Leaderboard
Popular Content
Showing content with the highest reputation on 30/03/20 in all areas
-
12 points
-
Not if you compare it to its equivalent on a Rickenbacker - and that genuinely is a slapped-on afterthought. Roger Rossmeisl's original design followed the form of the instrument in a way the current "design" doesn't. I think I've only seen a couple of singlecuts that aren't foul. I really have no idea why anyone thinks it's a good idea to add an extra 2kg of timber to a bass and make it look like this: And once you see it, that's all you can see...8 points
-
Modern singlecuts..... Euuurrghhhhhh...... Bodies like toilet seats *cough* MM Bongo *cough* Multi-string 'basses' that have more notes in the baritone,treble, alto & soprano range than actual bass notes available8 points
-
I’m loving everything about this. Lakland Bob Glaub. What a beautiful thing, sounds killer and used to belong to Nate Mendel. Lush as7 points
-
6 points
-
5 points
-
Stingray scratchplate and control plate. For such an "iconic" design they look like a rushed afterthought to me.5 points
-
It possibly comes under the heading 'functional' (although I've yet to encounter problems without the feature) but I just don't like the of any of those modern single cuts. A traditional single cut looks fine, Hofner Club, Gibson Les Paul, Yamaha Bex4, etc, it's just those with a bloomin' great bulbous top, erm, lump, that I can't get my head around.5 points
-
5 points
-
5 points
-
Hi! For sale beautiful Fbass BN5 from 2000. Bass is in very good condition. No deep scratches or cracks in the lacquer on the body. Realy small cracks of the polish on the head but it's hard to show in the picture. Original Fbass (by Gotoh) tuners replaced by another Gotoh model. Very rare, beautiful three-piece neck. In reality, the color is more beautiful and deeper with a pronounced wood structure, but that's all my camera can do. Original gigbag Fbass included. Feel free to ask on PM. I enclose two short movies recorded on this bass. Price: £2500 €27504 points
-
Nooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo! You're not supposed to touch your face!4 points
-
One word: Dingwall. I’m sure they’re great instruments but I think they just look ludicrous.4 points
-
Double Trouble are one of my favourite rhythm sections. Tommy and Chris’ work with Storyville is often overlooked, which is a travesty.4 points
-
4 points
-
I can't stand Fender P / J bass, Stratocaster shaped headstocks, and the big elephant ear tuners are ugly as sin. In fact I've never got the whole P bass thing. Bland with a side order of ugly.4 points
-
4 points
-
4 points
-
Branding on the body. Sandberg make some nice basses but those four dots mean I will never own one. And perhaps more controversially, tortoiseshell scratchplates. I always assume people like them because they invoke a particular era, because visually they make no sense - especially on a sunburst - gross! Highly subjective of course! Edit: I just thought of another one: those big long single cut bodies you so often see on higher end basses. I realise this one is not purely an aesthetic choice, but a horn does the same job, surely?4 points
-
Au contraire mon ami, the early P/Tele Bass headstock has the most pleasing symmetry and it is the later P Bass that should be confined to a darkened room!4 points
-
Also cough. The only 4 string I'll ever need. NYC Will Lee. The longer I've had it the more I love it. The Will Lee switch adds a lot of extra mid punch and tonal options to the bass.4 points
-
The theme from Minder. Not cool but love it. (Dennis Waterman wrote the theme tune, sang the theme tune)4 points
-
Long Beggs-related story. Feel free to scroll on by. Back in late '86, when I had hair and a discernible waistline, my rock-pop band were making our desperate bid for stardom. We lived in Reading, so it was dead easy to jump in the car and head into London to play gigs. We played quite a bit at the Red Lion in Brentford (RIP) -- our first few gigs there were as support to a guy called Philip Jap (the old farts among you might remember him) and his then band 'Secret Society'. I think he missed a trick by not calling them 'Jap's Eye'. Anyway, he asked us to play support at a party in London and we accepted. Being the mid 80s, slap was still acceptable -- almost mandatory in fact -- and our songs featured a lot of it. A lot. So there I was, thumbing the blazes out of my poor Wal, and it gets to the song with my showoff solo bit... I take a deep breath and go thwack-thwacka-ding wickety-wackety-wockity-dang, and having given it my best I look out at the crowd... straight into the eyes of Nick Beggs. Apparently an ex-label mate and friend of Mr Jap. I had a brief moment of wanting the ground to open up, I mean here's this bass god looking at me and I've just tried to impress this audience with something he could probably have done with one arm tied behind his back. But then his face broke into a big genuine smile, and with a nod he raised his glass towards me. I was walking on air for a month after that. I've bumped into him a couple of times since then, obviously he doesn't remember me but he's always been really friendly and happy to chat. Definitely one of our instrument's Nice Guys.4 points
