Bass4real Posted Saturday at 20:48 Posted Saturday at 20:48 I always wanted to have a RICKENBACKER that is until I bought a black 4001 in 1980 for around 700.00 . And then I played it . I was the worst money I ever spent on a bass I hated everything about it I sold it 2 months after I bought it. I don't like popular brand name basses. Fender - Gibson - RICKENBACKER - etc. I do like the Ibanez bTb series I do like some the PEAVEY basses I do like the SPECTOR basses from the 90s I do like the TOBIAS BASSES I do like 80s KRAMER 8 stringers I do like many of the,"cheaper basses" under 400.00 I've played the truth is" budget Bass guitars " have come a long way . My favorite Bass right now is a BRICE FREAK 5 str. that I paid $399.00 for in 2017 . It's one of the best basses I've bought in every way . I've not one time had to adjust anything on this bass , I know I know but that is the GODS honest truth. Later BASS PLAYERs 1 Quote
Lozz196 Posted Saturday at 20:58 Posted Saturday at 20:58 No, I’ve been fortunate that I’ve never hated any of the basses I’ve owned. Sure there have been some that I just haven’t bonded with but all of them were perfectly fine, just things like finding out I prefer gloss finish to satin, minor stuff like that. 2 Quote
Doctor J Posted Saturday at 21:03 Posted Saturday at 21:03 Hate is a very strong term, needlessly so. Many basses have been bought and sole over the years, can't say I've ever been so upset as to actually hate any. 1 Quote
Mottlefeeder Posted Saturday at 21:05 Posted Saturday at 21:05 I had a s/h Warwick Corvette fretless tuned BEAD, which I loved, and decided to move on to a 5-string fretless Corvette. What I didn't realise was that the transition from 4-string bubinga body to a wider neck 5-string and lighter swamp ash body would result in neck dive. I tried various remedies and eventually decided I would never be happy with it so I moved it on. Quote
chyc Posted Saturday at 22:28 Posted Saturday at 22:28 Not everyone can do this, but I've never bought an instrument I've not played beforehand. Does that mean I've passed up the opportunity to find my ultimate bass? Maybe, but on the flipside I've never bought a bass that's anything less than great, let alone owned a bass I've hated. Quote
NancyJohnson Posted Sunday at 08:13 Posted Sunday at 08:13 GAS/desire Vs Disappointment? Yep. Darkglass AO900 Various Fender basses Gibson Thunderbird NR reissue (first run) Tech 21 VT Bass (rack and stomp) ...probably more. Quote
NJE Posted Sunday at 08:32 Posted Sunday at 08:32 Hate is a bit of a strong feeling towards an inanimate object, but it was good click bait to get me in here 😄 I had an American Standard Jazz Bass for a short while, it was horrible. Heavy, lifeless, no resonance, badly built, neck felt cheap…it was just an absolute lemon. It was a real shame as I had an American Standard Precision when I was in my late teens and loved it. Quote
Terry M. Posted Sunday at 09:10 Posted Sunday at 09:10 Bass is too awesome an instrument for me to feel any hatred towards,even the ones I didn't bond with and had to move on. 1 Quote
LeftyJ Posted Sunday at 11:33 Posted Sunday at 11:33 For me as a lefty music stores are usually a huge disappointment, so I buy most of my basses unseen through the internet (mostly used). I've taken my fair share of gambles over the years, even buying basses well outside my comfort zone just out of curiosity. Because they're used the financial risk was low, because I would always be able to resell at the same price I paid. I've been lucky enough that none of them really disappointed! I, too, bought a Rickenbacker (at the end of 2008, when the British pound dropped below the Euro) brand new, and although I didn't get on with the ergonomics of the bass, I loved the tone and those iconic looks! My biggest gambles I probably took when I bought my first Status Graphite S2 Classic based purely on looks alone, and when I traded my 1981 Ibanez MC924 for an Atelier Z Baby Z-4J with a guy in the US by mail. With those two I really didn't know what to expect: I had never played a graphite neck before, I had never played a headless, I didn't know what to expect tonewise. Ditto with the Baby Z: I didn't have much experience with shortscales, I didn't know what kind of tones to expect, and I didn't know if I would get on with the narrower string spacing - plus I traded a rare vintage lefty bass from my collection for it, with less than 250 made. But it turned out great, I love them! 1 Quote
Schnozzalee Posted Sunday at 12:01 Posted Sunday at 12:01 Yep... A Tokai Hardpuncher - Just sounded like a shoebox with elastic bands no matter what strings you put on it and it had a Fender USA pickup, so I now avoid Sen Ash. Quote
Woodinblack Posted Sunday at 12:09 Posted Sunday at 12:09 Yep, dingwall combustion. But traded it for an Ibanez 1605 and that was lovely. Quote
JoeEvans Posted Sunday at 12:13 Posted Sunday at 12:13 I have a white fretless Tokai Jazz Sound from the early 80s which I love to pieces. Some years back I had the chance to buy a black fretted one from more or less the same year, and I snapped it up sight unseen, thinking that it would be really cool to have the pair like that - black and white, fretted and fretless. But despite being as similar as could be on paper, the black one somehow entirely lacked the charm of the white one. I couldn't even really put my finger on why - something in the combination of neck shape, tone, weight, the feel of the finish - it just felt wrong and I didn't like it at all even though it was incredibly similar. But I sold it to someone who loved it. Quote
