|  | | 
07-01-2005, 03:24 PM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Apr 2002 Location: Ontario | | | Finally, (soon) my own DB! That's right, I finally have my own DB...kind of. I don't own it yet, I'm taking it for a "test drive," but I'm friends with the current owner (he's selling it because he switched back to guitar and doesn't play it enough) so I'm going to hold onto it and pay it off as things go on as long as he's cool with that.
So, the scoop -- it's from the 50's, made in west Germany by a company called "Haeffner"? I don't know how to spell it, but I had a man by the name of Jim Smith take a look at it and apparently that's the maker. Only label I could find was "Made in West Germany," so...there ya go.
Laminate spruce top, laminate back -- I don't know what wood, but it's apparently harder than the spruce (almost no cracking in the finish). Ebony fretboard, Thomastik Spiro strings, Underwood Pickup, no indication as to who made the bridge but it's a maple job with chrome adjusters. Great looking neck -- can anyone tell me what wood it is?
3/4 size, 42" scale, Eb neck...am I missing any details?
The Spiros bow better than I expected -- I've never bowed one with them, and from what I've read on TB, I half expected 'em to just screech and squeal...and I was using a German without as much hair as it should that hadn't had any rosin put on in it in weeks (and I've been using it regularly, there's almost nothing left in the hair!)
Haven't plugged it in, but I've heard it played amped before and the school's DB that I've been using has an Underwood too. I'm probably going to switch it out, I'm not a fan of the Underwood's thin electricy sound.
Here are the obligatory pics! There's also one in there of me playing the school's at a jazz quartet performance at the Spring Concert. Other good news? I've lost about 15 pounds since that performance  . http://photobucket.com/albums/b124/govithoy/
Final notes: I'm also getting a bow with it. The bow itself needs a cleaning, a rehair, and a few parts (two rings -- one for the frog where the hair attaches and one for the button) but it's exactly what I'm looking for: french, heavy, and long. I left it with the repair fellow, and I'm going to have white hair put on it. The school's is a long, rather light German with black hair that's okay, but I REALLY want to learn French properly. Both are brazilwood.
The bass itself needs a bit of work. It needs a new nut (the spacing is a bit off,) a fingerboard dress, and some new strings (I'm going the high action, low tension route) that bow a bit nicer. I'm mostly going to be doing jazz, but I'll need something that bows well for concert band, the Youth Symphony I'm auditioning for, and my own random classical pursuits. I've actually been playing it since February, but now I've finally got my own that I actually get to play OUTSIDE of class! Woo.
Sign in to disble this ad
__________________ Quote: |
Originally Posted by HollowBassman Doesn't she know that they're not really people until the age of about three? |
Last edited by Govithoy : 07-01-2005 at 11:18 PM.
| 
07-01-2005, 03:39 PM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: May 2003 Location: Kraków, Polska | | | Congratulations! Seems like you're on a good path and I hope you stick with it. But as a quick note, low-tension strings don't bow as easily as high-tension strings (all else being equal, of course). But there's a strings subforum for that kind of stuff...
__________________
youtube.com/krowochron - conformist without a cause
Krappy Klub #2, redneck bassist #7, I back a hot singerbabe #22
| 
07-01-2005, 11:17 PM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Apr 2002 Location: Ontario | | | Hmm, interesting to know! I had to go to work shortly after posting this, so I haven't really had a chance to comment on the sound or anything. After a lot of consideration, I think I might actually keep the Spiros on -- the pizz sound is so nice! I can sacrifice a bit of bowing and ease of playing for a sound this good. I played the melody to Nature Boy on both basses, and excusing my intonation, playing it on this one makes it finally sound alive -- and compared to this upright, the school's sounds awful and lifeless.
Also, I found out it's an old Hofner! The guy I was talking to had an interesting accent...and said "hay-ffner."
__________________ Quote: |
Originally Posted by HollowBassman Doesn't she know that they're not really people until the age of about three? | | 
07-01-2005, 11:25 PM
| | | Congrats!
