Last Call (as in, we hung in there untill...): John, Ira, Karl, and David Photo by Mrs. Falkenstein |
We also added Run by Collective Soul. I used Audacity to transpose the keys of my mp3's so that I could practice the tunes in the altered keys. That is a revelation for me. It really makes a difference, as certain fingerings need to be worked out in advance on the bass. I ended up singing lead on Big Me, "Heroes", The Kids Are Alright, & Shambala. I think that's the most I've sang in a long, long time. It was a lot of fun. Meehan's has a decent stage that is raised up and roomy. It was also the first time I can think of that I didn't play through an amp. We all went direct into the mixing board. David used a Vox pedalboard for his tones, along with a crafty "harmonizing" pedal for the vocals. Gotta love that! Ira played a set of Alesis electronic drums. Electric violin added some really nice passages as well. No stage volume! We monitored with ear buds.
My setup was similar to what I used recently in Savannah with Square One: my bass pedalboard in conjunction with a Boss GT-8 for the "guitar" portion of the NS/Stick. These two signals were mixed together with the Boss LS-2 pedal that I normally use as a simple A/B switch. The issue with this setup is that it takes up twice as much floor space. Perhaps one day I can streamline it. Had always heard about how the Line 6 Pod XT Live and later models have the capability of processing 2 signals at once. Perhaps that could be in my future? The NS sounded great, with a pick, my fingers, and tapping. Funny how the volume felt consistent. I compressed it, as I always do. I had raised the action a bit and I think that helped get a bit more tone from the tapping and less fret buzz with the plucking. Was it too much? Perhaps I need to check the neck relief and readjust the string height. I play it fingerstyle more than tapping, but that's the beauty of this instrument: you can change your technique on the fly and it works for all of them - even slap if you're careful. I received some nice compliments on my tone from the guys in the headlining band BackFlash. Lead singer and front-person-extraordinaire Karen Tortoriello and her group put on a great, high energy show after ours, with some choice covers: The James Gang's Walk Away, The Motels' Only The Lonely, and the Clash's Brand New Cadillac. It was nice to unwind with a few pints of Guiness and savor our triumph. We made it happen!
My 8-string NS/Stick appears to have a custom headstock! |
I worked on the solo for Baby Blue, using right hand tapping. In a perfect world I would have gone for it. Not this time! Maybe next. I did get a half decent leslie vibe for some neo-organ tones in No Matter What and the Petty tunes. Mostly, I just tried to remember everything I had just learned the last couple of nights! We made it through roughly 20 songs in 90 minutes. Highlights not already mentioned: a fun romp through the Raspberries' Go All The Way and enough energy left for some vintage Who a la The Kids Are Alright. I like how that middle section after the bridge has an uncertain feel about it. I enjoy singing that one - it doesn't get very high and no big Roger Daltrey screams. If we have fun, the audience will have fun watching us. All in all, it was a good night of music for a very worthy cause.