........ Until I saw this beauty in Guitar & Bass Magazine. It's a 1963 Selmer Truvoice Little Giant. Only 4-watts of, zero-headroom, varying degrees of dirt available. Even comes with the original dust-cover. I've ordered it, and it arrives on Wednesday. Happy days
"Performance" can be likened to "song". It just means that you can set up various rigs within a performance (song), so you can change from, say, intro to verse, or chorus to bridge etc. with a single foot switch press on the Remote. Browse is just the ability to cycle through all of the rigs in your library.
Yeah, Robertson. Gotham and Moore's gear is fairly well documented. Phil Lynott's setup is a bit more elusive though. I've heard it said that he liked the MXR Phase 90, but then there is much argument as to whether he used phaser or flanger on these tracks. Either way, I cannot seem to nail it.
Anyone have any luck trying to recreate Phil Lynott's sounds? Specifically, I am trying to get the Dancing in the Moonlight, and Waiting for an Alibi sounds. I've had a good play around with Chorus, Phaser and Flanger, but never really got there. If anyone has managed it, and would like to share their rig I would be most happy
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You won't regret it. The custom DiMarzio's are probably my favorite pickups. They're monsters for rock/metal but have amazing articulation. The neck pickups is one of the few that I will play, and the one in my 96 model is far and away the best neck humbucker I've ever played. And you can't beat the silky smooth neck!
These are the ones I shared earlier. I spent so many years being a poor musician that couldn't have dreamed about dreaming about owning one, so having 3 is proof of my current gluttony.
Wow!! Very nice. Love the finish on the green one. Beautiful
I've only ever heard great things about them. The frets could do with dressing, but that's about it. Being a left-hander, I just could not let it pass me by. I might never have seen another one.
Regarding the cable, yes. That one is fine, just a regular printer usb cable. I'll leave the other questions to the chosen ones. I still don't know my arse from my elbow
Decided to treat myself to a long overdue bass guitar. Most people seemed to be recommending that I buy a 5-string. But, being a lefty, that presents a few problems. There appears to be only a handful of manufacturers producing 5-string lefties. After a bit of googling, I came across Sire Marcus Miller basses. I'd never heard of them before, but it seems that they are very well reviewed, with many people saying that they should cost a hell of a lot more. So I took the plunge and ordered one from Thomanns, the only store that seems to stock them. This is the one I've ordered:
No, sorry. I'm exceptionally disorganised, and incredibly lazy Kicking myself a bit as I had to perform another reset this morning. I guess I'm just lucky that I'm not a gigging musician, just a bedroom player. So I have the luxury of playing with it until it sounds shit, and then performing a reset and then playing some more.
May be a daft question, but I'm going to ask anyway
Is there any Drum software that can "listen" to a song and then replicate the drum track, or at least, determine where all the drum beats fall to make track creation easier?
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