10/22/2012

Hofner Icon Club Bass - Vintage Sunburst Review

Hofner Icon Club Bass - Vintage Sunburst
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I'll qualify my remarks by noting I've been playing bass over 40 years. I own, and have played, good stuff, and stuff that looks better than it plays. This Hofner Club Bass (C-Bass, C-Series), made in Indonesia, is designed as a vintage guitar, and achieves that look and feel completely. It is short-scale, with a body the same size and dimensions as a Les Paul. It is finished caringly, and the woodgrain in both the spruce and maple is handsome. The gloss (lacquer?) finish is flawless. There is no neck binding. The pickguard is nicely executed in a too-white pearloid-look plastic, which does not detract aesthetically. The sunburst coloration has an accurate '50s/'60s vintage look. The volume knobs are tiny and crappy, and I replaced them. The rosewood fingerboard has a high-quality finish and look to it. I replaced the factory roundwound strings with Labella Beatle Bass Flatwounds, and the hollow (I don't believe there's a sustain block) body with flatwounds yields the bottomy, woody sound you'd expect. The guitar has a quite broad tonal range, and unconventional switches. It very comfortable on the knee or over the shoulder. It DOES feel extremely light, and one is tempted to say, CHEAP, as a result. However, it plays great right out of the box (no set-up), has great tone, is effortless to sling for 3 hours, and you don't see them around, either in Indonesian, Chinese (Contemporary $700) or German ($2000+) iterations. The "cool" factor is big, and the price makes it a no-brainer as a second or back-up bass.

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10/21/2012

Florea Recital II Double Bass Outfit 3/4 Size Review

Florea Recital II Double Bass Outfit 3/4 Size
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I have always been told, why purchase something cheap when you know it will eventually breakdown, well, I wasn't expecting what appeared to be a solid upright bass to become such a disaster. I purchased my bass January 09, by April I had noticed bending and chipping of the ebony board, ok, so they replaced the bass ,sent a new one. It was ok at first, then I started noticing that the sound quality was not the greatest, string vibration, and that simply made it difficult to deal with. I must have moved the bridge around 100 times, but nothing seemed to work. I gave up and had an expert explain the awful sound I was getting: here's a little list: a) the ebony board was really mahogany and the wood was simply painted black to look like ebony. Besides this outrageous lie by the company, the wood wasn't totally dry, so over the winter it bowed and the bass became unplayable. The bridge is a joke and the strings, perhaps the worst you could ask for. So, I got the board reshaped at a local luthier, a good adjustable bridge, and new set of strings: Total cost: [...], plus %500 purchase price: [...], not counting a year of dealing with a third class instrument. Moral of the story, should have bought a %1,500 bass from a local dealer and kept Chinese crap from entering our music education system.

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Garritan Personal Orchestra Review

Garritan Personal Orchestra
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I am surprised that this is the first review for GPO on Amazon, considering the growing following this collection has.
This is one impressive product - a comprehensive list of sounds, that work very well together. Obviously the samples in more expensive packages are more impressive in their basic sound, but if used with skill it is truly astonishing what can be achieved with this set - one has only to listen to the numerous user demos on their web site to see for yourself. The situation here is that the sum is in fact greater than its parts.
In this price range, there really isn't anything that can compare to it. The quality of the results achievable are good enough for professional use, and in fact it is getting considerable professional application in many different areas.
Anyone looking for orchestral sounds, but unwilling (or more likely unable) to the spend the thousands necessary for the big libraries should take a look at what is being offered here.
Really, bravo to the Garritan team for creating such an impressive library at a price point accessible to almost anyone.

