T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1624.1 | | FACVAX::BUCKLEY | Snakes are your *friends*! | Tue Jan 09 1990 12:20 | 9 |
| I always thought that a good bass ffor not a lot of $$$ was the Peavey
T40 (gasp's of horror fall over the notesfile as people say "Oh no,
not the "P" word!!!). Yes, I had one of these and thought it was a
great bass...I'm sure a used one could be had for in the 200ish range.
I loved the neck on this beast!
Buck
PS - I see we're on the same node...do you work in PKO3?
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1624.2 | "Spreading the disease,everybody needs..." | DECXPS::GWILLIAMS | | Tue Jan 09 1990 13:28 | 12 |
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RE: -1
Buck,
I agree with you also. I think Peavey makes some great bass
stuff. Both for begginners and more advanced. Also some of their
bass amps sound good to. Now that I think of it the only time I've
disagreed with you on anything is on the Mary murder. SUICIDE!!!
R.C.
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1624.3 | Yeah I'm over here. I love bass. | FACVAX::ADSUPPORT | | Tue Jan 09 1990 15:28 | 10 |
| No, I'm over here in PKO1.
So Peavey can make an O.K. bass? (I don't have any prestige
problems. My wallet keeps me in check, no pun intended).
How about the Peavey amps? A friend of mine has a TK75 (75 watt)
and says he likes it, it's supposed to have built in compression and
graphic eq.
--mikie--
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1624.4 | | FACVAX::BUCKLEY | Snakes are your *friends*! | Tue Jan 09 1990 15:38 | 4 |
| The Peavey amps are *ok*. They do the job. Not much in the
Tons-o-tone dept. IMHO, but they are made ok and sound pretty good.
B.
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1624.5 | Peavey Fury Bass | FSTTOO::GALLO | Solid! | Tue Jan 09 1990 20:43 | 10 |
|
Mikie,
I tried to send mail, but it didn't go thru.
I have a Peavey Fury Bass for sale. If you're interested,
send mail.
-Tom
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1624.6 | I tried it, I liked it | DISCVR::JONEILL | | Wed Jan 10 1990 07:10 | 5 |
| While were on the subject (although this may not be the note)
does anyone have any coments on the peavy foundation bass? I played
one while trying out an amp and fell in love. Im just starting out
with the bass as well so maybe I was just over come by the newness
of the beast but I sure did like it.
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1624.7 | IMHO | FSTVAX::GALLO | Solid! | Wed Jan 10 1990 07:42 | 12 |
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Re: Peavey Basses
Peavey instruments are well built, quality intruments.
The PV line is also, for the most part, very affordable. PV guitars
don't have the prestige of other "major" brands, but for my money,
PV intruments are great. A lot of people will disagree with me,
but I like 'em.
-Tom
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1624.8 | | ASAHI::COOPER | Blackened is the word... | Wed Jan 10 1990 09:33 | 6 |
| The bassist in RnR (the band I'm currently affiliated with) has a
Foundation bass, and he *loves* it. Seems to lack top-end to me,
but it's probably just his EQ setting, not his bass...
Fwiw,
jc
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1624.9 | Shop Around... | USEM::SEAWARD | | Wed Jan 10 1990 13:03 | 28 |
| A little over a year ago, I went through a similar search for beginner
bass equipment.
I tried a lot of different bass guitars, and while none of them
had any mechanical flaws they do have big differences in how the
neck fits into your hand, how th body forms to yours, position
of your picking hand, and of course that good old characteristic
tone. The net result was that instead of ending up with a big
name bass, I found one that fit my needs at the time.
My humble advice is to try a lot of basses so that you can
build your own comparisons. Also, identify what kind of
music you will play most, and where. The amp will need
to be fairly powerful to be heard in a band; playing
the bass at home alone can get very lonesome since the
instrument is part of the rhythm section.
Peavy ? I've had very mixed results with their equipment,
but the basses seem popular.
Prices used ? Expect up to $200 for each - be sure to look at
the Want Ads.
Don't forget that some form of instruction goes a long way
toward enjoying the instrument...
Good Luck
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1624.10 | I hear ya....it IS the EQ.... | RAVEN1::DANDREA | Let the Big dog eat | Wed Jan 10 1990 13:26 | 15 |
|
> Foundation bass, and he *loves* it. Seems to lack top-end to me,
> but it's probably just his EQ setting, not his bass...
Coop,
The day Jim brought that new amp to practice, I asked him to kick up
the treble a little, and it knocked me out. That Bass has a super
high end, a bass tone that I'm partial to, but Jim doesn't like. He
runs his tone knob (on the instrument) nearly "off". Maybe if YOU
suggested he usa a little more treble.....?
FWIW
Steve
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1624.11 | | ASAHI::COOPER | Blackened is the word... | Wed Jan 10 1990 15:41 | 3 |
| Well, I have. Stubborn pr*ck!
;^)
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1624.12 | Is that like "hoof-in-mouth"? | BUSY::JMINVILLE | 3 shots, a twist, & a splash | Thu Jan 11 1990 10:18 | 6 |
| RE: -1...
