Wulf's Webden

The Webden on WordPress

3 August 2025
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Almost tour-ready

It was the penultimate rehearsal for the Charnwood Concert Bands summer tour this evening. Overall, there is a little bit of polishing the band needs but I’m fairly pleased with my preparations in the “string bass” chair.

That isn’t to say that I’m completely ready. There are a couple of runs and moments of timing I could do with going over and also one or two more songs that it might be worth engraving into a more legible form, for example where I’ve got a dodgy scan on my iPad or where my copy has unhelpful scribblings, like repeats heavily crossed out that we probably will do for our Belgian crowds. I also want to produce a full set of paper music just in case I have any technical issues on my iPad – peace of mind is worth the time and ink it will take.

I also need to do some other preparation work – such as working out what clothes I will take and how I will pack my equipment. There is also the matter of planning an itinerary for what Jane and I will do with our free time. It can always be changed but I like to have some options sketched out in advance. Still at least the most important stuff – like passports and being able to play the music to a pretty good standard – is in the bag already.

2 August 2025
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New Shed Day

Back in April, I was working hard on making room for an additional shed. I’ve considered lots of options, including building one from scratch. Materials aren’t cheap though and, given that the motivation for another shed is that I don’t have room to work in my present one because of everything stored in there, that seemed a bit of a stretch. In the end, I purchased one of these plastic ones, which was relatively inexpensive but I know people who have found they have stayed in good condition for a long time… and I could order last night and get it today.

It arrived nice and early so I was able to check all the parts had arrived but we had guests for lunch so construction couldn’t begin until mid-afternoon. I would say the the suggestion of construction being a two-hour job was optimistic. We finally had it together by about 7pm and I still needed to pop to the local DIY store to get some sealant as, despite doing our best to follow the instructions, the edges of the roof had some gaps which looked like they would cause trouble.

Would I recommend the shed? It is too early to properly review. I think there are several points where design and instructions could be improved but it does feel reasonably sturdy. Buying new, I don’t think we could have done better for the price and might have ended up doing a lot worse! What makes me happy though is that the new shed is now in place. I’ve started to fill it with some of the lumber and other bits and pieces from the working shed (not least to ensure it is anchored down potential stormy weather on Monday) and I’m looking forward to getting more organised and getting on with some more DIY projects soon.

1 August 2025
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More Pearls

U now has a third series of Whitstable Pearl available. I’m a couple of episodes in and enjoying it so far.

It also struck me that the “white post” of the theme tune is almost certainly a reference to the town in which the drama is set. It is commonly suggested (although not without some opposition) that “whit” derives from white and “stable” indicates a post, a meeting place or a meeting place marked by a post. I tend to be cautious about place name histories that seem conveniently straightforward but it is highly likely that it at least explains the choice of song!

31 July 2025
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A Deep Blast From the Past

I got a Facebook message today from someone whose name I didn’t immediately recognise. As always, I treat such things with a high degree of suspicion but, when I got home and could check it from the vantage point of my main computer, I realised it was someone who once attended a bass workshop I used to run regularly at various locations around the UK.

Deep to Deep was initially driven by a bassist called Mark Ashby who, with some encouragement from me, organised a meet up for people playing bass in church settings in Sevenoaks, Kent, in 1997. It was a worthwhile gathering. At the time, playing bass in church could feel quite isolated and the main support network I was aware of was the ChurchBass email list, which I had been part of since my university days. That was where Mark and I cooked up the idea of a local, face to face gathering and, since it was met with enthusiasm but Mark didn’t have time to take it forward, the mantle fell to me.

Over the next fifteen years, we had about 30 meetups at different locations in England and Wales. Sometimes we got into double figures on attendance and sometimes it was just four or five of us. Normally we met in churches and church halls and, on one occasion, in my one-bed flat in Lewisham. It was a worthwhile run but, as time drew on, more people got regularly online, more interaction and learning spaces, like Facebook and YouTube, became available and the ChurchBass list switched first to a different email host and eventually to become a Facebook group. I was also getting more busy myself and the gap between meetings eventually became a long-term cessation.

Perhaps, with music stores falling left, right and centre (eg. the sudden closure of established national chain PMT about a month ago) there is an opportunity to kick start the idea again sometime soon? I certainly used to enjoy the chance to chat church and bass with fellow players and to get a chance to try out all sorts of bass gear without any sales pitch or online purchase risks.

30 July 2025
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C how I’m tuned

Standard tuning for a 4 string bass is EADG. If you add a string, that would typically be a high C or, more commonly, a low B and, if you opt for a six string you get both and would expect to be tuned BEADGC, with an extension in either direction. That’s where I started on six string bass and it was mainly because I couldn’t decide whether I wanted to go a string up or a string down. Getting on for twenty years ago, I had a brainwave and decided I would start tuning my main six string bass from a low D, giving me DGCFBbEb. That is a little higher than normal but still gave me a nice, fat low D (which was very handy, particularly for a lot of the church music I was playing) but also gave me a little more range at the top, also handy in church when we were missing a regular guitar.

Recently, I’ve found that bass has been struggling to get the Eb note in tune. I guess the string has stretched and, because of the way headless bass tuning works, there is a limit to how far you can push a fixed length string up with the mechanism. I noticed this shortly before my accident and then ended up putting that bass aside for a couple of months. Getting it out this week, the same problem was still evident so I pondered what to do. My first thought was to borrow from regular guitar tuning and drop the top two strings a semitone lower than they would normally be on bass: DGCFAD. The trouble is that my guitar chord knowledge is thrown out by being a tone lower than regular guitar tuning and my bass playing is very habituated to the beauty of even intervals between the strings.

