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Flaneur

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Posts posted by Flaneur

  1. Does electro-acoustic-only mean no 4-stringers are welcome?

    xx

    Nope- it ,means we have an electro-acoustic bass and would like to hear you play it. :)

    We also like fiddlers and cellists, if you know any? Uke players, Cigar Box guitarists, you name it...............

    Turn up, sit in, play your own stuff, try something way out of your comfort zone, whatever............ it's meant to be fun and it is.

    • Upvote 1
  2. Is this mid-week jam session on a regular basis ? .... cuz I'd be well interested in going !

    (be good to met new folk and jam some blues)

    It isn't a mid-week jam- but it is well established. We usually have the session on the last Sunday of each month- but the next one is on July 1st. Hope you can make it- either on the 1st, or in future. If you don't have an electro-acoustic, you can use mine...... :)

  3. The solution to all those neck-diving SG/ 10 pound Les Paul/ 3 hour gig problems......... just bought a Leathercraft Big Softee guitar strap. Made in the UK, 4 inch width, feels lovely and sits where you put it. They have 'em at R'n'B......

    • Upvote 1
  4. It's a bit unfair to condemn all SS amps out of hand. Most of the jazz players you've ever heard of use them, plus promising up-and -comers like B.B. King.

    To answer your question, I can recommend Champ 600s- tons of clean Fender tone, takes pedals well, won't wake the baby. I also bought a Roland Cube 15 for £20. Perfectly respectable sound, sturdy and lightweight. I gig mine, a couple of times each month- although I never expected to......

    Keep the HRD, pick up something cheap :)

  5. The Smiddy Bar in Daviot has a friendly electro-acoustic jam on the last sunday of each month, starting at 3pm. The landlord is a guitarist and singer and the locals are welcoming to newcomers and new styles of music. The structure leans more towards a companionate, Irish feel, rather than the sometimes competitive and bitchy open mic nights. If you'd like to just play your own stuff, unaccompanied, though, that'll be no problem.

    Daviot is near Inverurie, by the way...............

    Like you, I enjoy backing other musicians and singers. It's fun stretching your skills and satisfying to help a new performer along the road.

  6. Oh yeah..... the next jam at my mate's pub is on the 27th of May. I usually do plenty of 50s style blues- Muddy, Elmore, Sonny Boy. If you can make it, we can do it more in the manner of T Bone or Louis Jordan, if you like?

    Electro-acoustics only....... The Smiddy Bar, Daviot, near Inverurie, 3 'till 7

  7. Gotta big this post :)

    Any mention of T Bone and Duke Robillard is a good thing.

    Check out the Youtube clips of Jimmie Vaughan at Burnley Blues festival, the other week........ he was masterful and understated. You'd have loved it:music:

  8. Bit of a niche market in Aberdeen, I would think. The internet is your friend, in this regard........

    If you're already comfortable with open tunings, it's quite possible to teach yourself some basic Jerry Douglas style Country phrasing. Blues is even more straightforward, if you have done any slide playing on regular guitars.

    What sort of music are you looking to play?

  9. z

    Biyang make really good pedals for being so inexpensive,

    I bought a lightly scuffed Biyang OD-8, for about a fifth of the retail price of the Tubescreamer it emulates. It's very tweakable and extremely well built. It can be used for a nice clean boost, to warm up and thicken the sound of a SS amp and to put dirt into any mix. I like the extra option to run it through the clean channel of a Marshall or Fender valve rig- giving distinctive, slightly different tones to the normal Marshall OD sounds, in my JCM602, for example. Like with a lot of pedals, running it in conjunction with the amp's OD channel is a case of subtraction by addition.........

    Highly recommended. :)

  10. Bought an FRV1-the Boss Fender '63 reverb pedal- recently. Not as versatile as some of the Holy Grail types but very good at what it is designed to do- emulate vintage Fender tones. If you like classic Fender sounds but have an amp without built-in Reverb........ like a Bassman, for instance......... and you can't stretch to a tube reverb tank- this might do the job.

  11. I really don't know. Oddly enough all the old esquires have pickup selector switches on them. You can't seem to get a tele control assembly without a pickup selector :confused:

    p1_usc24lrtu_ss.jpg

    It's quite common for esquire builders to put a stealthy neck pickup under the guard - a hot one, naturally :)

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