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40hz

⭐Supporting Member⭐
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Everything posted by 40hz

  1. That Status is lovely! Don't get me wrong, It's not the look of boutique basses. It the way they mostly don't tend to have very unique voices. I totally get some people desire that ability, but for me, I love a distinctive tone.
  2. I don't find any bass boring per-se in terms of visuals but I don't like vanilla sounding basses with no character. Since I started playing, I've always been attracted to Basses with very unique sounds (Modulus, Wal, Rickenbacker, Travis Bean, Warwick etc). Basses I don't like are usually high-end boutique, coffee table stuff, for the reason that they always seem to sound very generic and polite, with no unique voice. I'm not saying they're bad basses at all. Same reason I don't like Ibanez, just quite generic sounding to me. Horses for courses and all that.
  3. I played a buttercream Player Series P-Bass recently. It was utterly exceptional, under 8lbs easily and finished beautifully with a great core P-Bass tone. Definitely on my 'to purchase' list this year.
  4. No need to apologise.
  5. I wasn't being literal? It was a turn of phrase.
  6. I've had 2 Fleas. A 2005 one with the Seymour Duncan pickup (which is allegedly a reverse engineered LP) and Aguilar OBP-1, and my current one - A 1997 model with an original Lane Poor and Bartolini NTBT. The difference is very small and could be down to other factors, but the LP is definitely a little cleaner in the mids and top end than the SD. Whereas the SD was a bit growlier in the low end, although I think this could well have been the Aguilar Pre-amp causing this. Interestingly all of Flea's own Moduli sport the LP.
  7. I don't get the hate. It was played by Dee Dee Ramone during and close to the height of the Punk era. It's a piece of rock and roll history. I'd dare say Dee Dee Ramone is more well known and more influential than most of the names that get bandied about this forum. His ability is borderline irrelevant to the the sale of this instrument.
  8. I've read that the pickups themselves are a wide aperture type called a 'sidewinder' but know nothing beyond that. The original Lane Poor pickups for the Flea were made from 97-01 and they could be shipped with a couple of pre-amps, the standard option back then was the Bartolini NTBT with the Aguilar OBP series as a small upcharge. In terms of tone, it's like having a reference quality microphone bolted to your bass. It gives you every frequency in the spectrum from top to bottom, with incredible clarity.
  9. I believe I sold you one of those Status necks? I had a similar experience. It tightened up the Stingray sound, adding its own unique twist, but it sounded absolutely nothing like the Modulus Flea. They've just got this incredibly unique tone that I haven't heard another bass get near.
  10. You can't beat a Modulus Flea. IMO the greatest bass guitar ever made. Like I ever need an excuse to post pictures of mine . . .
  11. No doubt this will be an utterly sublime piece of kit but surely going to carry an astronomical price. Somebody please feel free to tell me I'm wrong but are Boogie not seen as a sort of mid/upper level brand in the US? So why the borderline boutique UK pricing?
  12. Mick Karn for me.
  13. Funnily enough I had a Sandberg Basic. Personally, I wouldn't say it sounded much like a Ray. Far too clean, clinical and polite, but a cracking bass all the same.
  14. Another vote for the Kiloton. I think it's the only Stingray inspired bass that actually sounds like a Stingray (to my ears anyway)
  15. 1 - Wal MK1. I would buy one new, but I can't live with the astronomical wait time. I'm impatient, what can I say? 2 - Warwick Streamer Stage 2 Tried one at Bass Direct and thought it was pretty 'meh', but every time I hear the recorded tone (Zender, Dirk Lance et al) it stokes up the GAS! 3 - Fender American Original P-Bass In white with a gold anodized scratchplate, ta muchly
  16. I much prefer the shape/woodwork Warwick used on these earlier Thumbs. Beautiful!
  17. Always wash my hands before playing where possible but never ever clean or wipe a bass down, but then I do a thorough clean on them once a month anyway.
  18. I had a 2013 Euro SE5, released to celebrate the 30th anniversary of the Synchronicity tour by The Police. The bass and treble frequencies were superbly judged for the instrument and really felt like they were extending and enhancing the Spector sound, rather than being integrated at random, it really sounded to me like it had been thoughtfully designed specifically for the instrument. Unlike the Bart NTBT currently on my Flea, which is a great pre-amp but completely on the wrong bass. Wonderfully crisp treble, deep and clear bass with that Spector snap and snarl. Other people may have differing opinions etc, but I massively rated it.
  19. FWIW, I thought the Spector Tonepump was probably the best sounding pre-amp of the dozens of basses I've owned in the past 15+ years. Mine was the later one with a trim pot and I wicked it down to 50%.
  20. I absolutely loved my old Spector Euro SE5. The workmanship and set-up was impeccable and truly, without fault. I can't see how a USA NS2 could up the game from that (quality wise anyway). I miss that bass 😭. A big, white chunk of gnarly fury! It was the only bass I've played that out 'hi-fi'd my Flea bass. I also preferred it to two of its German cousins I owned
  21. That's just it though, the BH550 to my ears is more a transparent head than the LM2 I had. Sounding far, far clearer across the range. IMO, YMMV and all that.
  22. I moved away from Markbass LM2 and NY122 to TC Electronic BH550 with K-Series cabs as they sounded far superior to my ears with far more authority, energy and 'excitement' to the sound. The Markbass stuff just sounded flat and lifeless to me. 🤷‍♂️
  23. Tina would make my personal top 10. 🤷‍♂️
  24. Probably my favourite Bass Player. Love the tone she gets with the Pro Cardinal Bass.
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