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Whether you're a professional film composer who needs to produce orchestral mockups at a moment's notice, a hobbyist who wants to create great sounding orchestral music, or a student who is studying the art and craft of orchestration, Personal Orchestra will simplify creative work at a price that won't break the bank. In the studio, at home or on the road, Personal Orchestra is for every musician.Personal Orchestra contains samples of all the major instruments in a symphony orchestra-strings, brass, woodwinds, and percussion-as well as instruments not found in other orchestral libraries-a Steinway® concert grand piano, a Stradivarius violin, Guarneri Violin, Gagliano Violin, Wurlitzer and Venus concert harps, Haynes flutes, Heckel bassoons, a Mustel celeste, a Rudolf von Beckerath concert pipe organ, a harpsichord, and many other exquisite instruments. There is everything one needs to create orchestrations of any size! In fact, as a whole, Personal Orchestra has the most expensive collection and highest caliber of orchestral instruments of any orchestral sample library ever recorded!Build ensembles one instrument at a time from individual solo instruments. This allows the user to construct ensembles or sections of any size - solo instruments, duos, trios, quartets, chamber ensembles, small orchestras, or a full symphonic orchestra.Personal Orchestra allows you to create realistic sounding orchestral music quickly and easily, right "out of the box." No confusin...

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10/20/2012

Crystalcello MC500 Oil Varnished Flamed 4/4 Size Orchestra Cello with Lightweight Case + Padded Bag + Bow + Accessories Review

Crystalcello MC500 Oil Varnished Flamed 4/4 Size Orchestra Cello with Lightweight Case + Padded Bag + Bow + Accessories
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This is a pretty good cello for the price, but it requires a bit of attention from the buyer before it's really playable. The cello arrives, as advertised, with the strings slack and the bridge un-installed -- and rightly so, it shouldn't ship under tension. Putting the bridge up is covered, well enough, in the enclosed instructions.
But, before you do that, the fingerboard and nut (the little block at the top end of the strings) can really use some final finish work. As is understandable in such an inexpensive cello, the finish work has been done quite hastily and is a bit ragged. But, it's a simple matter to get the scratch marks out of the fingerboard and nut with some sandpaper of progressively finer grits -- sanding *with* the grain! Fortunately, these two parts don't have varnish on them, so you can sand them up nicely without having to refinish anything.
That will help with the cosmetics of the cello, but it also needed some help with the playability. As with any stringed instrument, how easy it is to play varies with how high the "action" is -- the distance between the strings and the neck. If the strings are too high, it takes a lot of effort to push them down to the neck, and gets tiring and painful for the player (especially if she's only 12). The default action on this cello (and, probably, all inexpensive cellos) is way too high, and MUST be adjusted before this is a usable instrument.
This will require a tiny file to deepen the notches in the nut that the strings ride in, until the bottom of each string is about 1/32" from the fingerboard just in front of the nut. I've been playing guitar for 30 years and have encountered this issue many times before, so I had the tools to, and no qualms about, doing this myself. If you're unable to do it yourself, you will have to find someone who can, or you will be unhappy with the playability of the cello. After the notches are deep enough, the nut should be filed down so that the strings are only half-way in the notches, and half-showing above the wood -- the strings should not be buried in what will probably be very deep notches once they're properly cut.
After the nut is right, you'll probably also have to deepen the notches on the bridge, too. Install the bridge and tighten the strings up to the proper pitch (or close). I'm not a professional luthier, but I measured a friend's well-set-up cello, and matched the heights of each string above the lower-end of the fingerboard: C-string=12/32" (or 3/8"), G-string=10/32", D-string=8/32", A-string=5/32". The lower strings were pretty close already, but the highest string needed to go down quite a bit. Especially since it's the one that's played "way up the neck" the most, its action is important.
Again the strings shouldn't be "buried" in the notches, so you'll have to sand or file the bridge until the notches are tiny nicks again. This is tougher, because you can't just flatten the top of the bridge -- it was, and should stay a "knife edge", so you have to sand the side of the bridge until it tapers up to the new notches' depths. (But notice that the bridge is flat on one side, and the taper is only on the "front". Don't sand the flat side.) Again, if you're uncomfortable doing this yourself, find someone who can. I don't think it necessarily has to be a professional luthier (though that's the safest route), but someone who's used to working with wood. It's not rocket science, but it does require some care.
Also, the strings that come with these cellos aren't very good. It was certainly playable, but we replaced them with a known-brand set, and it sounds noticeably better. The old ones are in the case, though, for emergency replacements.
One more thing -- while I had the strings off, I noticed that the tuning pegs would turn easily for a quarter-turn, then get tight, then easy again. This turned out to be caused by the pegs themselves being undetectably not-quite round -- probably (and understandably) caused by the weather difference between China and Southern California. It was causing the cello to be tricky to tune, because of the non-even force required to turn the pegs.
I fixed the problem by removing each peg and sanding the part that rides inside the hole, causing a "matte finish". Then I tightly re-inserted the peg, and turned it. When removed again, I could see where the peg was tight by where the matte finish had been burnished shiny. I sanded the shiny parts, and did it again. Eventually, each peg would burnish all the way around, and also turn smoothly and consistently.
If you've read this far, you're probably thinking that this is a "no good" cello. But I actually feel that it only suffers from some understandably hasty manufacturing, and that with a little extra attention, has become a quite good cello. I feel that, at the "price" of X dollars, a few hours of my time, and a new set of strings, it's a terrific cello. If you're expecting Ready-to-Play out of the box, you won't get it at this price -- but if you're willing to touch it up a little, or have someone else do it, it's a very good "deal". Other than the details I tweaked, the main part of the cello is well made (though the varnish is a little thick), the wood is pretty, and the staining is a nice deep red-brown (we don't like the usual "orange" finishes).
By the way, the company was great to deal with, too. They "upgraded" the cello from the described "alloy tailpiece" to an real ebony one. That's probably a welcome free upgrade for most people, but I actually prefer the alloy tailpiece because it has "designed in" fine tuners, where the ebony tailpiece has those atrocious kludged-on ones. I emailed them and they immediately sent an alloy tailpiece -- we had it two days later.


