|  | | 
03-08-2011, 07:08 PM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Nov 2006 Location: Central, PA | | | Can I play an EUB for Bluegrass I have never played an URB...but I love Bluegrass. I have played EB for 15 years and I also play banjo, mandolin and guitar. I would really like to learn to play an URB, but I don't have a place to put it. I drive a four door cab truck and I don't have a cap on the back...so I need something I can get in the cab of my truck. I am thinking about a an NS NXT and use a GK MB200 with an Ashdown 210 cab. I know it is not the most normal thing....but does anyone out there use an EUB for Bluegrass. I already get enough odd looks when I pull a Taylor out at a jam session (I live an hour away from Nazareth).
Any one have any experience using this type of bass in this setting?
Sign in to disble this ad
| 
03-08-2011, 07:16 PM
|  | Bartle doo? | | Join Date: Jun 2010 Location: Missing Mountains | | | Blueground Undergrass was a band that used electric instruments and a drumset in their bluegrass music. I think as a result, they weren't very accepted in the propper bluegrass circles. Since bluegrass is based off heritage and tradition, the style of music almost demands nothing change. If instruments start changing, then so does the sound and thus, bluegrass is now modern folk.
I'm also a huge closet bluegrass fan. Grew up on it in the mountains of NC. I'd say get you an upright 3/4, lower the peg all the way down and squeeze that bad boy in your pick-up. Find you a circle somewhere and get to pluck'n away. I've seen uprights stuffed in backseats plenty of times, so it can be done.
__________________ Quote:
Originally Posted by YCBass Fortunately the smell is only there when you actually put your face close to the holes, otherwise you wouldn't notice it in playing position... |
Fuzzrocious #2 / B1S #2 / S.A.S.S. #15 / WA #37
| 
03-08-2011, 07:57 PM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Apr 2006 Location: Brooklyn, NY | | | If you really can't fit a 3/4 (which I think you might be able to), get a 1/4 size and play seated or with a long pin. A compromise, but still a viable acoustic bass with high string height. You can usually find them pretty cheap.
I would think the only times you want an EUB for bluegrass is if your doing prog/jamgrass which uses electric sounds / drums. Its really a different instrument. | 
03-08-2011, 08:20 PM
| | | | I isn't unusual to hear bluegrass bands with EUB's. Especially touring groups. | 
03-08-2011, 10:08 PM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Apr 2006 Location: Brooklyn, NY | | Quote:
Originally Posted by MR PC I isn't unusual to hear bluegrass bands with EUB's. Especially touring groups. | Agreed. I used to use one in a bluegrass band! I definitely should have added the touring caveat; even some super trad groups use them on the road. I don't mean to discount their usefulness for a performance musician, but he was asking about informal jams which are almost always acoustic. I know from experience needing a power outlet (and needing to explain what you are playing) can be frustrating in that scene. YMMV. | 
03-09-2011, 05:33 AM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: May 2007 Location: No. Virginia near Wash, DC | | Just a Suggestion, but . . . billm67 - I have a 4-dr p/u truck & have no problem whatsoever fittin' an ol' 3/4 Kay into the back seat from the driver's side with the neck laid across the front passenger seat with the back adjusted just a touch down to the rear.
I'd suggest that, first of all, you try to fit a full size URB into your truck before you give-up on it, which sounds to me like what you would really, truly rather/want to play - am I right or wrong? 
__________________
Tejano Bass - "Never pick a fight with an old Tejano! If he's too old to fight, he'll just shoot ya!" That's (Tay-hah'-no) . . . if you don't savvy Tex-Mex.
| 
03-09-2011, 07:10 AM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Nov 2006 Location: Central, PA | | | I would love to learn on a 3/4 size bass. I think I could probably get one in the truck diagonally as you described. | 
03-09-2011, 07:24 AM
|  | Registered User | | Join Date: Feb 2006 Location: Tampa | | | I'd say if you're just getting into bluegrass, go bluegrass all the way. Get an upright - it doesn't have to be anything beyond an old beat-up one that you configure to get decent action. And get going!
Yes, easier said than done, but if you put some work into it and keep at it for a while, you'll get there. And I guarantee you'll be happy doing it.
And I'd suggest NOT getting a 1/4 bass. It wouldn't be loud enough in a bluegrass group setting (unless maybe you're a duo), AND you'd still have to deal with buying and selling the thing and transitioning to (and buying) a standard 3/4 upright later. Skip the middle step.
I'd also suggest not doing the EUB unless/until you feel like you really need one, or some kind of touring situation requires that you go that way. IME, I've found EUBs to be just too "in between" - not really an upright (even in the hands of great jazz players), and if I wanted electric, I'd just play my bass guitar(s).
