Jump to content
Why become a member? ×

My new bass - ACG Harlot singlecut review


Chris2112
 Share

Recommended Posts

I've got the time to do a quick review of my new bass now, my ACG Harlot singlecut bass:

First, a few pictures:




















It's numbered as #32, the first Harlot Singlecut made by Alan Cringean at ACG. It's got an Amboyna top, mahogany core with a flame sycamore back. 5 piece maple/mac ebony neck with an Ebony finger board. The pickups are 2 RFB's with the ACG EQ01 pre-amp.



[b]Overview[/b]: This bass was initially made for basschat user Greeneking as a "dream bass". It has turned out to be a bit of a dream bass, for me! Made by Alan at ACG in Moffat, Scotland, this bass has really turned my attention towards modern, high end instruments. It is fresh and intriguing to me on a number of levels...

[b]Construction[/b]: The bass is made of mahogany with a flamed sycamore back, a maccasar ebony and maple neck, a gabon ebony fretboard and and an amboyna top. I suppose many would sell the top as "amboyna burl" due to the beautiful figuring in the wood. The thru neck construction is beautiful and the quality of the woods is obscene. I have rarely seen a collection of such beautiful woods in a bass. Even the neck has a glossy flamed character to it, and the mahogany slice exposed on the back of the bass shows a delicate wave of figuring running through. Alan also said the fretboard was the blackest piece of wood he had ever seen. The pickup covers appear to be made of wood and have the ACG logo engraved on top, which is a subtle and smart piece of branding. The side dots on the bass are aluminium - this is one of the most subtle and attractive materials I've seen used for this; it adds a touch of understated class like walnut panelling inside a good Mercedes Benz. The bass is finished in Acid Catalysed Lacquer to a high gloss finish. The hardware is black, matte finish Hipshot USA stuff, extremely high quality. A Neutrik locking jack is also included for ultra-reliable connections and security.

The construction has been a real surprise. I was expecting a nice, handmade instrument. When I first saw it, I was taken aback. The quality of the woodworking is incredible. Everything is so incredibly precise, the materials used are the absolute best. It is quite easily as nice as anything I've ever played and quite easily matches the level of precision and sophistication seen on the most elegant of Fodera and Alembic basses.


[b]Playability[/b]: Again, it's in a class of it's own. When I first saw the pictures of it, I thought it looked oddly elongated but still a fresh and elegant design. When I saw it in person, I realised how small and superbly proportioned it actually is. With a strap on, it suits beautifully with no neck dive. The first position isn't too far away as the bridge sits over the body. The bridge does not sit quite as far across as it does on a Warwick Thumb bass, but neither is it offset massively to the side like it is when you play a Fender jazz bass. I tend to wear my basses quite high up, and the accessiblity to all areas of the fretboard is superb. The singlecut design gives it incredible access to the upper frets and the hand never feels strained at those positions, which is a bonus. It has really reinvigorated my desire to comp and solo in the higher registers. The neck is an asymmetrical design, I have heard it compared to a "bass clef" shape. Thicker on the E string side and thinning out towards the G string side, producing a very natural feeling neck. It feels like a real step forward for neck design, superbly comfortable. The board has no radius, which I like. It is a unique player, due to it's singlecut style and custom neck. It's equally at home sitting down or standing up, and the weight is very reasonable. I'd be quite happy to do a full standing set with this bass, and I love lightweight basses.


[b]Sound:[/b] The sounds of these basses is destined to be the real talking point. Alan used "ACG" pickups wound by Aaron Armstrong. The neck pickup contains an Alnico magnet for warmth and there is a ceramic magnet in the bridge pickup for burp and punch. The pickups then run through an ACG EQ01 preamp. This is a filter based preamp, with low pass filters and "resonance peak" controls for each pickup with an overall treble and treble peak resonance control. It's a setup that I found confusing intially. It reminds me of the some of the more exotic Alembic preamps in terms of layout, and I found myself fiddling away with controls for a while. What I've unlocked is a preamp that is incredible versatile, but loaded with it's own character. It's certainly a massive step away from traditional boost and cut preamps and it took me a few days to really get what I wanted out of it. I could sit down and turn a few controls and I'd have a brilliant sound; but fine tuning it to make the exact sound a I wanted was a bit tricker. Luckily, Alan spotted that I had bought the bass and emailed me the instructions. Once I had a clear understanding of what the controls did and how the preamp worked I was able to make the magic happen.

It's a difficult thing to explain; how the preamp works and how you can use it. It is something I will certainly go into if anyone is interested. Suffice to say, I've had a blast with it. Given that I bought this bass to be brilliant in the studio, it certainly delivers. A wide range of tones are on offer, but never sound "forced" or artificial like some would with a cut/boost preamp (maxing out the treble and bass on an active jazz to try and creat a slap machine bass, for example). This is because you can subtly contour your sound to the extent that it sounds like the bass was meant to sound like that. It's not just a bass with one voice that can go louder or boomier, it's a bass with many voices.