I tried it for the first song at tonight’s church rehearsal and it worked to an extent… but I mainly found myself sticking to the lowest 4 strings and the chords I would normally play on bass weren’t instinctively at my fingertips. I was also leading the vocals on that song and help the rest of the group learn it but, in getting reading for the next one (less in the spotlight), I decided to try the alternative idea I had and drop all the strings down.

I had considered going from a low Db but that felt like too much mental gymnastics. I would either be describing my tuning as Db Ab Gb Cb Fb Bbb (brain busting), Db Ab Gb B E A (still brain busting because of the jump in the middle) or C# G# F# B E A (also still brain busting). That wouldn’t give me suitable low open strings for the keys I often end up playing in. Instead, I opted for C F Bb Eb Ab Db. It will still take some getting used to but, to me at least, seems a bit easier to get to grips with. If in doubt, I can always remember to reach for notes two frets higher than I’ve got used to… and don’t ask why that seems easier than one fret higher!

As a bonus, my initial impression is that it felt very comfortable to play and I was enjoying the thick warmth of the low notes (looser strings so perhaps a little rounder in character) and the low C that I haven’t had access to for a long time. My inner jury is still deliberating but I think I’ll give it some more work over the next few days and a proper live test when I play on Sunday morning.

28 July 2025
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Thinking about Christmas (songs) already

Today I bumped into a couple of people from the Loughborough University choir – one popped into my office to drop off her computer for a Windows 11 upgrade and the other spotted me down at the allotment when I popped by to do some harvesting and watering after work. That prompted me to make a start on a Christmas song I’ve had in mind to offer but hadn’t yet got round to working on outside of my head – a rendering of The Boar’s Head Carol with a few extra twists and turns to add a bit of spice to the dish.

It isn’t quite finished yet but I should have something to send to the conductor sooner rather than later and certainly before the start of term.

27 July 2025
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Lovage Cordial

One advantage of blogging fairly consistently for a long period of time is that you can check back and see if you have publicly pondered a topic before. It turns out I was thinking about lovage cordial back in 2011, having discovered it as product available on supermarket shelves. Sometime after that, it went out of production and I couldn’t even find a recipe for it online. Subsequently, some information has been published and it is being produced again and has been made available online.

However, at £26 before postage, that’s a bit on the pricy end of things. Since I have abundant supplies of lovage (the herb) at my allotment, I pulled some thoughts from reading around and decided to try my own. The method I used was to steep lovage leaves in brandy for a few days and then dilute the resulting liquid with some sugar syrup.

The result? Rather pleasant although I could possibly do with upping the sugar a bit and perhaps also adding some other steeping ingredients, like fennel seeds or citrus peel. Am I close to that drink I bought all those years ago? I’m not sure but it has produced something delicious, so that will do for now.

26 July 2025
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Map Additions

Jane and I finished the leaflet delivery this afternoon and I had to exercise my mapping skills. Having tried to keep tabs on things using my phone, I switched to pencil and paper… and as well as jotting numbers, improved the rough outline of the road layout that Google has so far.

25 July 2025
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Tomatoes and Blackberries

Two harvesting landmarks have been passed in the last couple of days – our first tomatoes from the polytunnel and our first blackberries from the allotment.

We’ve got various types of tomato growing but this year’s first past the post was ‘Orange Rapture’, which I’ve been cultivating successive generations of from seeds taken from a supermarket tomato. Despite being the most weedy looking of my seedlings they ended up surviving better and make up the majority of plants in the polytunnel. I’m also looking forward to the San Marzano tomatoes, another supermarket sourced variety. One of the plants had a stem which had got partially buried and begun rooting, which I cut off and, to my delight, it seems to have established itself as a new plant.

Meanwhile, our Oregon Thornless blackberry has ripened its first fruits. There are plenty more growing on it and it promises to be a good year Raspberry production on the allotment is also going well and I got another 100g of those today, the biggest single harvest so far.

Hurrah for harvests!

24 July 2025
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Triskaidekaphobia is alive

This afternoon, I discovered that triskaidekaphobia (fear of the number 13) is alive and well, and living in a new housing estate near me. Jane and I were putting some leaflets for Hathern Baptist Church’s free summer BBQ (12 noon on 17 August) around the new Garendon Park Estate. As a new location, I was also making a note of how many houses on each street for future reference.

The task was tricky for two reasons. Firstly, only part of the estate is built and occupied. Whereas an established area can normally be reconnoitred using a service like Google Maps, this one is shown in even less than its current state of completion on the satellite view and the Street View car was there even longer ago (June 2023). Secondly, as I walked round, I realised that the developers had chosen to miss out the number 13. On each of the streets we got to, houses on the odd side of the road went from 11 to 15.

For completeness, I (Google) visited a couple of other housing estates – a slightly older but still recent one in Hathern and the patch I live on, which was completed in the late 1930s. It turns out the modern one also seems to be missing out the number between 11 and 15 while the pre-war effort calmly counts without missing items in the expected sequence.

Plenty of sources would like me to believe that our society is becoming more rational and less benighted with superstition; I’m not sure this is evidence that supports that point of view.