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bassmonkey

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Joined
Aug 4, 2005
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908
Location
Perth, Australia
Hi,

I recently posted about joining a new band and my forthcoming first gig with them. A few of you asked for pics and a report, so here it is.

It was a Sunday evening gig in a town called Sunderland, just south of where I live. It has the reputation for being a bit rough. I have only been with the band about 3 weeks and we had a total of 2 rehearsals prior to the gig, and I haven't performed live for about 15 years. I had to learn 22 songs in that time.

Well, I arrived at the venue a little late, due to not being sure of where it was, but had given myself plenty of time, so no great sweat. The other band members where a little disgruntled, because it is a really small pub and we had to squeeze into a really tight corner.

Our first set started at 8:30, so by 8:00 I was really nervous. It was obvious to the other guys in the band and I think they were quite concerned for me. Anyway, the time came to start, and off we went. People wandered in and out of the bar all through the performance. I made a lot of mistakes, but nothing major. We got polite applause after each number. Throughout that first set I really couldn't shake my nervousness and it really spoilt things for me. I kept thinking what a fraud I was, what made me think I was good enough to play in public. Stupid thoughts, I know. However, before I knew it we were onto the last number.

After a 30 minute break, we were back on again for the second set. I was a little more relaxed now, and there were some more upbeat numbers in this one, including "You Ought To Know", which I know I play pretty well. I felt a little bit better by the end of the set. The audience remained indifferent.

The rest of the band were very complimentary and said I had done really well for a first gig, and not to worry because the audience weren't great. I'm not sure if they really meant this or were just being kind, but they didn't sack me.

The Musicman basses performed really well, and my new GK rig really put out a lot of volume. With this bass/rig combination it really cuts through. One thing though, I like things quite trebly, however, on my usual settings with the other instruments in the mix, my trebly tone sounded quite bassy. I'll need to sort that at the next gig, I was too flustered to fiddle around with tone controls. So, a big thumbs up to my gear choice.

I have another gig this coming Saturday. I'll do a bit more practice over the next few days and hopefully it will go better. Enjoy the photos, and that miserable look on my face is actually a look of nervousness.

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tkarter

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Jun 22, 2004
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5,921
Location
Kansas
Thanks for the report and remember at a gig the more fun you have the better you play.

Don't be too hard on yourself.

tk
 

bassmonkeee

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Apr 25, 2004
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4,628
Location
Decatur, GA
You were obviously comfortable enough to whip out the fretless, so you can't have been too nervous. And, any gig that doesn't result in bloodshed is a successful gig. Heck--some of those are pretty fun, too. :D

As for the audience, I know I've certainly played to my fair share that we eventually thanked for their nonthreatening indifference. :cool:
 

mdc

Active member
Joined
Nov 2, 2005
Messages
30
Location
Middle England, UK
Hey B glad it went ok, and that you were happy with the rig you bought. I really like that fretless you got there...
 

oldbluebassman

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Joined
Mar 13, 2004
Messages
539
Location
Surrey UK
Great report. Well done. I'm sure you'll soon get a grip on the new set. I know what you mean about playing live after a long lay-off. I gave up for 23 years and started again. It was a big learning curve and quite daunting but well worth it in the end. Keep the reports coming.
 

bassmonkey

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Joined
Aug 4, 2005
Messages
908
Location
Perth, Australia
Dr Stankface said:
Where'd you get your strap?? :confused:

I like to play mine kind of high and it's hard to find straps that'll adjust that high.

Andrew

It's a leather one, I got it at the Bass Centre in London many years ago. It has their logo on it.

Thanks to everyone for the words of encouragement.
 

roballanson

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Mar 17, 2005
Messages
1,437
Location
Norwich, Norfolk, UK
HEy Bassmonkey good report. Hang on in there.

PLaying Sunderland sounds like playing Great Yarmouth and Lowestoft....

we played a pub in Diss once and went down like a lead balloon with weights on - indifference was not the word. Despite pumping out some 300wts of bass it was like we were not there.....so we had a great gig between the four of us.

Keep on going. Nice anniv model you got there.....also cool to see a fretless being used - you must not have been shakingthat much.

:) :)
 

strummer

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Joined
Aug 28, 2005
Messages
4,518
Location
Safe European Home, Stockholm, Sweden
Nice report!
Nice basses!

I haveplayed live gigs a lot, and still I am nervous before every gig. Nowadays it goes away as soon as the music starts, and I think your next gig will be like that too:)

I just think about an indifferent audience as idiots. And beleive me, that helps:D

About the sound: Don't forget the midrange. The sound we like when playing ourselves does not always work too well in a band setting, and trying to make "that" sound cut through might be painful to the ears of the audience;)
 

bassmonkey

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Aug 4, 2005
Messages
908
Location
Perth, Australia
roballanson said:
Keep on going. Nice anniv model you got there.....also cool to see a fretless being used - you must not have been shakingthat much.

:) :)

The Anniversary model is a stunning looking bass. The fretless was not such a problem, only play it on 4 tracks 'Every Little Thing He(female singer!) Does Is Magic', 'So Lonely', 'What I Am' (Edie Brickell version, not the awful Emma Bunton cover) and 'I Deserve It'. So, nothing too strenuous, plus it's a pub band, so will be difficult for anyone to tell if the intonation is a little out.
 

bassmonkey

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Aug 4, 2005
Messages
908
Location
Perth, Australia
strummer said:
Nice report!
About the sound: Don't forget the midrange. The sound we like when playing ourselves does not always work too well in a band setting, and trying to make "that" sound cut through might be painful to the ears of the audience;)

Care to expand? Any tips?

I tend to set the tone controls to 12 o'clock, boost at 9-10 o'clock on the amp. On my bass I turn the treble 1/2-3/4 up, a bit of mid and cut the bass a bit. This gives a trebly-growly sort of tone solo. However, with drums, guitar and vocals too, it sounded more bassy, veering towards muddy.

Perhaps it would sound different out front, I dunno.
 
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