This is the name of two bands:
The first is a current day band formed in… Read Full Bio ↴This is the name of two bands:
The first is a current day band formed in Colchester, Essex by Matthew Simpkins (vocals, Hammond, guitar), Mark Turnbull (drums), Toby Bull (bass, saxophone, vocals), and Adrian Johnson (vocals, guitar) in 2001. The group began playing at pubs at Essex and Suffolk, and were highly praised due to their unique sound and talent. In 2006, they produced "Sound About You," an LP that successfully captures the band's talent in songwriting and in performance, which includes the hit song "(Not Now) I'm In a Hot Tub."
The second is also known as Fuzz Face. A solo project by Midnight Oil's founding member, guitarist, keyboardist and leading songwriter Jim Moginie. The four-track EP Fuzz Face was recorded in a small home studio with Oils' producer Nick Launay and released in 1996, with fellow Oils guitarist Martin Rotsey contributing under the pseudonym 'The Family Dog' - a term that Moginie would later use for his live band, 'Jim Moginie and The Family Dog' (a spoof of the band name 'Sly and the Family Stone').
The first is a current day band formed in… Read Full Bio ↴This is the name of two bands:
The first is a current day band formed in Colchester, Essex by Matthew Simpkins (vocals, Hammond, guitar), Mark Turnbull (drums), Toby Bull (bass, saxophone, vocals), and Adrian Johnson (vocals, guitar) in 2001. The group began playing at pubs at Essex and Suffolk, and were highly praised due to their unique sound and talent. In 2006, they produced "Sound About You," an LP that successfully captures the band's talent in songwriting and in performance, which includes the hit song "(Not Now) I'm In a Hot Tub."
The second is also known as Fuzz Face. A solo project by Midnight Oil's founding member, guitarist, keyboardist and leading songwriter Jim Moginie. The four-track EP Fuzz Face was recorded in a small home studio with Oils' producer Nick Launay and released in 1996, with fellow Oils guitarist Martin Rotsey contributing under the pseudonym 'The Family Dog' - a term that Moginie would later use for his live band, 'Jim Moginie and The Family Dog' (a spoof of the band name 'Sly and the Family Stone').
Boom Box
Fuzzface Lyrics
We have lyrics for 'Boom Box' by these artists:
Andrew Huang i wanna go all the way with you hold you close…
Boom Boom Boom Videos Images Shopping Books News Maps Flights Finance मराठी…
Chris Brown Aye aye aye my chris breezy aye i love you…
Hyper Crush You can feel it when the groove stops listen to…
Institute We're going down the tubes, to the underground What we've co…
Institute (Gavin Rossdale) We're going down the tubes, to the underground What we've c…
Kianush Immer noch Boom Box Denn der Nachbar ruft Cops Hängen auf Ro…
Rhema Soul K-nuff verse: Jam it in your boom box, your boy is…
Institute We're going down the tubes, to the underground What we've c…
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@JimmyHagerstrom
Hi Julian! You aren´t from Sweden huh? The surname Holm is very common here in Sweden anyway...
Would you like to tell more precise where you are stuck, with what? Is the breadboarding where it takes stop for you? When you are trying to take a schematic and put a circuit on the breadboard? Is it something specific that you have been trying to do but haven´t been able to overcome? Some circuit you cant get working?
I wouldn´t mind to try to help you overcome the obstacles so you can keep on advancing to your next level with electronics. Getting stuck is so un-fun and bad for creativity so i would be glad to help you with your journey. I´m no electrical engineer but i have made the journey myself with building kits - building from stripboard/vero layouts - building from schematics - making my own schematics and circuits - designing and making my own PCB´s for pedals/synthesizer circuits. I feel like this hobby is the best thing thats ever happen to me, it has been so extremely fun. Everything about it. To learn, create, advance, trying, failing, troubleshooting, getting ideas on the bus i have to draw a sketch of immidiately and try as soon as i come home. It is so rewarding and healthy for the mind and soul. Challenging and interesting.
