I've used Kent Armstrong 'enclosed' Cool Rails and 'open' Hot rails in 70s musicmaster basses. I definitely prefer the cool rails. The hot rails is too clanky whereas the cool rails is smoother punchier and deeper (at least to my ears).
I can practice silently with my bass unplugged or using the tascam headphone/mp3 thing I can't see what the problem is that these basses are supposed to solve.
Any ideas?
I guess that would help if the original socket was one of the flimsy cheapos, but I always put in a standard mono switchcraft if I replace the socket in a passive bass/geetar & they're sturdy enough that the contact doesn't lose its spring.
Has anyone mentioned the body & pickguard are completely the wrong shape around the lower cutaway? And what he heck is going on with all the routing. Its a bit of a mess if you ask me. Last time I discussed vintage fenders with a someone working in a shop in Denmark street I was amazed at how ignorance could be presented so confidently.
[quote name='spike' post='290973' date='Sep 24 2008, 04:14 PM']AFAIK Duck Dunn replaced Lewis Steinberg in Booker T and the MGs quite early on. It is Steinberg playing on Green Onions though.[/quote]
Yep - thats right, very early on.
[quote name='OldGit' post='290901' date='Sep 24 2008, 03:03 PM']Ah, the power of space in the bass .....[/quote]
Lisa "You've got to listen to the notes he isn't playing"
Homer "I can do that at home"
Years ago the (now late) bloke in the Bass Cellar told me when I enquired about availablity of the MIJ Fender Duck Bass, that Duck wasn't a very good player and Lewis Steinberg played on all the hits
I didn't take much notice of him though as Duck was and (indeed still is) a well respected and sucessful recording artist with impeccible taste who has been inducted into the Rock n Roll hall of fame and Mr Baldy was a cloth-eared miserable little cnut in a shtty bass shop.
[quote name='TheDarkReaver' post='290324' date='Sep 23 2008, 09:02 PM']That's because you seem to have bought an amp.[/quote]
You'll probably suffer bad neck dive if you screw that to the headstock.
Ha! the listing has now been changed. I'm off to carve the word "funk" in the neck heel of a squier so I can put it on ebay with the caption "Jamerson?" & pretend to know nothing about anything.
[url="http://cgi.ebay.co.uk/Fender-Bass-Scratchplate-ex-Sid-Vicious_W0QQitemZ380064660841QQcmdZViewItem?hash=item380064660841&_trkparms=72%3A12|39%3A1|66%3A2|65%3A12|240%3A1318&_trksid=p3286.c0.m14"]Fender ? Bass Scratchplate ex Sid Vicious ?[/url]
Oh dear what a load of nonsense in his listing.
I wonder if he'll acknowledge my msg I sent:
[quote]Hi, I can clear up the mystery of the Sid Vicious connection for you.
This is definitely NOT a scratchplate from a 70s or earlier bass. All Precision bass pickguards before 1982 had extra holes for the chrome pickup cover and thumbrest. These holes are not present in yours. It looks single-ply rather than three ply of a genuine fender and there is at least one other screw hole missing as well as no half-moon cutout at the neck butt. I suggest you edit your listing - unless it is your intention to mislead. This is not a Fender Pickguard and when it was made Sid Vicious had already been dead several years. Hope this helps.[/quote]
[quote name='EccentricRichard' post='288488' date='Sep 21 2008, 12:45 PM']Not being rude, merely making objective criticism...[/quote]
Yeah right - ask people about their dream basses and slag them off. That's just bad manners.
[quote name='The Burpster' post='288233' date='Sep 20 2008, 09:04 PM']That whole Daisy Rock is cool![/quote]
My 13 yr old thinks so and so does her 11 year-old sister who has the geetar version also in magenta-burst pearl-top.
New Order live in Glasgow on TFM - I used to love New Order in the 80s, but its still all fcuking drum machines & sequencers. What a load of soulless tosh. Bernard still can't sing & I can't hear his guitar & Hooky's "bass" playing is still just the old three note riffs. Oh dear