fatherland's historical excursions into Western terrain, I have all sympathy for the somewhat labored "Dietschen"-interpretation. The unfortunate thing about relatives is that you don't really get to choose them!
Isn't that the truth.
I wonder what said dike would have to say about it.
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"Friends are God's way of apologizing to us for our families."
--Tennessee Williams