Sean Posted Sunday at 07:48 Author Posted Sunday at 07:48 8 hours ago, HeadlessBassist said: I have a secondary pupil in Wiltshire who has a very metal looking Schecter bass. I have to say it's very nice to play, but the sound is a little generic. I would however, like to try one of the Charles Berthoud Signature Schecters. Not keen on the looks particularly, but it certainly sounds good in the right hands. I like the lower cutaway for access. 1 Quote
tauzero Posted Sunday at 17:25 Posted Sunday at 17:25 18 hours ago, HeadlessBassist said: I would however, like to try one of the Charles Berthoud Signature Schecters. Not keen on the looks particularly, but it certainly sounds good in the right hands. To make the most of one of those, I'd need Charles Berthoud's hands. 1 1 Quote
NancyJohnson Posted 19 hours ago Posted 19 hours ago Rambling post. In my youth, I seem to remember Schecter being a cheapish go-to kit guitar brand business (like Allparts or Warmoth) before going into a fully fledged guitar brand. Cursory interest back then, but didn't really care. Just took a look at their website; honestly didn't realise they did so many bass models. Aside from a couple of more traditional offerings that I'd never consider purchasing (the J-4 or the Model-T things), there's no appeal whatsoever. The designs look quite meh, there's not much in the way of finish options. Some horrific headstock designs. Looking at the recent Signature model basses...the Sixx, dUg, Gallop, Michael Anthony; we all know which basses these guys are famous for but their signature lines fail miserably. 1 Quote
prowla Posted 18 hours ago Posted 18 hours ago (edited) Years ago Schecter used to do a catalogue of guitar parts you could buy - enough to build a whole instrument. It was great. I think now it's just the name. (Oops - posted at pg. 1, then read @NancyJohnson's post; as I recall they were good quality and not so cheap.) Edited 18 hours ago by prowla 1 Quote
LeftyJ Posted 17 hours ago Posted 17 hours ago When I first heard of Schecter (mid 1990s) I don't think the more affordable Far East Diamond Series was around yet. I just remember me and a classmate lusting over their sexy carved top USA Custom Shop superstrats like the Hollywood Classic and Sunset Classic on the internet. It wasn't until many years later when they finally got a distributor in the Netherlands but I still don't think I've ever seen a Schecter in a Dutch store in my life. Their popularity peaked in the Nu Metal days when bands like Alien Ant Farm and Papa Roach were endorsed by them - and then we all laughed when the infamous crabwalking clip of Attack Attack!'s "Stick Stickly" came out with the whole band sporting Schecter guitars and basses Quote
Russ Posted 12 hours ago Posted 12 hours ago 4 hours ago, LeftyJ said: ... and then we all laughed when the infamous crabwalking clip of Attack Attack!'s "Stick Stickly" came out with the whole band sporting Schecter guitars and basses CRABCORE! 2 Quote
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