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West Side Story Suite (arr. Raimundo Penaforte) Review

West Side Story Suite (arr. Raimundo Penaforte)
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The violin and piano parts are separated into 2 books. The print is nice and big. Even though Stephen Sondheim is credited for lyrics, this version does not have any lyrics. It's only piano and violin. It's exactly what I wanted. So I'm pretty happy with this version.

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10/19/2012

G Series NEX Flamed Maple Acoustic Electric Guitar Review

G Series NEX Flamed Maple Acoustic Electric Guitar
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If you are into fingerstyle blues - this Korean made Takamine guitar is a great place to start. It features a well matched spruce top, laminated maple sides and back and an excellent electronic system that includes a tuner. The tone on this model is "old blues" with just a hint of brightness...but is missing just a little mid range, however this is something that should improve with playing. The violin burst finish is matte in texture and in color has that old faded blues box look. The neck is in a mild v shape, 14 frets accessible, with a nut width of 1 11/16. If you have big fingers, perhaps further research into guitars with nut widths of 1 3/4 would be in your interest, but I have found it to be comfortable.
I bought it to replace another guitar that I had outgrown and have found this to be an excellent intermediate choice. Perfect for learning fingerstyle blues.
The only negatives is that the back and sides are maple laminate and this model lacks a cutaway. However, for the cost this is a good value and if you feel the need for a cutaway - Takamine makes this model with the same finish plus the cutaway.
Recommended and good value for what you will spend!!!!

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Frost, Robert S. - Christmas Kaleidoscope - Cello - Neil A. Kjos Music Co. Review

Frost, Robert S. - Christmas Kaleidoscope - Cello - Neil A. Kjos Music Co.
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These books are wonderful to encourage duets. The cello book works great alongside the violin book, and even though one child is more advanced than the other, the arrangements are simple enough for both to play. A great way to encourage learning how to play with another musician with accessible arrangements. Each child has had fun picking either the melody part, or from two harmony parts.

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