I wouldn't class it as my hobby but in my spare time other than playing games, I like photography, Not really much to do that interests me to be honest.
I don't have a car at the moment so I'm a named driver on my girlfriend's insurance, and her insurance costs actually went down from adding me as a named driver. !!!!!!
Speaking of the guitar I tried to teach myself to play, got myself a shed load of beginner books, and then basically spend most of the time randomly hitting random strings. After 6 months I had managed to teach myself 'Suicide Is Painless" and then forgot about it, one of my regrets to be honest.
Bassists (well, most bassists, let's forget that Adam Clayton from U2 exists for the sake of argument) usually work harder than anybody but the drummer. It's rare you get a break in a groove long enough to sort your hair out or take a girl's phone number or do a line off the percussionist's vibraphone or whatever.
Pretty tune. Yeah I'd always wanted to be able to play keys properly but I still can't. I can play one-handed well enough and record a lot of stuff using keyboards for band demos and so on, and actually if I come up with a tune in my head I sit down at a keyboard to figure the chords out rather than pick up a guitar (I always get nicer, jazzier chords doing it that way), but I can't sight-read and I find the syncopation between the two hands difficult.
What's annoying is my girlfriend can play piano very well and she reads music better than I can, but she can only recite what's written, she doesn't know music theory at all. Whereas I taught myself everything I know and while my knowledge is still limited compared to, say, someone who studied composition or jazz, it does at least mean my ear can usually tell me everything I need to know and I can fake my way through pretty much anything on bass.
Everybody should learn to play something though, I think. This will sound really lame but I find music is immensely good for the soul, and opportunities in adult life for being creative are so limited it's a real blessing to be able to sit down with an instrument and just play whatever comes out.
As a hobby I occasionally do a bit of rally driving.
My main hobby is playing football, I would rather be rally driving more often but obviously it is a bit cheaper playing football
When I was 12 I was scouted for Gillingham Football Club but in the end nothing happened, they must have lost interest in the end because I didn't hear anymore of it after the manager of the club told me about it. Now 15, playing under 16 football and have played some mens football. Not a great difference except the men fall harder. This season I have scored 5 goals and made 6 assists in 6 games and I play left midfield.
Unfortunately last week after scoring another goal I had to be rushed to casualty as I tore the muscle attached to the bone at the top of my left leg and around my hip after trying to lace a shot towards goal. This has left me on crutches and probably out for the rest of the season. Bloody painful.
Edit: Forgot to mention I do engine sounds for LFS in my spare time as a bit of a hobby too. :P
When I get bored of video games I drive my car up the the mountains in my area and will drive for 6-7 hours on the tight, twisty roads there. I'm always surprised by what city I end up in when I come out
Also I am currently training for my private pilot's license. There is nothing quite like flying over the California coastal range on a clear day.
If you recall from the US election thread, yes, they are quite well off.
I will someday fly the skies. It might be in a little lawnmower powered ultralight rather than a real plane, but I will be taking to the skies.
My hope/dream is to buy my neighbor's property some day, I have a HUGE field behind my house owned by the neighbor. I want to put a grass airstrip in and get an ultralight aircraft. No license needed.
That's the way to go - full-on airborne freedom. I hope you do that one day, Mike.
There's a flying club around here somewhere with a bunch of guys who take up microlites, I'm always jealous when I'm stuck in traffic on the ring road watching them buzzing around above me.
College
in town with mates
home
shower
check lfs forums and team forum for like 30 mins to see what people are upto in the gaming world
listen to music
go out when it's dark (for someone reason I like riding round especially this time of the year because it gets dark weally weally early) meet mates
use some cheesy chat up lines
get told i'm going to get battered by her big brother
ermm sleep there abouts
Those "all-in-one" controllers are good for learning the basics on, but the plasticy feel and cheapo faders will annoy you quickly.
Try before you buy (If you haven't already), and may I suggest a pure DJ controller, like the EKS XP10, routed into a proper DJ mixer. This kind of setup will really prepare you for a modern club, with a CDJ-esque platter and proper mixer with hardy EQs and nice loose sliders. Even using your keyboard to control pitch/jog and a proper mixer to manipulate your sounds will help your ability grow. I've always said that your work on the mixer is far, FAR more important then matching the beat, although the latter is (of course) a vital skill. Don't abuse the auto-BPM!
16 is a great age to start learning the dark arts of DJing. Same age as me when I took it up (although I started on vinyl, bleugh!) What genre(s) are you playing at the mo?
I wish some of you bloody kids would learn to scratch instead of wasting your time mixing. Every kid in the land's got a pair of turntables and can I find a scratch DJ? Can I bollocks.
Don't dismiss mixing hip hop, it'll teach you to shortmix and deal with broken beats properly which could lead onto playing breaks, D&B etc. I've always thought it very wise to keep what you play pretty open, as different kinds of genres require different methods to pull off a smooth, fluid mix.
Once you learn a technique that works, you can use it on your main genre. Never keep yourself boxed in, be as open as you think you can be
Also, don't rush yourself. Play to people outside of your own space when you're ready. I didn't play my first DJ set out in a club for a very long time, due to self-confidence issues.
Indeed. It'd just take longer for them to lock the two together. They also seem to struggle with fluidity when it comes to merging the tracks instead of just banging them together.
I can scratch to a degree myself. I tend not to cos I'm really poo at it