Friday 21 August 2009

LOGMAN Builds a Bass or: How To Make Something Take 20 Times Longer Than it Should Have

Our company's managing director recently made a trip to America, so while there I managed to get him to bring me back a large quantity of parts for a bass guitar. I figured this would be the cheapest way to make a great sounding bass guitar for all my recording needs - and I was right. However, as brilliant as I am, the process was not all smooth sailing, as you will find out below in:

The LOGMAN Step-by-Step Guide to Building a Bass Guitar


Step 1: Purchase parts as per below

Step 2: Attach pickups to control plate, feeding pickup wires through bass body chamber.





Step 3: Attach pickups to bass body.

Step 4: Attach control plate and bridge to bass body.



Step 6: Realise you forgot to place the mounting pads under the pickups, which was why you were having such a hard time screwing in the pickups.

Step 6: Remove pickups, attach mounting pads and replace pickups.

Step 7: Attach pickguard.

Step 8: Go to attach neck, but realise there are no screws to do so.



Step 9: Go to Mitre 10 to purchase screws that look the correct size but are too big.

Step 10: Laugh. A lot. Go watch Roddy Piper and Hulk Hogan set a steel cage match for Halloween Havoc.

Step 11: After a week of ignoring the bass, install tuners to head of neck.



Step 12: After another week of ignoring the bass, finally order screws for the neck.



Step 13: Screws arrive a week later. Look for power drill that has somehow disappeared into a black hole so attempt to drill holes with someone's cheap and powerless drill. Fail.

Step 14: Borrow power drill, drill holes and attach neck.

Step 15: Install strings. Cut the G too short and have it somehow disintegrate during the tuning process, leaving it completely unusable and impossible to successfully set intonation and tuning.

Step 16: Order another set of bass strings from the US

Step 17: Install strings.

Step 18: Go to adjust action. Discover you do not have an allen key small enough to make adjustments on the bridge.

Step 19: Go to Mitre 10 and Bunnings to buy another set of allen keys - one that contains a super small allen key to adjust the bridge on the bass. They are lame, so you will fail.

Step 20: Find a cheap clearance open set of allen keys at The Warehouse that actually contains the desired size allen key. Say 'boo-yaa' and purchase.

Step 21: Make necessary adjustments to the truss rod and bridge, adjusting string height and intonation.

Step 22: Discover one pick-up is shorting out, so re-cut and solder neck pickup wire.

Step 23: Re-attach ground wire properly and screw control plate back on.

Step 24: Channel Strong Mad and go dow dow dow dow dow DOW DOW DOW DOW because you now have a kick ass bass!!!

Step 25: Don't worry that it could have been done in a matter of days instead of a month.Freak out because you no longer have any excuses to keep delaying your recording. SNAP!

Tuesday 18 August 2009

LOGMAN is a Basterd

And he has his ticket to see Inglourious Basterds on Thursday night.

Quite looking forward to that...

Friday 14 August 2009

Decadence

Well this was odd. For such a long time now I have seen the Head Automatica album Decadence around, and for some strange reason I was sure I had heard it was kinda dancey and groovy.

So LOGMAN found it brand new for just $1 today and bought it.

And it is really kinda emo.

I'm not saying it is awful, or emo awfulness on the level of Panic at the Disco, but it is not at all what I expected.


Updated:
Dance Party Plus is pretty kick ass. The vocals of the Dupree sisters really adds something to the sound.

Thursday 13 August 2009

To Kill a Mockingbird

So LOGMAN had free tickets to go to the Christchurch Repertory Theatre's production of To Kill a Mockingbird.

Being quite familiar with the story, but not overly familiar (I read the book back in High School, and have the seen the movie twice) I felt this would be a bit of an interesting experience. Nothing could have prepared me for what I was about to witness.

So the show opened with slides of black slaves with an old gospel recording of We Shall Overcome playing. This might have been a great way of building an emotional response in the audience before the play began... except the sound system in the Repertory is awful. It is like a couple of speakers taken out of an old car have been put on the wall and mixed through a cardboard box. You are unlikely to even appreciate Queen Live at Wembley through those so you can imagine how much emotion this stirred in me.

Then we begin the show, and I am immediately drawn to my most biggest peeves of all peeves when it comes to acting: accents.

I've always had the opinion that if you can't do an accent, don't try. And if your whole cast are incapable of doing an accent, then you best just scrap the whole idea. Obviously the directors of this play do not share my disdain for such inconsistencies, as for the next 2 hours I got to listen one boy mush his words so bad that at times he just sounded like a cockney young boy from Oliver Twist, an old man that sounded like he had just come down from the Highlands, and old ladies that didn't know if they were American or New Zealanders. Apart from Atticus, NO ONE IN THE ENTIRE CAST was capable of doing a convincing southern accent for more than a few words, some even less. Fortunately, the worst of the accents was to come in the 2nd half of the play...

Next thing that impressed me was the women wearing shoe polish to look African-American. Classy.

Wait! Here comes a legitimate black man! Yes, the one Maori person to be cast in this play was - for some reason - placed in the role of the Reverend. At first I questioned why he wasn't automatically given the role of Tom Robinson (the black man accused of raping and beating Mayella Ewell), but once he too attempted to create a southern accent by speaking like Kermit the Frog with a blocked nose - and thus causing LOGMAN to suffer a bout of hysteria - I found the casting decision a bit more agreeable. But seriously, is Christchurch suffering from that much inherent 'white pride' that they can't even let Maori people be part of their theatre scene?

