Terry M. Posted 13 hours ago Posted 13 hours ago 1 hour ago, eude said: The sound was immense, they looks SO cool, but ergonomically, a very bad design compared to a lot of others out there, including other basses in the Warwick catalogue. From what I understand the Thumb was originally known as the JD bass after an American bass player based in Germany called John Davis.He seemingly had a hand in the design and development.Not only was he one of the actual singers of the lip syncing Milli Vanilli he was a slap and pop player hence the "Thumb". I believe the intention was to wear it high and play...with the thumb! This story won't make playing one any more comfy for those who find them challenging but it might explain the design to a degree. Definitely quite niche.Mine isn't going anywhere. Quote
itu Posted 12 hours ago Posted 12 hours ago 52 minutes ago, Terry M. said: I believe the intention was to wear it high and play...with the thumb! They did an "enhancement" and "designed" the Corvette that looks a bit like a Gus bass. Every time I see a Thumb, I like it, but a Corvette makes me laugh. Thumb is one good sounding bass, but the Dolphin was something I wanted, although never bought. They were expensive and rare from the start. 1 Quote
Kev Posted 11 hours ago Posted 11 hours ago 5 hours ago, Terry M. said: I'm still yet to understand why electric basses that need amplification are judged acoustically. I'm always willing to learn however so what exactly am I missing with this? If the amplified sound is good isn't that the point? Always the first test I give a bass. If it doesn't sound good unplugged, it doesn't usually sound good amplified either, unless it's running something like EMGs. Why? Don't know, but it's absolutely my experience of it. Quote
Misdee Posted 11 hours ago Posted 11 hours ago (edited) There's some synergy between the combination of very dense hardwoods used on the Thumb that gives it such a unique raunchy tone. It's nothing like Spector, that's for sure. The pickup placement must contribute a lot, too. It would be great if Warwick could somehow get that same sound with a bass that's more comfortable to play. I'm sure it's not beyond the wit of mankind to come up with such a design. Just a thought. Edited 8 hours ago by Misdee 2 Quote
Terry M. Posted 11 hours ago Posted 11 hours ago 1 hour ago, itu said: They did an "enhancement" and "designed" the Corvette that looks a bit like a Gus bass. Every time I see a Thumb, I like it, but a Corvette makes me laugh. Thumb is one good sounding bass, but the Dolphin was something I wanted, although never bought. They were expensive and rare from the start. Now it's the Dolphin I think looks weird. They sound really good though,went to a gig once and the bassist had a 5 string version. 1 Quote
Kiwi Posted 11 hours ago Posted 11 hours ago 5 hours ago, Terry M. said: I'm still yet to understand why electric basses that need amplification are judged acoustically. I'm always willing to learn however so what exactly am I missing with this? If the amplified sound is good isn't that the point? I think the point I was trying to make, perhaps poorly, is that there is a huge difference between how the Thumb sounds AND FEELS acoustically and what it sounds like amplified. Perhaps I"m still trying to get my head around the difference and I need more time with one to reach any kind of lasting insight. I can't think of any other bass where I've felt like that. Quote
Terry M. Posted 11 hours ago Posted 11 hours ago 30 minutes ago, Kev said: Always the first test I give a bass. If it doesn't sound good unplugged, it doesn't usually sound good amplified either, unless it's running something like EMGs. Why? Don't know, but it's absolutely my experience of it. I promise I'm not being deliberately obtuse here but I've heard this before and genuinely can't understand the point of testing a bass unplugged other than to get the feel of it. It doesn't mean you're wrong however so don't take it that way. Quote
Terry M. Posted 10 hours ago Posted 10 hours ago 6 minutes ago, Kiwi said: I think the point I was trying to make, perhaps poorly, is that there is a huge difference between how the Thumb sounds AND FEELS acoustically and what it sounds like amplified. Perhaps I"m still trying to get my head around the difference and I need more time with one to reach any kind of lasting insight. I can't think of any other bass where I've felt like that. I'm happy to have got this wrong but as I've said before I basically think the sound of an unplugged electric bass is irrelevant but are you saying you feel the Thumb bass even FEELS differently acoustically to when it's plugged in? When you arrive at more insight on this please let me know? I think my mental struggle with the sound is the sound shaping options available when plugged in versus unplugged. How for example can I expect the MEC preamp on my Warwicks to translate to them before they're even plugged in? Again I'm willing to learn. Quote