On the other other hand, if money, time, and storage space weren't issues, I'd have and play any number of basses. | 
03-09-2011, 08:37 AM
| | Temp Banned (TOS Violation) | | Join Date: Aug 2008 Location: Stouffville, Ontario | | | There' s an older fella in my bluegrass club who uses an electric upright bass. It sounds good and all. He uses an EUB because he doesn' t want to transport a double bass.
Myself I prefer an upright bass. I tried a pbass before but prefer the sound and feel of an upright bass.
good luck,
Fred | 
03-09-2011, 03:30 PM
|  | Registered User | | | | | I drive a Silverado with extended cab (rear-opening doors, not the quad cab with four front-opening doors) and my 3/4 bass fits just fine.
__________________
"All of the poor people who started rock and roll are cool." -- Iggy
| 
03-09-2011, 03:33 PM
|  | Registered User | | Join Date: Nov 2008 Location: Minnesota - Twin Cities | | | This cult has expectations... EUB are not generally accepted by upright guys.. or Bluegrass
__________________
-------------
------------- (o)\ ! /(o)
-------------
Minnesota Classic VW Collector & Peavey USA Custom Shop Freak
Peavey USA Club Member # 122 (X40) Bassists who drive a VW club #? (x20+)
| 
03-11-2011, 12:37 PM
| | | | The bass player for Cadillac Sky plays EUB. I can see u using one if you're on tour, but for jamming, it almost out of the question. Plus EUB sound awful.
__________________
Susannah "Junebug" Armstrong
Third Rail, Bassist
| 
03-11-2011, 03:50 PM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Aug 2005 Location: Ontario Canada | | Yes you can, I've been using one for years as in this YouTube - skspeedie's Channel | 
03-11-2011, 03:58 PM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Aug 2005 Location: Ontario Canada | | | For the record I jam with the EUB all the time... take a little inverter box along and it lasts the whole evening...
Sold my German Upright...
Some folks just can't get by it but that's their problem not mine. | 
03-14-2011, 07:18 AM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Nov 2006 Location: Central, PA | | | Well...the wife and I were talking this weekend and she said"you're not bringing a huge bass into.here too". Seeing as though I have three guitars, two banjo, two mandolins, an electric bass, a couple of amps and a decent sized pa system at the house (think bi-amp with sub cabinets) I can't really blame her. If I am going to do this...it looks like an EUB is all I'll be able to get away with. Most.of the jam.sessions I get to now just have an electric bass player...so I'm not really.worried.about.whether they would accept an EUB. I have a cool idea for.festivals too. I just bought a GK mb200 and it would be fun to build.a.compact cube with a kappalite 3012ho speaker. Duracell makes a little battery powered inverted that would run off amp for at least a couple of hours. Put it on a little folding luggage cart and carry the Eub in the case in the other hand and I'd be set. I am leaning towards an NS designs nxt4 as the eub. I could always pick up some other jobs and play it in church too. I have a pair of 2x10 cabinets that I could use for real jobs. | 
03-14-2011, 07:32 AM
|  | Jack of all grooves, master of none | | Join Date: Jan 2010 Location: Nashville, TN - Music City | | | My brother played bass in a successful gigging bluegrass band for years using a Fender Jazz bass with coated strings. He played well above the neck pickup (sometimes over the fretboard itself) to get an open, hollow sound.
His main instrument is banjo, but he also plays guitar, piano, and just about anything else with strings.
The band played a festival that did not allow "amplified" instruments. He borrowed an upright bass and played all their sets with it.
It's a shame that some bluegrass people are so closed minded. Wonder how long it took before the upright bass was accepted over the washtub bass or blow jug?
It's 2011. Play electric. | 
03-14-2011, 01:54 PM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Nov 2010 Location: Ann Arbor Michigan | | | People's expectations are ridiculous sometimes. I've had gigs where the bandleaders insisted on upright when the EUB was working better in the mix...but it didn't look right. Or times where someone wanted my Jazz Bass rather than the Alembic, same reason. I'd prefer it to be what SOUNDS good in the context of the ensemble, but whadda I know, I'm just the bassist. And yeah, my old Kay sounds fantastic, but so does my Fender Jazz. | 
03-14-2011, 04:46 PM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Nov 2006 Location: Central, PA | | | I kind of like the sound of my Fender Jazz too....I just put a set of Dimarzio Ultra Jazz pickups in it and they sound great! | 
03-14-2011, 05:34 PM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Aug 2005 Location: Ontario Canada | | | The NS is a pretty decent EUB but pretty expensive for a stick bass, you can get an Ergo a way cheaper. I would highly recommend the Eminence as they are a hollow wood bass with sound post etc.
Dang good sound, really cuts through the mix with next to no feedback issues no matter where the placement of the amp or monitors are.... | 
03-14-2011, 05:47 PM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Aug 2005 Location: Ontario Canada | | | Here are the portable Inverters I use, have a GK MB150 that I use [ATTACH]  [/ATTACH] | | 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 | | | |