At this stage LOGMAN is asking himself 'How could this possibly get more enjoyable?'

And then the gods of theatre answered my question, when Atticus Finch walked on stage... looking like Colonel Sanders

Colonel
Mutha fucking
Sanders

I kid you not; the guy looked like he was wearing a Colonel Sanders outfit. And a cheap one at that.

To the actor's credit, his performance was the strongest and he handled his accent well. But the costume just left me waiting for him to say something like "Tom Robinson is an innocent man... just like my 13 secret herbs and spices"

ON TO THE TRIAL and bah gawd Alan Partridge is prosecuting! "I call to the stand Mayella Ewell.. A-HA!!!" Oh how I wish he had done that. Another Colonel Sanders lookalike serves as the judge - I believe he might have been Admiral Sanders or something because he had a nice grey suit instead of his counterpart's chicken frying outfit. And this brought about a superb performance of Bob Ewell. And by superb, I mean a man with massive padding to make him look fat who spoke in an accent I couldn't define and delivering brilliant dialogue like "You are tricking me with your trickery!" like he was an extra on Shortland St. LOGMAN laughed some more.

After the 1st act plodded along with all the grace of Johnny Rotten with Mad Cow disease, I found the intermission a great chance to regain my senses and ponder what might happen in the 2nd half: would Tom Robinson be sent to his death? Would Oliver Twist ask for more supper? Would the people of Maycomb run out of shoe polish? Was Rambo going to save the day? I just couldn't wait!

So the 2nd act continued the trial and that meant it was time for Tom Robinson to take the stand. Again, the shoe polish effect was strong, as was the actor's constant moving of his lips to make them look big. Because, you know - African-Americans have big lips.

I kid you not.

And even better, I believe he had been watching Malibu's Most Wanted to get inspiration for his accent. I don't think I ever imagined Tom Robinson to sound so gangster in 1932 - bravo to you, young sir!

Of course the trial ended, lights faded, something happened that I couldn't understand because the children were talking and their accents were all over the place. Then Bob attacked and Boo Radley made his entrance like Jason in Friday the 13th. And looking like Don Johnson. Then again, it might have actually been Don Johnson... I mean, does anyone even know where he is these days?

I should also point out here that Boo Radley has barely been mentioned until now, apart from one boring occassion at the start of the play where the children were playing outside his house. I'm pretty sure he was a rather big deal in the book which made his appearance at the end all the more important...

And that was the end. But not before we got another performance of We Shall Overcome through the cardboard speakers of doom. But this time with slides from the Million Man March, and Martin Luther King, Jr, and Malcolm X and... Obama? Yes - it ended with a picture of Obama in the White House.

I guess the moral of the story is a black man was wrongly convicted and put to death so the USA could have a black President

Either way, it was a fun night for the whole family.

Wednesday 12 August 2009

Logan Through the Decades

I got bored today (OH MY GOSH SHOCK HORROR SAY IT ISN'T SO) and was forwarded a link to the popular website http://www.yearbookyourself.com/ and had more fun than when I made myself a Transformer.

So prepare yourself for 50 YEARS OF LOG!!!


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Monday 10 August 2009

Ferris Bueller's Day Off

A big 'OOPS' on my part - in my little tribute to the late John Hughes, I forgot to mention one of my absolute favourite movies of all time; Ferris Bueller's Day Off.

I have to give John Hughes a big truckload of respect for that film, as that movie is just so much fun. I don't think my life would be the same without it. Seriously. It is right up there with The Last Starfighter in terms of 'movies that define my childhood and subsequent years in my 20's when I was rediscovering my childhood because there is something disturbing in my brain'

If you haven't seen it, I can only imagine you are not my friend and you will be watching it in the next 24 hours. If you have seen it and don't enjoy it, I can only imagine you have no soul and were sent by the devil himself to make life miserable for others.

For everyone else, let's just watch some highlights and remember the talent that John Hughes had for giving us all some genuine good times in the 80's


Friday 7 August 2009

In Our Most Convenient Definitions...

RIP to Mr. John Hughes.

Sad to think that another icon of life in the 80's has passed away - obviously the god of the 80's are not happy! How may we appease you, so that we that don't lose any more great artists who brought us joy in the decade of awesome???

Anyways, I just wanted to say that John Hughes was great. Even if he hadn't actually made a movie since 1991 (according to IMDB he was still writing under the name Edmond Dantes though). Seriously, I had no idea! Despite that, The Breakfast Club, Weird Science, Pretty in Pink and Sixteen Candles were core parts of growing up in the 80's. To this day I still remember the first time I watched The Breakfast Club when it was shown on TV, and they edited Judd Nelson's line of "Eat. My. Shorts." to "Eat. My. Shoes." Because somehow that was less offensive??? Still a great movie and def not the sort of thing Hollywood would try and attempt again - 5 kids stuck in a room all day with no other characters except a jackass of a principal.

And Sixteen Candles is just pure gold. Very easy to forget how funny that movie really is; I watched it with some friends a couple of years ago (they are a few years younger than me and had never even heard of it) and they were cracking up the whole way through. Good to see it still has relevance.

Thank you Mr. Hughes for all the memories.


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