Who's the chick?  | 
07-01-2005, 11:48 PM
| | Registered User Endorsing: Ampeg | | Join Date: Apr 2005 Location: Apopka, FL | | | Yeah, who's the chick? Nice going, dude! | 
07-01-2005, 11:49 PM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Jun 2002 Location: Austin, Texas | | Quote: |
Originally Posted by Ray Parker Congrats!
Who's the chick?  | lol, i was thinking the same thing.
she's pretty hawt  | 
07-02-2005, 12:14 AM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Apr 2002 Location: Ontario | | A good friend of mine, she sang with us that night and was the singer for the band I was in (one of the guitarists from that band was also playing with us.) Don't get any ideas, she's already got a boyfriend -- who, coincidentally, is another friend of mine who plays a 5 string Peavey BG. That, and she's 17, so a bit young for most of y'all  . Except maybe Ray.
Oh, I was just playing the DB for a while...yeah...I'm gonna have to change those strings. I love the pizz sound to death, but bowing them is a lot harder than I initially encountered.
__________________ Quote: |
Originally Posted by HollowBassman Doesn't she know that they're not really people until the age of about three? | | 
07-02-2005, 09:04 AM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: May 2003 Location: Kraków, Polska | | | Bowing is hard and discouraging enough without making it any harder than it has to be. Trust me on that, I started out on Spiros as well. There are strings that do arco and pizz reasonably well - d'Addario Helicore Orchestras are a good choice. Or if you have low-tension or solo-tuning Spiros, you may want to try a medium-tension set.
Your neck is almost certainly maple. Flame maple looks like that and is a standard material for necks, sides, backs of violin-family instruments. And if there's an umlaut in Hofner, the old guy was pronouncing it correctly.
__________________
youtube.com/krowochron - conformist without a cause
Krappy Klub #2, redneck bassist #7, I back a hot singerbabe #22
| 
07-02-2005, 09:45 AM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Apr 2002 Location: Ontario | | Quote: |
Originally Posted by pklima Bowing is hard and discouraging enough without making it any harder than it has to be. Trust me on that, I started out on Spiros as well. There are strings that do arco and pizz reasonably well - d'Addario Helicore Orchestras are a good choice. Or if you have low-tension or solo-tuning Spiros, you may want to try a medium-tension set.
Your neck is almost certainly maple. Flame maple looks like that and is a standard material for necks, sides, backs of violin-family instruments. And if there's an umlaut in Hofner, the old guy was pronouncing it correctly. | Umlaut = two dots above the "o"? Yeah, it's there. Thanks for the correction!
Yeah, I love bowing a lot...it sounds great on my teacher's bass that we use at lessons -- a very, very old 3/4 fully carved orchestral bass set up with orchestral strings. Easy as pie on it (relative to other basses I've tried bowing) to make a great sound. I think I might try Dominants, actually -- my teacher has 'em on his Kay and they have a great pizz sound and are pretty good with the bow, especially when compared to Spiros. Plus, the tension isn't too far off from the Spiros that are on my bass now, so it should be pretty okay. I'd prefer the lower tension, but if it means a great sound, I can definitely learn to live with it  .
I assumed it was flamed maple, but I remember assuming that of similar-looking cello necks and someone told me it was some other wood...started with a C. Ages ago, oh well.
__________________ Quote: |
Originally Posted by HollowBassman Doesn't she know that they're not really people until the age of about three? | | 
07-04-2005, 10:39 PM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Apr 2002 Location: Ontario | | A couple days and a lesson later, I've decided to keep the Spiros. It took a bit of work, but I've gotten them to bow pretty well and my teacher is impressed with them -- the D is *kind* of rangy, but everything else is okay. The G actually sounds much better than my school's bass, which is generally much easier to bow. Plus, I tried the Dominants, and there's just no comparison to the pizz sound. I can't help but LOVE these Spiros.
Going to put in a Revolution SOLO pickup in place of the Underwood, and I'm grabbing a Gollihur German bow to go along with the random French bow that came with the bass (which is still in repair, I should get it back next week,) a case for both, and a quiver. After all this, the fingerboard dress and the new nut are done, I should be set for a while (until I get up the cash for a six string BG and an AI combo amp...  .)
