Jump to content
Why become a member? ×

Death Core bass in F#


toddwright138

Recommended Posts

Hi guys.

 

Just joined a band that play in F#.

 

Has anyone achieved a set up that sounds good in this key?

 

I have already tried a 4 string and using the digitech drop pedal.

 

My next test is a 5 string with extra thick strings - drop that to A or better still G# and using the drop pedal to go one step down.

 

I'm trying to avoid buying a crazy expensive specialist bass. 

 

All help welcome!

 

Current set up - Fender P bass, 1993 Ampeg svt 3 NON Pro , 1993 Quad Core

Link to comment
Share on other sites

D'Addario do a .147 string. That'll do it. Tune all the way down. Chuck that and the heaviest three strings from a heavy 4-string set onto that Precision and you'll be just fine.

 

Pedals and other electric gimmickry can find it hard to track downtuned basses accurately.

Edited by Doctor J
  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

not had to play anything going that low, but from my experiences of needing to go lower than standard, it's more or less the same as for a 5 string bass - get the right gauge strings and tune to the note, don't try to get anything to track it. Personally I'd want at least a five string bass if I was going that low, possibly six, but it depends on whether you need the higher notes so putting thicker strings on a four string will be fine if you don't need the full regular set.

 

You will need to do a proper set up though

 

That may then give you an issue with the tone across the whole set lower strings often "boom" a bit, or can be muddy.  I found that when I went to a low B a lot of it is getting used to the difference in tone from the E and adapting your playing technique, which is a longer term solution.  In the short term, the best "out of the box" tone I got across lower strings was from EMG pickups on a relatively cheap ESP/LTD bass.  I didn't especially like the bass in the long run and don't have it any more, but the EMGs really handled the tone across the whole set brilliantly, so that the low B didn't boom

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Do you need to go down an octave? 

 

think some bands with 8 string guitars will have the guitar and bass in the same octave, but just different timbres. A pal of mine who writes this sort of thing was telling me about it, means you get more definition in the bass sound and a low F# is so low not many speakers can reproduce it anyway.

  • Like 3
Link to comment
Share on other sites

7 minutes ago, Bigwan said:

Edit: as has already been suggested! 

 

Why go low? It's a headache. Look at bands like VOLA. Tune the bass up to F# and high pass guitars. 

 

 

Also look VOLA up anyway, as they slap

  • Like 1
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Winding isn't all of it, it's core size/shape too.

Talk to Newtone Strings here in the UK, they'll be able to wind you a custom set of strings that have an appropriate tension for the tuning you need.
Whether your P-bass neck can take that tension is another question, should be fine, but therein often lies the benefit of multi-scale basses or other more specialist/custom neck specs.

 

Si

Link to comment
Share on other sites

42 minutes ago, Sibob said:

Winding isn't all of it, it's core size/shape too.

Talk to Newtone Strings here in the UK, they'll be able to wind you a custom set of strings that have an appropriate tension for the tuning you need.
Whether your P-bass neck can take that tension is another question, should be fine, but therein often lies the benefit of multi-scale basses or other more specialist/custom neck specs.

 

Si

 

Unless you are going very very heavy gauges, the lower strings are always lower tension than the higher ones.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

If you tune to the F# below the B on a 5 string, you are going to be asking your cab to reproduce a fundamental of 23.1 hz. That's approaching infra bass territory. I don't know of a bass cab that can produce that frequency at any volume or with clarity. Many are running out of ideas at around 50 hz. Unless you are using a serious sub and some very powerful and stable amplification, it isn't realistic (imho or course). How deep are your pockets?

 

Bill Fitzmaurice, Phil Starr and Stevie are probably the best people on here to advise.

  • Like 2
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Agree with everyone here who points out that there's absolutely no need to tune down that low. There's no audio equipment short of an actual PA system with subs that can reproduce a 23.1Hz fundamental - all you'll end up hearing is the first harmonic anyway. 

 

For instance, if you want to talk heavy, D!ck Lofgren from Meshuggah plays in the same octave as the guitars - their lowest notes are A or A# so just a step or half-step down from the regular low B. Just EQ it nice and low with a bump in the low mids. 

Edited by Russ
Meshuggah's bass player's name keeps getting changed out on me!
Link to comment
Share on other sites

For no good reason, other than they cost me £20, I bought a set of Rotos Drop Zone +

 

rs66lh_plus.jpg.42ab46e7ca034c809bac3e96f4282d1c.jpg

 

Bloody hell, farmers use thinner wire for fences 😄

 

Tuning the F# was a nightmare. I imagine being heard would be another nightmare, doubt anything I had in the house was up to it.

 

Thankfully this particular "I wonder" folly of mine was cheap.

 

@toddwright138

If you fancy trying the Rotos, send me a pm 👍

Link to comment
Share on other sites

40 minutes ago, Russ said:

all you'll end up hearing is the first harmonic

You'll end up hearing most of the harmonics -depending on eq- the timbre even. Which I imagine is the point of using a low f# tuning. It will sound very different to F# tuned up from E.

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.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

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