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The ultimate jazz bass


JamesBass
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Mine would be a pimped vintage MIJ bass, and would have DiMarzio Model Js, stack knobs, passive electronics, Schaller 3D bridge, maple/blocks and a vulgar scratchplate. In fact it would be this:

[sharedmedia=core:attachments:66973]

Jon.

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for me the ultimate ever jazz bass is a Suhr. I've played Sadowsky's, De Gier,s, Lulls. nothing comes close to the feel and sound you get from John Suhr's instruments. only my opinion. they are pure jazz bass porn aswell. i will…..yes i will own a Suhr one day..

Edited by bubinga5
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[quote name='bassmachine2112' timestamp='1427017889' post='2724642']
Early Peavey Foundation with super ferrite pick ups.
Cheap as chips and made in USA.
My one is 31 years old and gets gigged every week.
These are seriously good basses
[/quote]

Agreed. I don't particularly like Jazz basses because of the body shape, so the Foundation suits me better. The Super Ferrites are great pickups. My Foundation is a dream to play, thin, fast neck, straight as an arrow and really low action. The neck tilt feature is totally underrated.

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If you know next to nothing about Jazz basses, you best get yourself out there and try a load. That should give you an idea if it's 'the one' for you before blowing a load of cash on the ultimate one.

Just a thought :)

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Think the point of my thread has been missed which is my fault!

I'm planning on building/commissioning a Jazz bass soon. I know enough to go buy off the shelf, but I'm interested in building a jazz that is "The ultimate Jazz" basically a jazz like the Fender 50th Anniversary jazz but even better!

So far I know I want matching headstock. Bound rosewood neck, undecided on dots or block inlays, I'd like it to be a stack knob but don't know about body pickup positions and their pros and cons, what about neck shape/specs? Or how has the body shape and contours changed and what's the consensus on the best neck shape and dimensions and body shape and contour?

I'm looking for it be sound balanced, articulate, and 60s inspired as I play soul, blues, jazz, and funk.

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[quote name='zero9' timestamp='1427029620' post='2724818']
If you know next to nothing about Jazz basses, you best get yourself out there and try a load....
[/quote]

I think this is good advice to start off with, especially if you're commissioning a bass to be built.
Another point is Warmoth do some fantastic parts and are easy to put together IME. You really can get what you want then!

Edited by Noisyjon
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From the front it would just like a standard Jazz with a rosewood board, blocks and binding and a matching headstock.

However it would have a neck-through construction with the neck painted to mach the rest of the bass, angled headstock, Lightwave pickups under the bridge ashtray and the lower cutaway enlarged to allow as much access to the upper frets as possible without obviously changing the body shape.

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[quote name='BigRedX' timestamp='1427121846' post='2725978']
From the front it would just like a standard Jazz with a rosewood board, blocks and binding and a matching headstock.

However it would have a neck-through construction with the neck painted to mach the rest of the bass, angled headstock, Lightwave pickups under the bridge ashtray.
[/quote]

I mostly agree with you here (though I'd swap the blocks & binding for clay dots & no binding) but I'd go Wenge neck-through, no paint or varnish.

I'd love to have a bass like that.

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[quote name='BigRedX' timestamp='1427121846' post='2725978']
From the front it would just like a standard Jazz with a rosewood board, blocks and binding and a matching headstock.
[/quote]

BRX in "my ultimate Fender" shock!!! :lol:

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This is what I built with Jon Shuker.

On reflection I should have gone with body coloured headstock. Spec is Seymour Duncan Soapbar pickups with the Steve Bailey 4 band eq. This has a pull-out slap setting too (not that it ever gets used!) It's nice and light ( for a 5er) c. 9 lbs and is swamp ash with a maple facing.

[attachment=187339:S5000265.JPG]

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[quote name='Paul S' timestamp='1426951479' post='2723916']
Under 8lbs, 32" scale, black body, bwb pickguard, maple neck, passive with S1 switch. Anything else is icing.
[/quote]
My one is a 2006 USA although with a 34" rosewood neck. Love it. I've never tried a maple one nor seen many around.

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I have 14 basses, but when I'm gigging, I always seem to go for my American std Jazz. I just love the feel, the sound, the weight, everything is perfect, at least for my tastes anyway. I think they just got it right.

Edited by ubit
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