Need advice for starting a band (for assisted living - nursing homes)
- By Zooberwerx
- Band Management [BG]
- 72 Replies
Possibly the one gig where you'll NEVER be too loud.
Yeah, they rarely change the batteries in their Beltones. Blast away!
Riis
Possibly the one gig where you'll NEVER be too loud.
have you tried swapping any more cables in your chain?
I've had a lot of single lessons that were impactful. One important thing is to ask them specific questions about what they do that you want to learn. Otherwise they will just pick at your left hand for the whole lesson!
Can’t physically go any lower.When you say you can't lower it below 5/64", do you mean that the saddle can physically go no lower? Or do you mean you can't lower it without buzz?
This may seem elementary, yet bears reiterating: a good mix or mix+crossover sound will often not be a combination of a clean signal and a drive signal that each sound great on their own.Gather that dialing in two different usable sounds on the XB is difficult if one of them uses Mix/Crossover mode. The XB Driver's strength seems to be in having a lot of adjustment range to really dial in distortion sounds, but not so much in terms of having the flexibility to dial in two or three tones that can be switched on the fly. Two good sounds may be achievable with a bit of compromise. However, perhaps it might be worthwhile to play to its strengths, and focus on creating the best single distortion tone possible. Gather that, similar to the DP-3X, many people are disappointed to find that the XB really works best either on or off, not as a channel switching drive pedal, which seems a tad less than expected given the cost. Broken record here, but it really seems like a pedal like this needs presets to offer that sort of flexibility.
If you're playing in F minor or F# minor, you want your index on the root.Hello, I've been learning to read music from a hal leonard book. They teach to use index on first fret, middle finger on second fret and pinky on the third fret.
For the first shift, they have it as index on third, middle on fourth and pinky on the fifth.
Conversely, I had a bass teacher that taught one finger per fret. He didn't give me a definite rule on shifting. Kind of depending on where you are and where the music is going. If there was a definite rule, I'd think it would be finger-per-fret on 1-4 and then 5-9 and so on, maybe adjust it depending on the key you're in (finger per fret on 2-5 and then 6-10).
Typing this out I kind of got my answer, I think I should disregard the Hal Leonard books suggestion. It was probably written with kids playing in mind that likely can't do a finger per fret.
Open to suggestions and comments!
I wanted an eq pedal that doesn’t affect tone when switched off. I seem to notice tone suck more than most players. The redux has a powerful effect where, I remember the empress sounding as if the eq was in parallel with my dry sound and not having as deep an impact on my sound, no matter what my frequency measurements said. The redux and whirlwind make a difference when you turn a knob. I do prefer the easier/faster adjustment of the bass10 but, the redux can do things the whirlwind can’t, and it’s a lot smaller. That’s why I own them both.Looks nice. Is it quantifiably or empirically better than the Empress and other such pedals?
I’ve considered the Whirlwind, but space is a premium on my pedalboard.