Well since being a junior member is frowned upon, I thought I get my post count up a little with a quality discussion about basses! Bass players seem to be quite in the minority on this forum. I know this is the J/C forum, but do you bass players out there have other favorite brands/makes/models? My favorite three brands are Jackson, Gibson, and BC Rich. What other basses do you have/like/use? What do you play on them?
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other basses?
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Re: other basses?
I don't own either, but Spector and Warwick have been impressive when I have played them. My charvel plays so well that I have never been moved enough by a different bass to buy it."told you guys that spandex, hairspray and makeup on guys was a bad idea, and now look what happened - you all turned into women." - Newc
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Re: other basses?
i have a couple of ibanez, aria,a dean,washburn, even an electra mpc and even a warmoth parts mutt, rarely touch them. lately been using a 2b with a lefty neck and emgs.the neck plays as well as my custom shop and is not as heavy!did recently play a bolt on spector at g/c and it was sweet!The Truth Hurts Only If It's Supposed To !
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Re: other basses?
I play on a Carvin LB75. Plays really nice and can be picked up for cheap via the 'bay. The 'backup' bass I use is a Samick 5 string that sounds absolutely horrid (but it isn't mine).
Other basses I've tried and liked... Fender, Ibanez, Modulus, and Spector. The black necked Ibanez sound gear five-stringers are really nice. And I've played on a couple of ESP basses that either sounded terrible and played pretty good or sounded great but played pretty bad.
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Re: other basses?
I did have a Pedulla Pentabuzz for a while, but sold it to the guy in Japan who would later turn out to be my contact for scoring a JacksonStars NASL (New Archtop Soloist - PRS-ish thing).
Best bass I've played yet besides the Jacksons I've had was a Bossa. Thin neck, low action, killer tone, and woodgrain pickup covers.
I pretty much stick with my Jackson Concert V Pro 5-string, but am eyeing the Winger Pro currently on Ebay [img]/images/graemlins/laugh.gif[/img]
I had one of those and it's sweet. Might have it defretted as I don't have a fretless, and neckthrough is way better for fretless IMO. Basses really show the differences between bolt-on and neckthrough construction as far as tone goes, and neckthrough + fretless = mellow like a cello [img]/images/graemlins/laugh.gif[/img]
I also had a Fender Mexi-P that was decent, but played a USA P that was way better.
Never owned a Ric 4001 but played something similar once that had what felt like a 1" nut width and guitar-like action [img]/images/graemlins/drool2.gif[/img]
It was only $250 at the time - I shoulda bought it.I want to depart this world the same way I arrived; screaming and covered in someone else's blood
The most human thing we can do is comfort the afflicted and afflict the comfortable.
My Blog: http://newcenstein.com
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Re: other basses?
Laklands are fantastic.
Warwicks are nice, but tone-wise are kind of a one-trick pony. You can really nail that clanky Korn tone with them, but that's about it. Not that that's a bad thing. They also have the thickest necks I've ever played on any guitar or bass. Serious Louisville territory. I do plan on buying one of these someday.
In my quest for a less-expensive bass to use for gigging, I am considering a G&L Tribute 2500. Played very nicely, good low B, and VERY versatile tone-wise. A good all around bass.
Schecter Stiletto Elite four-stringers are nice. I owned on eof them for a while before switching to five-strings.
I own a Roscoe five string; impeccable workamnship, with a very warm sound. Not as versatile tone-wise as I would like, but it is my baby, and I wouldn't give it up for anything.
- E.Good Lord! The rod up that man's butt must have a rod up its butt!
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Re: other basses?
I agree about Warwicks. Though I was thinking about getting a Warwick Buzzard because I liked Entwhistle's playing a lot. Laklands look pretty good, I've only casually played one at GC. Seemed expensive for an refined Fender P to me.
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Re: other basses?
I'm currently playing a Jackson Concert V 5-string, but I've had a number of basses over the years. I'm really a guitarist who does home recording, so I'm not especially picky about my basses, but I'm mostly interested in:
--low action and reasonably narrow string spacing, since I mostly play with a pick.
--bright, punchy sound. My main bass heroes are Chris Squire and Geddy Lee, and I prefer their brighter sound over the bigger, darker sound that you hear from Geezer Butler and such, though I'm also a huge fan of Geezer's playing.
--versatility. While I mostly go for a Squire-ish sound, I like to have a bass that can do a reasonable approximation of Geezer's tone, or get all silly and sound like the "Barney Miller" theme or Bootsy Collins on occasion.
The bass I've owned the longest was a Korean-made Spector NS-2B, which was a very nice bass, actually. I only sold it to switch to a 5-string. I'd like to get a Rickenbacker 4001, but I just don't have enough cash to blow it on something I wouldn't use very often.
Before the Spector, I was playing an early '90s Fender J-Bass that was sort of the bass equivalent of the HM Strat--it had a covered P-J pickup combo, maple board, and the 'modern' script on the headstock. That was a nice player, but not as nice sounding as the Spector. Fenders are always so damned dark sounding to me.
I thought about getting one of the Ibanez BTB 5-strings, because I like the extended scale on fivers, but the string spacing is awfully wide on those--which is great for the funk guys, but murder on me as a flatpicker.
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