snorkie635 Posted Sunday at 12:24 Posted Sunday at 12:24 Hate is perhaps too strong a word, but I bought a Wal back in the early 80s which I thought was awful (Pro 2E). Got rid of it within a month and then, based on recommendations, bought another Wal, this time a Mk1. This was slightly better, but also had to go. Why didn't I like them? So many reasons, but mostly, I found them very finicky to use live and could never get a decent amount of 'bass' from either model. Traded last one to Overwater, and bass and sound were immediately sorted. Quote
chris_b Posted Sunday at 14:46 Posted Sunday at 14:46 The first "pro" bass I bought, and the only one I could afford at the time, was a very used Gibson EB0. It was awful. The tone sounded like a goose farting in a fog. I used it on 1 gig and that was 1 too many. The next day I borrowed a Danelectro Long Horn and as soon as I scraped the cash together the EB0 was replaced by a fabulous Fender Precision, which I still have. 2 Quote
OliverBlackman Posted Sunday at 15:56 Posted Sunday at 15:56 An epiphone Thunderbird. Bought it after seeing The bassist from The Darkness and Cliff Williams playing Gibson equivalents but with the exception of the hard case, everything about it was rubbish. Quote
Bass4real Posted Sunday at 17:41 Author Posted Sunday at 17:41 20 hours ago, Doctor J said: Hate is a very strong term, needlessly so. Many basses have been bought and sole over the years, can't say I've ever been so upset as to actually hate any. I know hate is a word I ( hate ) to say : ) I don't hate , But I'll say that I was more than disappointed in everything , I thought the RICKENBACKER 4001 was going to be a BASS for life. IT was a Bass for about 2 months.. Yeah well it happened a long time ago. Quote
Bass4real Posted Sunday at 17:43 Author Posted Sunday at 17:43 20 hours ago, Doctor J said: Hate is a very strong term, needlessly so. Many basses have been bought and sole over the years, can't say I've ever been so upset as to actually hate any. I agree hate is not the best way to describe it Quote
Steve Browning Posted Sunday at 18:18 Posted Sunday at 18:18 I didn't hate it, but an early purchase of a Hondo Ric made me realise the Rickenbacker ergonomics don't work for me. I was gifted a 4000 a few years and it was just the same problem. Just didn't give me anywhere comfortable to rest my thumb. The pickup was too close to the strings and the surround was too far away. Quote
Hellzero Posted Sunday at 20:45 Posted Sunday at 20:45 Yep, and there are quite a lot, but having owned luthier basses almost from the day one didn't help with what I may call mass produced "basses". Quote
Bass4real Posted Sunday at 21:27 Author Posted Sunday at 21:27 (edited) 23 hours ago, chyc said: Not everyone can do this, but I've never bought an instrument I've not played beforehand. Does that mean I've passed up the opportunity to find my ultimate bass? Maybe, but on the flipside I've never bought a bass that's anything less than great, let alone owned a bass I've hated. I'm right there with ya In 2025 in Reading Pa the Guitar stores that were here for decades have completely disappeared I think there is 1 store that you can still buy a new guitar or bass but it doesn't have any selection. I have never or would I ever buy a bass I haven't actually held in my hands , played it heard it through an amp . I see basses for sale on the Internet for thousands even tens of thousands. Who would be so stupid to buy a used bass for 5 -10 - 15 thousand or more without ever even seeing it before it shows up at your door. HELL NO NOT ME . As a matter of fact I wouldn't buy a bass that costs even $100.00 without seeing - playing etc etc A few years ago I was taught a valuable lesson DO NOT BELIEVE EVERY 1 OF THE SITES OR STORES ON THE INTERNET THAT SELL NEW & USED GEAR. ARE AN HONEST BUSINESS THIEVES ARE EVERYWHERE ESPECIALLY ON THE INTERNET. Edited Sunday at 21:39 by Bass4real Quote
Gank Bass Posted Sunday at 21:54 Posted Sunday at 21:54 I don't know if it's because I'm so used to playing my own home brew Chinese firewood j*zz basses but I rarely play something in a store that feels "right" to me anymore! This has lead to way too many being sold on despite probably being excellent instruments. Ricks are a strange beast as I've never enjoyed the ones I've tried out and yet I still have serious gas for one 🤦♂️ The lesson I take away is that if you find something that feels right, go with it Quote
White Cloud Posted Sunday at 22:43 Posted Sunday at 22:43 Yes, when I bought a brand new Wal in 1985. Don't get me wrong, the sounds were sublime, however I hated everything else about it. 1 Quote
asingardenof Posted Monday at 11:26 Posted Monday at 11:26 I was given a bass and hated it, a cheap and nasty Wesley five-string with a neck like a tree trunk. Quote
chris_b Posted Monday at 12:03 Posted Monday at 12:03 13 hours ago, White Cloud said: Yes, when I bought a brand new Wal in 1985. Don't get me wrong, the sounds were sublime, however I hated everything else about it. I bought a used Wal mk2 which sounded thin and gutless. I chopped it in for a mk3, at a local store, which sounded fat, full and punchy. Both Wals but chalk and cheese. 1 Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.