-
3 points
-
And the last job to be done before I start with lots of sanding on the body was to make a control cavity cover. Again, I made a template for this and used an offcut of spalted beech to make a cover.3 points
-
Next job - use the template to cut the pickup pocket (after carefully measuring to make sure it was central and square). And check again before cutting...3 points
-
Next task was to make a template for a Musicman style pickup. I've got one template but it was just a little too tight fitting. First thing was to mark out a piece of mdf with the key dimensions Once that was done holes were drilled for the mounting lugs and a few others for cutting out it out using a coping saw. After that I used some pieces off wood pinned to the board ready to use the router to neatly trim the template with a bearing cutter. And the finished template3 points
-
Its got to be Fodera. They design such beautiful basses and then it looks like they have forgotten about the aesthetics of what the pattern of the preamps knobs will look like. Its a cluster x*"! of knobs that have no cohesive design when it comes to the rest of the body. I don't get it. Jens Ritter does an amazing job. But no, not Fodera. Maybe its substance over style.3 points
-
3 points
-
3 points
-
Exotic hardwoods/coffee table basses. "Reliced" (another word for deliberately trashed). Weird shapes, especially angular/pointy. Dozens of strings and knobs. Stupid names/emblems.3 points
-
Any pretend Fenders - that is, basses with all the features/shape of the original but not. Appreciate they may be better built / higher spec / more upmarket / expensive / boutique, but just make the whole thing more original. I’m looking at you Sandberg, Sadowsky, Lakland etc etc.3 points
-
Not a fan of Fender shapes - P bass, J bass (body and headstock). Yes some of them are nice to look at - especially those not made by Fender, e.g. Sadowsky, Sandberg et al. - but there's so much out there that looks better. I loathe pickguards, especially tort, especially on Fender-ish basses. I really don't like 'burst' colours, although I'm stuck with them on a few of my basses because there was no lefty alternative. I'm sure I'll think of something else!3 points
-
3 points
-
3 points
-
3 points
-
Body : Alder Neck : Maple (U shape) Fingerboard : Rosewood, 200R, 20F Pickups : VPB-Z, VJB-2B Controls : 2 volume, 1 tone Hardware : Chrome Color : Vintage White Quiet inspired by the Fender Jazz Bass Special from the Boxer Series, the one used by Duff Mckagan. This bass is simply amazing... only 40 mm on the nut. Really fast neck to play. Fat & precise sound... the pickups are great. She's in great condition ! Weight is 4,2 kg and well balanced.3 points
-
3 points
-
2 points
-
I love this one. Currently up for sale if you want to buy the ultimate P in classic black/maple combo!2 points
-
2 points
-
2 points
-
Alongside the trivial personal foibles we've been discussing here, that is genuinely dreadful.2 points
-
I agree, I think they should have been left as trees. I call them either "conversation piece" , "mid-life crisis", or "More-money-than-sense" basses. Basses : Rickenbackers , No not in my house, sorry. Warwicks, great bridges shame about the rest of it. Any bass with a name I'm not sure how to pronounce. Sounds: Jazz pickups... just ugh! especially that honky, farting bridge sound. It just 'aint bass to my ears! Colours: that creamy off-white colour, green is a no go, light coloured "natural" also a no, however the darker natural colours are fairly nice. Design: Nothing says " I have a small willy" more than those stupid big single cut things. LED lights also... wtf? 🎸2 points
-
Jack Casady (Hot Tuna..?) ... Why..? A solid grounding in the genre, and great complicity with Jorma, after all the years they've played together. A very versatile player.2 points
-
Yes, the book has quite a few of those ‘ah, so it was Guy’ moments in it. Love the book. It’s the only book ive read twice in the past 20 years. Also agree about Pulse. I downloaded it after reading the book, as I’m not really a PF fan, and its an album i put on when i want to relax.2 points
-
Wake Me Up Before You Go-Go. Insanely nice playing. Every time I play it/hear it, I'm like, dayum... I wish I had come up with some of these lines.2 points
-
2 points
-
As Jacko said above "Think you need to look up the definition of 'uncool'."2 points