Kev Posted 10 hours ago Posted 10 hours ago 28 minutes ago, Terry M. said: I promise I'm not being deliberately obtuse here but I've heard this before and genuinely can't understand the point of testing a bass unplugged other than to get the feel of it. It doesn't mean you're wrong however so don't take it that way. I guess its how the woods and general build of the bass resonates. If its dead acoustically, that transfers through when amplified. If its loud and alive, that seems to too. The effect diminishes with active preamps and especially active pickups (I find anything with EMGs in the same positions sound the same). 1 Quote
Terry M. Posted 10 hours ago Posted 10 hours ago 2 hours ago, itu said: They did an "enhancement" and "designed" the Corvette that looks a bit like a Gus bass. Every time I see a Thumb, I like it, but a Corvette makes me laugh. I had to Google Gus basses. Isn't the Corvette design older? Quote
Rolf Posted 10 hours ago Posted 10 hours ago 1 hour ago, Misdee said: It would be great if Warwick could somehow get that same sound with a bass that's more comfortable to play. I'm sure it's not beyond the wit of mankind to come up with such a design. Just a thought. I've been toying with the idea of building a Jazz bass with Thumb pickup placement, maybe even with a wenge neck, just to see if I could get someting similar sounding. It's somewhere on my very long list of future projects 1 Quote
Terry M. Posted 10 hours ago Posted 10 hours ago 30 minutes ago, Kev said: I guess its how the woods and general build of the bass resonates. If its dead acoustically, that transfers through when amplified. If its loud and alive, that seems to too. The effect diminishes with active preamps and especially active pickups (I find anything with EMGs in the same positions sound the same). Thanks Kev. I'll admit defeat on understanding/experiencing this one 😂 1 Quote
eude Posted 10 hours ago Posted 10 hours ago 6 minutes ago, Rolf said: I've been toying with the idea of building a Jazz bass with Thumb pickup placement, maybe even with a wenge neck, just to see if I could get someting similar sounding. It's somewhere on my very long list of future projects I think the very dense body wood of a Thumb also contributes something, although, probably less on the bolt-on. If you were to build a Jazz sized body with similar woods though, it would be a boat anchor! 1 Quote
Kev Posted 10 hours ago Posted 10 hours ago It's getting dangerously close to a tone wood argument I'll admit 4 Quote
Kiwi Posted 9 hours ago Posted 9 hours ago 1 hour ago, Terry M. said: are you saying you feel the Thumb bass even FEELS differently acoustically to when it's plugged in? No, not at all. Just sounds different because of the filtering by the electronics. EMGs are quite bold sounding and have their own flavour. Acoustically I can both hear and feel the amount of upper mids that are dampened by the amount of wenge and bubinga in the neck. In particular the wenge fingerboard will absolutely dampen some treble content. You could try your Thumb bass against a Status Series II at some point acoustically and see what differences you can hear. We've occasionally had discussions in this forum about the sound of backline and I've played through some bass rigs where it sounds like there's not just pillow over the speaker but a complete four poster bed. I've been at a loss to understand how the owner can actually hear themselves on stage amongst all the cymbals and guitars. And the answer is they can't but they are so used to it that playing based on hand position and the movement of their trouser legs is their normal and a yardstick for what sounds good to them. Perhaps "good" really means normal. 1 Quote
Rolf Posted 9 hours ago Posted 9 hours ago 41 minutes ago, eude said: I think the very dense body wood of a Thumb also contributes something, although, probably less on the bolt-on. If you were to build a Jazz sized body with similar woods though, it would be a boat anchor! Yeah, a bubinga Jazz body would probably have enough mass to catch smaller objects in its gravity field. But walnut or mahogany shouldn't be too bad. Quote