-Aaron
__________________ Quote: |
Originally Posted by HollowBassman Doesn't she know that they're not really people until the age of about three? | | 
07-05-2005, 05:00 AM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Aug 2003 Location: Denver, Co. | | | Aaron, congratulations!
Just ignore these low lives who were asking about the chick.....you say 17? Ah.... when will she be 18?
__________________ Oh, no.....have we gone OT yet again? "The opportunity was there...but it never presented itself." Phil Urso, 1980. :atoz: | 
07-05-2005, 05:42 AM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Jul 2004 Location: Edinburgh, Scotland | | Who's the low life now, Paul?  | 
07-05-2005, 06:30 AM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Aug 2003 Location: Denver, Co. | | Quote: |
Originally Posted by Doug Ring Who's the low life now, Paul?  | Above all else, i'm still a bass player.... 
__________________ Oh, no.....have we gone OT yet again? "The opportunity was there...but it never presented itself." Phil Urso, 1980. :atoz: | 
07-05-2005, 07:17 AM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Jul 2004 Location: Edinburgh, Scotland | |  You mean we all gotta be like you?  | 
07-05-2005, 12:14 PM
| | Sam Shen's US Distributor Sales Manager, CSC Products Inc. | | Join Date: Mar 2003 Location: Rochester, NY | | C'mon guys, admit it, you clicked on the picture of the pretty girl before any of the bass pics.  Congrats Govithoy, keep us posted on your doings. | 
07-05-2005, 01:00 PM
|  | Journeyman Clam Artist Moderator | | Join Date: Nov 2002 Location: Winnipeg, baby | | Quote: |
Originally Posted by Govithoy Don't get any ideas, she's already got a boyfriend -- who, coincidentally, is another friend of mine who plays a 5 string Peavey BG. | Yeah, but now you've got the REAL BASS and it's time for you to learn that chicks dig it! Mr. Five-String Peavey won't be around forever...
__________________ There's a joker in every deck... | 
07-05-2005, 08:50 PM
|  | No Longer Works a Day Job | | Join Date: Jun 2000 Location: USA | | | Congrats on the bass. I'm only 19......
__________________
"A lunatic might just be a minority of one."-1984
Sadowsky Club #320
| 
07-05-2005, 08:51 PM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Apr 2002 Location: Ontario | | Quote: |
Originally Posted by Damon Rondeau Yeah, but now you've got the REAL BASS and it's time for you to learn that chicks dig it! Mr. Five-String Peavey won't be around forever... | Mr. Five-String Peavey can stay for as long as he wants, I've got my eye on a trumpeter.
EDIT: By the by, the trumpeter has a known history of being attracted to bass players, and also finds me playing DB attractive  -- I jokingly suggested some sort of scientific explanation for it, and she said I should write a report for it...which I shall be doing so sometime in the near future, and publishing this here on TBDB and BG.
__________________ Quote: |
Originally Posted by HollowBassman Doesn't she know that they're not really people until the age of about three? |
Last edited by Govithoy : 07-05-2005 at 08:58 PM.
| 
07-05-2005, 09:38 PM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Oct 2002 Location: Englewood, CO | | | I was gonna ask if the lady came with the bass, but that would be redundant. Cool bass- I'm sure it will serve you well.
__________________
"Jesus is my bassline" Immedicabile vulnus ense recidendum est, ne pars sincera trahatur | 
07-06-2005, 07:15 AM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: May 2000 Location: NYC, USA | | Quote: |
Originally Posted by Govithoy Mr. Five-String Peavey can stay for as long as he wants, I've got my eye on a trumpeter. | Ok, lets see a pic of the trumpeter, then we'll let you know if it's a good trade-off .
(did I just say that???  )
__________________ Little cars, big basses - perfect together
| | Thread Tools | Search this Thread | | | |
Posting Rules
| You may not post new threads You may not post replies You may not post attachments You may not edit your posts HTML code is Off | | | |