May 21, 2015

New Toy: Gretsch G5440LS Electromatic Hollow Body Long Scale Bass Guitar - Orange

Cat Not to Scale
I just unpacked this, a little present to myself for my new promotion. I went downstairs and plugged in and played a little Slayer. This really isn’t a Slayer axe, but there’s no better break-in music.

First impressions:
I like it. Which is good. I spent a bit of money on it. It looks nice, but I am a fan of the hollow-body shape and the open sound holes. It is a bit bigger than I thought it would be. The body is pretty much the size of an acoustic guitar, and almost as deep.

Playing:
First, a bit of where I’m coming from. I have only been playing bass a couple of years. I started out with a Squire P-Bass, but I traded that in to another P-Bass, but this one is a Fender Blacktop. It has the same double humbucker pick-up setup as this one does, but the bridge pick-up is closer to the bridge. The neck pick up is further from the neck. When I play that one with a pick or my fingers, I usually anchor my striking hand with my thumb on the neck pick up.
What that means is that I tried to replicate that same motion with this machine. The problem was that the strings even in standard tuning had too much slack for me, and I was finding myself playing with my hand anchored down on the bridge pick up instead. That’s not an issue but it shifted my conception of where my fret hand was. I thought I was on the ninth fret, but I looked left and I was on the twelfth fret, It was a mental block, but I think I got the hang of it.

New factors:
This is not a solid body bass. It has that sort of bluesy soul and not really the rock vibe, but it works.
The hollow body means that there is some resonance, and I will be able to practice without plugging it in. I bet that excites my pets. The body is bigger than my Blacktop. Where the Fender machine ends, here there is more bass. That’s not bad, it just means that I need a longer strap.
The strings on this are further away from the body of the machine. That means nothing for finger-style, but I found that my standard style of pick playing didn’t work, I can’t anchor my thumb on a pick-up and play. It seems as if the best playing style with a pick is a floating hand, but I need some work with that (I know, I know, you never use a pick. But “Raining Blood” has some power-chords.).
The biggest drawback is that there is some neck-dive. My Fenders have been well-balanced, so I never really knew what people were talking about when they said this phrase. Now I know. I found myself having to give some support to the neck with my fret hand, which was a new experience.

Overall, I’m very pleased, but it is easy to feel that way right out of the box. Should it break tomorrow, I’ll come and update this.


May 7, 2015

On "Hooligans United" - a Rancid Tribute



It was about time for a Rancid Tribute album.
I preordered this pretty much as soon as I heard about it, in the “Please Take My Money” sort of way.
It is a double album chock full of songs that were originally performed by Rancid.
So a couple of things I learned listening through this several times:

11)      Part of what makes Rancid so distinctive is Tim and Matt’s singing voices. I’m a big Anti-Flag fan, and they get the first song on the first record. They do a straight-forward cover, but it feels a little thin – Justin and Chris can’t quite match it.
22)      Tim, who released a solo album under the title “A Poet’s Life,” really is a poet. His songs work well even when singers who enunciate sing his songs.
33)      The most interesting covers are the ones that take the songs in an entirely different direction than the one you’re used to singing along in.


Overall, it is an interesting record for the Rancid fan, but I’m not sure how heavy of a play it will earn on turntables.

April 20, 2015

On Siddhartha



I first read this years ago.
I was trying to impress a girl.
I didn’t get it. I was too young. Maybe so was she.
I read it again. I didn’t have to impress a girl.
Still the girls were impressed.

My wife had read this copy before me. The pages are dog eared.
There’s little in terms of plot. Sid just goes from one thing to the next.
But it is reflective of life, though few have his gifts.
Still the girls were impressed.

It is put aside now.
In years the time will come; I’ll pick it up
Again, or pass it along.
The girls won’t matter then.