Electronics is not easy. You WILL get stuck. What i like about it though is that you physically can track down and find the faults. It doesn´t give you a error-code like a computer "FaultErrorUpdate404.exe is computing process corruption, bios delete C:. Erase the Cat. Press Try Again!.
If you get how i mean. If you have a short circuit for example, there will be a physical short somewhere on the 10x10cm board that you will be able to find, sooner or later. In the beginning there is a lot of headscratching when troubleshooting but the more you do it the better will you be at troubleshooting. You will be a lot faster and it will be a lot easier when you have methodical ways and a better overall understanding of circuits so you know where to look when a certain fault is showing its ugly face. As a beginner you have to just be persistent sometimes, find A way. Maybe not the best or fastest way but atleast you now have a way that you know will work for sure, get you to your goal.
It´s a lot easier if you have someone to bounce your ideas off of and talk to when getting stuck, we learn a lot by putting word to our thoughts.
So if you want someone to talk electronics with back and forth and maybe share our current projects and learn from each other you´re more than welcome to send me a e-mail or text me att fb or something. You can find my mailaddress and my name here on my youtube page. I´m curious where you are stuck :-).
If anyone else reads this and wants to talk electronics, feel free to reach out!
@hisproperty1438
G'day Josh,
I'm enjoying your "How To" video. I'm about ½ way through so far, but I had to write you a note.
You've just encouraged us to write, so here's some tips I have to share (although, I feel really silly telling you this). I made a couple of volume boxes & A/B switches where I made some mistakes. So I ended up making some new leads for my multimeter to help find the problems. I bought a few 6.35mm TS jacks, a bunch of ¼" banana plugs, some 2-core wire, & made up a few test leads to connect my DMM to the boxes. Here's what I made;
1- Single jack to 2 banana plugs. I wired up the tip to a red plug, & the sleeve to a black plug. When I use this lead in the box, select the Continuity Test, & test is negative, then the earth & positive are not connected. I can also use this lead to test pickups in guitars.
2- Single jack to single plug (4 off). I wired up the tip of 2 jacks to 2 red plugs, & the sleeves of 2 more jacks to 2 black plugs(single wires can be used). When I run a continuity test, 2 black plugs should test positive, & 2 red plugs should test positive on a by-pass circuit.
3- Finally, I've connected solid core wires to 2 banana plugs. The solid core wire should be sized to fit breadboard sockets. I can then use these to test my breadboard circuits for voltage, resistance, or continuity.
I hope this helps someone out here in JHS-land.
Once again, I am enjoying your video. Thanks for the great program. Please please please do not stop making them. I tell you what - if you promise to keep making these videos, I promise that I will not start my own pedal company to put you out of business. Or, in other words, I promise to use what I'll learn for niceness, instead of evil.
Keep up the good work
Andrew
BTW, your desk is a mess, which is good to see. :)
@chilidogcowboy
Dude-thanks for teaching people how to catch their own fish.
@jhspedals
Any time!
@nmbnmb7256
"Fishing is not that hard"
-R. Swanson
@gregheaney
I'm only a few months into pedal building and I've never heard a more reassuring phrase than "This is the part of the build where things start disappearing." It feels like at some point your parts and tools just sprout legs and toddle off and it's nice to know it's not just me.
@GuitarSoloReactions
Love the last name, I'm Brian Heaney
@nevermind4328
Worry not. Happens to all of us. LOL.
@pabloveloso5790
Sometimes mine just falls into oblivion.
@C33Fernandez
Haven't gotten into pedal building, but I have assembled things before with small parts and one tip is to use small containers to categorise and keep things in. That way, when those small containers sprout lets and go walk-abouts, at least you'll have the peace of mind that the little pieces aren't alone.
@gregheaney
@@C33Fernandez Smart. The buddy system is a classic for a reason.
@krisbradford8963
As someone who's just started building kits I love this