I think we're just more persistent!Tarekith wrote:The analog ones
You can read that how you want.
Honestly give me all of it!
Tube, Solid State, Analogue, Digital.
I love it all!
I think we're just more persistent!Tarekith wrote:The analog ones
What, from having to lift all that heavy gear around? LOLTarekith wrote:The analog ones
Right, not being afraid of analog gear because it's heavy would be a start towards being a tougher person!DJVespers wrote:What, from having to lift all that heavy gear around? LOLTarekith wrote:The analog ones
Interestingly enough, a lot of good ideas or basis for tracks I've had over the years have been when trying out a new thing, including betas of new upgrades. In fact I reckon the ratio is probably something like 70-30% - mainly because when trying out something new I'm more likely to start a new idea with it. Otherwise I can be stuck in tweak land for sometimes quite literally years.DJVespers wrote:Good insights mate. I agree, to a point. On the flipside, DAWs and plugins have a major learning curve on them. With the rate at which new software is coming out, it's possible to be a student your entire life and a master never. The jack of all trades and master of none. So many people I come across know their software at only a surface level, because they're always fixated on the newest thing. Victims of savvy marketing and availability of pirated warez![]()
Rather, I've always opted to delve into the tools I have chosen more deeply. Given all the time in the world, I'd try out all the DAWs. But given that time is not something you can currently buy more of, I've chosen to focus on a narrower range of tools.
then there's those of us who started out as roadies and now have fucked backs. My definition of heavy lifting is carrying a 300kg mixer up 8 flights of stairs that are too narrow to get enough guys around in 38 deg C. heat.Machinesworking wrote:Right, not being afraid of analog gear because it's heavy would be a start towards being a tougher person!DJVespers wrote:What, from having to lift all that heavy gear around? LOLTarekith wrote:The analog ones
Seriously, that has never been my concern in gear purchasing..... "Oh gee? it sounds great but it weighs more than 8 pounds!"
Unless you have a bad back I have never gotten why anybody would think like that? but then I owned a Marshall Major half stack. The head alone was around 80 pounds! Probably about four times the weight that most people here consider and intolerable amount for their entire live setup!
I like how you bragged about hurting your back?Forge. wrote: then there's those of us who started out as roadies and now have fucked backs. My definition of heavy lifting is carrying a 300kg mixer up 8 flights of stairs that are too narrow to get enough guys around in 38 deg C. heat.
I'll take the laptop thanks.
Unless you have a bad back I have never gotten why anybody would think like that?
well YOU were bragging about your 80 pound Marshall and how no one round here would want to lift more than that for their whole rig.Machinesworking wrote:I like how you bragged about hurting your back?Forge. wrote: then there's those of us who started out as roadies and now have fucked backs. My definition of heavy lifting is carrying a 300kg mixer up 8 flights of stairs that are too narrow to get enough guys around in 38 deg C. heat.
I'll take the laptop thanks.![]()
Let me point out something in this thread.
Unless you have a bad back I have never gotten why anybody would think like that?
Not at all trying to be rude, but there are ways of lifting things that do not injure your back, lifting 300+ pounds of gear isn't it, though being a roadie pretty much is a back injury in and of itself.Forge. wrote: Anyway, having actually done shit like that, I don't see it as bragging, I see it as pointing out what a fucking stupid thing to do it is. No matter whose backstage pass you get.
trouble with those kind of jobs though is you invariably end up having to carry it around a corner, on stairs and things like that which totally throw the proper lifting idea out the window. And that was 300 KILOS - about 6-700lbs - a mixer like the old PM3000 which was about 5-6 feet long and maybe 1 foot thick in it's case - there's no safe way to get that around a corner on stairs with not enough guys.Machinesworking wrote:Not at all trying to be rude, but there are ways of lifting things that do not injure your back, lifting 300+ pounds of gear isn't it, though being a roadie pretty much is a back injury in and of itself.Forge. wrote: Anyway, having actually done shit like that, I don't see it as bragging, I see it as pointing out what a fucking stupid thing to do it is. No matter whose backstage pass you get.![]()
My point is a little anaerobic exercise from lifting your own gear in the realm of 80lbs which any healthy person should be fine with, is not the enemy, laziness though...
king of lazy here!!! ask me anything..Machinesworking wrote:Not at all trying to be rude, but there are ways of lifting things that do not injure your back, lifting 300+ pounds of gear isn't it, though being a roadie pretty much is a back injury in and of itself.Forge. wrote: Anyway, having actually done shit like that, I don't see it as bragging, I see it as pointing out what a fucking stupid thing to do it is. No matter whose backstage pass you get.![]()
My point is a little anaerobic exercise from lifting your own gear in the realm of 80lbs which any healthy person should be fine with, is not the enemy, laziness though...

Yeah that's why I only think the rare monster who's 250+ pounds of pure healthy muscle with no family history of back injuries should be a roadie full time. Like I said, that job is a back injury in and of itself.Forge. wrote:
trouble with those kind of jobs though is you invariably end up having to carry it around a corner, on stairs and things like that which totally throw the proper lifting idea out the window. And that was 300 KILOS - about 6-700lbs - a mixer like the old PM3000 which was about 5-6 feet long and maybe 1 foot thick in it's case - there's no safe way to get that around a corner on stairs with not enough guys.