Misdee Posted 8 hours ago Posted 8 hours ago 1 hour ago, Rolf said: I've been toying with the idea of building a Jazz bass with Thumb pickup placement, maybe even with a wenge neck, just to see if I could get someting similar sounding. It's somewhere on my very long list of future projects I think the bubinga body adds a degree of compression to the tone. Don't some of the Moon Jazz-style basses have pickup placement similar to a Thumb, with the angled neck pickup? They definitely sound nothing like a Thumb. A more comfy Thumb would need a bigger body with a longer top horn, but not a Corvette, because they are uncomfortable in their own right. Quote
TRBboy Posted 7 hours ago Posted 7 hours ago Thumb 5 BO was my first 'good' quality bass. Tried it on a shop around '97 and fell in love with the sound, and the looks and feel..... Sitting down. I preserved with it for about 5 years in amongst other basses, and then decided I couldn't get on with 5 strings. What I realised later, after playing lots of other 5 strings, was it was the ergonomics of that particular bass. With such a small body but a fairly heavy neck, it was prone to neck dive. The worst part of the ergonomics though is that because of the body proportions, first fret feels a country mile away, stood with it on a strap! Feels like it's a 48" scale length! 🤣 That sound though.... I swapped mine for a 4 string corvette, which still sounded and looked great, but was much more ergonomic. There's no 'magic' about them tonally though, it's just down to the pickups, preamp, and location of the pickups. If you did the same thing in any bass shape it would sound essentially the same. 🤷 1 Quote
eude Posted 7 hours ago Posted 7 hours ago 24 minutes ago, TRBboy said: Thumb 5 BO was my first 'good' quality bass. Tried it on a shop around '97 and fell in love with the sound, and the looks and feel..... Sitting down. I preserved with it for about 5 years in amongst other basses, and then decided I couldn't get on with 5 strings. What I realised later, after playing lots of other 5 strings, was it was the ergonomics of that particular bass. With such a small body but a fairly heavy neck, it was prone to neck dive. The worst part of the ergonomics though is that because of the body proportions, first fret feels a country mile away, stood with it on a strap! Feels like it's a 48" scale length! 🤣 That sound though.... I swapped mine for a 4 string corvette, which still sounded and looked great, but was much more ergonomic. There's no 'magic' about them tonally though, it's just down to the pickups, preamp, and location of the pickups. If you did the same thing in any bass shape it would sound essentially the same. 🤷 Ryan Martinie has moved to Fodera from Warwick, his signature tone was always a Warwick Thumb, and yet, his Fodera sounds just the same, with a maple neck, korina body with a maple top. The pickups are in that classic Thumb 5 position however, which like you say, has to be the secret sauce... https://fodera.com/collections/signature-instruments-standard-series/products/ryan-martinie-black-beauty-standard-deposit 2 Quote
Cosmo Valdemar Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago 2 hours ago, eude said: Ryan Martinie has moved to Fodera from Warwick, his signature tone was always a Warwick Thumb, and yet, his Fodera sounds just the same, with a maple neck, korina body with a maple top. The pickups are in that classic Thumb 5 position however, which like you say, has to be the secret sauce... https://fodera.com/collections/signature-instruments-standard-series/products/ryan-martinie-black-beauty-standard-deposit I don't think it sounds the same, although I've only got the YouTube demos to go by. They're in the same ballpark unsurprisingly but the Fodera doesn't seem to have any of the growl or aggression of the Thumb. Quote
Terry M. Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago 3 hours ago, TRBboy said: There's no 'magic' about them tonally though, it's just down to the pickups, preamp, and location of the pickups. If you did the same thing in any bass shape it would sound essentially the same. 🤷 Hmmm I'm not so sure you know. I wouldn't necessarily use the word magic but I feel there's definitely a "formula" Warwick cooked up to create that sound. Obviously I don't know for sure but I've yet to hear anything else sound close to a Thumb. Those brass bell frets may even be a contributing factor and wood and fretboard choices. I could be wrong of course. 2 Quote
Bassman68 Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago Maybe it’s just folklore but I’m sure I read it somewhere that the original Thumb bass was meant to be headless? Quote
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