What's a-matter Jeff, can't get it straight??? ;^)
joe (sorry couldn't resist)
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1624.13 | Be much cheaper, s'pose... | LOOKUP::ADSUPPORT | | Fri Jan 12 1990 12:01 | 8 |
| On the same lines, does anyone have plans or a book that shows how
to make an amp yourself via Rat Shack or such? I saw a book once that
showed various speaker enclosures, but didn't explain the whole thing
(i.e. electronics). I'm a good hack when I have a recipe. Any info
would be appreciated.
Thanks,
--mikie--
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1624.14 | Buy A Bassman | AQUA::ROST | Everyone loves those dead presidents | Fri Jan 12 1990 14:40 | 17 |
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Re: .13
You'd be hard pressed to save any money building an amp...honest!!!
Go look for a second hand Fender Bassman head, there's even one for
sale her in notes this week. These are easy to find for $100-150 and
are really nice amps to start with, reliable, cheap and great
tone.
I CAN'T RECOMMEND BUYING ONE HIGHLY ENOUGH.
I've had one for over 12 years and it's been my main amp, my backup
amp, my guitar player's backup amp, the monitor amp, etc. over the
years, you name it, a real workhorse. I'll sell mine once I can't get
tubes for it anymore.
Brian
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1624.15 | | DNEAST::GREVE_STEVE | Greee Veee King | Tue Oct 30 1990 22:05 | 14 |
|
YeeeHaawwww... had my first bass lesson today and I am psyched!!!
Yep, I've got two fingers stickin' out of my cast jeeeeest enough for
my root and fifth stuff.. Sheesh I didn't really have a feeling for
how much responsibility and influence on (in) a band that a bass player
has.. So what's the advice for "day one" bass "greenies" like me!! I
was going to ask which amp to buy, but Rostie cleared that up for me in
.-1 [;^)
Gree Veee One Handed Bass Dude!!
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1624.16 | Bass is the place! | ISLNDS::KELLY | | Wed Oct 31 1990 08:41 | 35 |
| Bass player :== the most important guy in the band: he connects the
the melodic players (like guitarists, and keyboardists) to the
the engine (drummer). Being a guitarist, this is clearly a biased
point of view, but the bass player is the first thing I check out
when I see a band.
My personal likes are for a big (no, make that HUGE, or YUGE, as
they say in the Pittsburgh, Chelsea,...) bass sound. I'm into
reggae bass players, so I have an exagerated view of what a big
bass sound is. You need a big power amp and at least 15's,
preferably 18's, as speakers. Compression is good, if used sparingly.
Elaborate bass runs do not, IMHO, make it. I feel like the groove
of the song gets lost when the bass player plays guitar-like lines.
If I hear any treble distortion out of the bass amp, I have to be
restrained from rushing up to the stage and rolling off the treble.
I HATE treble distortion on a bass.
The best bass players I played with had always been with the same
drummer for a while. I'd vote for finding a drummer you like and
jamming with him until you both function as a unit.
Finally, I don't believe you'll have any difficulty getting work,
particularly if you are part of a bass/drums two-person unit.
...and you can use that 'root and fifth stuff' to bass your way
to success in nearly any country band and most of the R&B bands
out there.
My faves are: Kenny Gradney (Feat), 'Family Man' Barrett (Wailers),
James Jamerson (Motown house band), and 'Duck' Dunn (Stax house
band).
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1624.17 | Stay away from Flat Wound Strings on a Bass!!! | CSC32::MOLLER | Give me Portability, not excuses | Wed Oct 31 1990 11:48 | 36 |
| Yes, don't let that root-5th fool you. It works for so many things,
but is quite useless for others. I love the way the Bass player
of the Miami Sound Machine puts his progressions together (definately
not your average effort). The Bass player can't get too bizzare in
thier patterns, otherwise it detracts from the rest of the band, but
if the Drummer & Bass player are in sync, it can have a very powerful
effect (no matter what the style of music is). Root-5th is a good
start point; from there, start playing with some Octave switches
(ie. the same notes, but different octaves). Then progress to the time
honored Bass 'Walk' lines, where you progress from the Root to the
5th by walking up or down the neck to the notes. Another variation of
this is the 'Kansas City' Bass progression. You'll be throwing in
variations of these no matter what you play.
I like a percussive bass on occasion. Slapping the strings with
your finger tips (instead of plucking the strings) every now and
then can liven up the Bass parts, without it becoming busy or
detracting from the sound (When I sequence, I tend to mix bass
timbres to do this). I also like octave slides (press on the note
an octave lower than you want to play it & slide up to the note
that you want, plucking the string when you get to the note, but
not before).
Of course, you can use a Pick (get a medium to heavy nylon pick,
all others will break very fast) if you want, or you can pluck the
strings with your fingers (I play Bass this way most of the time),
You could use your thumb (yuck) or you can slap the strings. Play
what feels right, just don't play it like a 6 string guitar.
They are similar, but quite different in character & what they
are used for. Patterns from 6 string (normal guitars) don't always
translate well to Bass & visa-versa. After a while, you'll come to
appreciate the Bass player quite a bit more.
Jens
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