
I got my new Fender Squire Fretless Christmas eve would you believe it? Played it today and did my practice routine on it and I adore it...especially for the money. Yeah yeah I wish it had black hardware and active pickups--and right now until I fool around with it there's a little buzz at the twelfth fret line...but it is incredibly well made,with a thin narrow fast neck and it's own unique tone that sounds truly fretless to me.....I believe that once i get the black, nylon wrapped, fender strings on the sound produced will be perfect....
Playing fretless does tune you up...during practice today there were definitely some iffy notes that never appeared on my fretted six. The 4 is a vacation from the neck and the weight of my Yamaha 6--and I sometimes feel like a lost little child on the 6 fretboard but not that way on the 4....The Squire fretless also fits in with the old guy sound vibe I want to produce...more mature, yeah thats it, not old--mature--riiiight.



I am lucky in the fact that I can cannibalize some material from my guitarist pedalboards and begin creating my bass pedalboard. I've got compressors, tuners, volume pedals, flange, chorus blahblahblah pedals. I had two professional airline cased pedalboards i used on the road as a guitarist----one of which I'll convert to bass. My delay is in the fact that my wife and I are rehabbing the studio house right now and I have to wait pulling my shit from storage to begin working on this new pedalboard project.....It will be really interesting to see what I will transfer from my previous guitarist life to my new bass life.




Remember when I said that this time around with music I would fight the acquire gear syndrome? Yeah well not so much...As I learn more with the bass old feelings arise..more basses, bigger amps, pedalboards.....I love this Mark Bass NYC 1-12 combo I purchased...great sound--Lot's of power, lightweight----but small...and as we all know electronic musicians gotta stack---even if you are creating the mini-tower of doom amp line--you gotta stack. I've been fighting against the urge of getting a Mark Bass 2-10 traveler speaker cabinet to add to my NYc amp. Adding a cab increases the power of the NYc from 300 to 500 watts at 8 oms....and of course it's a stack--a small stack but that's immaterial it's a stack. The problem is of course money. Mark Bass makes great stuff and great stuff costs. So it may be awhile before I can accomplish this but---gives you something to think about when you can't play.



Practice, Practice, Practice---with some success and hopefully more as time goes by. I have admitted to myself that I really never want to go back to playing regular guitar again--
Committing yourself to a new instrument seems to be the best way back to practice.
This produces a beginners mind that I have not had for a long, long time---everything is new and difficult...and I am filled with demands on myself. I play with my brain and not with my soul or emotions which took me a long time to admit....because of this I have no great flashes of insight while performing and I absolutely have to have a wiring diagram of what I want to do and what I can do in my mind.
I fall in between extremes when it comes to practicing---Most musicians either love or hate practicing.....I really don't have extreme feelings on it. I practice because I have to---not much natural talent in my DNA....I do better when I practice on a routine basis...with a specific time set in my head and on a daily or every other day schedule. I don't preconceive what i am going to work on--I do just let it flow and If it is instantly apparent that "I am going to suck today" I stop immediately so i do not practice in mistakes. Otherwise I do not think about how I practiced purposefully since I am my own worst critic and enemy on performance standards----I practice and let it go.


















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