It's natural sound is bright and modern. It's certainly not Status Graphite or MTD bright, but it gives a nice shimmer. It settles into a burpy, characteristic midrange and a bottom that I believe Geddy Lee would call "fruity" (as he described the bottom end of his Wal basses in 1993). The Wal comparison is something that comes up a lot with these basses, although it was never Alan's goal. They've both got filter based preamps and both have a similar sounding midrange. I've found that the ACG fits in tonally with"Hold Your Fire" and "Power Windows" by RUSH, I reckon I could dub the bass tracks on those records and few would be able to tell the difference (save for the playing). The bottom end is superbly present too, and the thru neck construction adds a wonderfully even quality to the tones.

The pickups in this bass are the "RFB" models, based on a Musicman Humbucker design. They're both big, punchy pickups and creat a tonal character that jumps out at you. Interestingly, the bass has a couple of switches that I understand are coil taps. Whatever they do, they just suck the oomph from the bass in general, although flipping the neck one can give you a that huge, middy punch that Musicman Stingrays get. I hear that Alan will most likely be dropping these from these basses, although for me it's an interesting extra and one I'd ask for again if I bought another ACG!


[b]Verdict[/b]: I'm extremely impressed, and even more surprised. I had no idea there were luthiers like this on our doorstep. Sure, you've got Sei, Wal and Status down south and Overwater in Carlisle occasionally produce a stunner, but ACG were a relative unknown to me. That made discovering this bass all the more remarkable. Getting it has changed the way I play bass (again). I still love to slap, and this bass is great at that, but it's got bme back to my Rush and Paul Simon records, revisiting all those incredible fingerstyle lines. It's got me going over my 80's pop records, adding to or playing over the basslines there. This is my first singlecut bass, and I've fallen in love with it.

Having played my way through the top end basses (Fodera, Alembic, Status, Wal, Kubicki etc etc) it was easy to find incredible basses, but getting harder to find ones that made my jaw drop and get back to the simple joys of playing everything I could through it just because it was so effortless to play and sounded so damn good. I hope the wider bass playing community soon start to embrace these forward thinking ideas that ACG incorporate; I don't think it will be too long before these top drawer creations from ACG are enjoying the accolades gives to other legendary British luthiers like Status Graphite and Wal!

Edited by Chris2112
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Ecellent review Chris, well written and you put the ACG brand up where it deserves to be imo.

Yes , she's a set neck. I'm really pleased tht the bs hs grabbed you although as seller I'm alwys hopeful. It's a special bass no doubt.

My Graft Gallus, although an 'economy' model is proving a great bass too and will be well abused by the time my neck through headless Gallus full custom comes to fruition.

Peter

Link to comment
Share on other sites

[quote name='Brave Sir Robin' post='996609' date='Oct 22 2010, 03:24 AM']Correct me if I'm wrong but I believe the construction is set-neck. Not that it matters really. Superb instruments in every way![/quote]

You are indeed correct, another late night mistake from my work weary eyes! Having looked at those pictures there, I think I'll have to get it out for a go before work later!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Congratulations on discovering ACG and becoming aware of Alan's superb luthiery skills and visionary outlook on tonal shaping. I've played Pedro's ( now your!) bass on many many occasions and I own 5 ACGs myself with another two on order. You have a gem of a bass. Enjoy.

Edited by Scoop
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 3 weeks later...

[quote name='steve' post='996863' date='Oct 22 2010, 10:28 AM']Nice review, and aren't they fantastic basses? had mine for over six months and I still get the same buzz form playing it now as I did when I first got it[/quote]

I feel exactly the same with mine! It's the only bass I take to a gig nowadays.....

Alan is a bad, bad man!!!

D.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I was having a little go on the bass tonight and I've discovered a neat new trick. I'm used to thinking in terms of "absolutes" with bass EQ'ing, so I decided to fiddle around with the controls a bit more on the ACG to see what I could discover.

As has been said, each pickup has a frequency filter and as a control that acts like a "boost" for that pickup. Then there is the treble and treble "boost" control to consider, along with the coil switching options for each pickup. By putting the bridge boost on full and the filter about midway, and putting the neck filter on "closed" and boosting that too with plenty of treble dialled in I had created a sort of "Geddy Lee" type sound which was most surprising, given that I play through an Ashdown MK500 which is all solid state, all clean. It had this incredible twang and attack and a solid bottom with a punchy midrange; the closest way I can describe it is by comparing it to Geddy Lee's Rickenbacker sound, or perhaps Chris Squire's Rick.

Given that I was playing with my fingers through a clean amp, I can only imagine how powerful this tone would sound through an overdriven amp! I have been using the ACG for middy, modern bass tones but this discovery of a raw "rock" sound is awesome!

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • 4 months later...

[quote name='Chris2112' post='1023677' date='Nov 14 2010, 06:12 PM']I was having a little go on the bass tonight and I've discovered a neat new trick. I'm used to thinking in terms of "absolutes" with bass EQ'ing, so I decided to fiddle around with the controls a bit more on the ACG to see what I could discover.[/quote]

Have you discovered how to emulate a wah-wah pedal yet, just be dicking around with your pre-amp? If not then there are joys in the ACG EQ01 you are yet to explore. :)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Restore formatting

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

 Share

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...