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Originally posted by 20db pad SD was using a host of session players to handle bass duties in the "Aja" era. Chuck Rainey played on many of the big SD hits. He used a Fender Jazz.
Anthony Jackson also played on a few cuts, as well as on Donald Fagen's solo album. I never researched what basses AJ played on these records. The timeline and the sound kind of points to either a Ken Smith or a modified Fender jazz. |
I found this info in the Bass Player article archives. I was pretty sure that Chuck was a Pbass man until the 80's:
Dancing Machines
Unlike James Jamerson's Funk Machine and Jaco's Bass of Doom, Chuck Rainey's main Fender from the '60s and '70s hasn't disappeared--although it has long been retired. The '57 Precision has a blond finish and a rosewood fingerboard. His early backup instruments were a Lake Placid Blue '62 P-Bass and a sunburst '62 P-Bass, both with rosewood boards.
In the early '80s, Chuck switched to a Spector NS prototype. From there, he moved to Ken Smith basses, with brief stops at Warwick and Peavey. Inspired by Anthony Jackson, he contacted Smith to make his first 6-string; shortly after, Smith introduced the signature CR line of bolt-on 4-, 5-, and 6-string basses.
Chuck's collection is now in transition. It currently includes six Smith basses: CR 4-, 5-, and 6-strings, a CR Wide 6, a Burner 4, and a BT 6--as well as a Roscoe 6-string and a Pedulla 5. In addition, Rainey is eagerly awaiting the arrival of three new instruments: a Fodera 36"-scale 6-string, an SSD NS 4, and a prototype signature-series 4-string built by Alvarez and Conklin's Bill Moll, which Chuck is helping to design. Rainey has been using Dean Markley strings since 1974; his basses are strung with nickel-plated Round Wounds, gauges .045, .065, .085, .100, with a .030 C string and a .125 B. He also uses Smith and D'Addario strings.
In addition to his Fenders, Chuck made a lot of music from the early '60s to the late '70s with his Ampeg amplifiers ("B-12s in the studio and B-15s on the road," he notes). Ever-evolving with the times, he switched to modular rack gear when it was all the rage in the '80s. His current road rig consists of a Gallien-Krueger 400RB or 800RB head with an SWR Goliath 4x10. His home studio includes a Trace Elliot GP7SM300 head with a Bag End D10XD cabinet, as well as an Ampeg SVT-III Pro head and two Ampeg SVT410HE 4x10s. He also keeps his old Ashly power amp and preamp on hand.
Though it's not widely known, Rainey was an early effects user, having first been introduced to them by King Curtis and effects pioneer/session guitarist Vinnie Bell. "I used to bring pedals on film dates to provide sound effects, because if you brought them along you were paid as if you played a second instrument. When I was subbing in the pit of Hair on Broadway I used a wah-wah pedal, and there's a lot of wah-wah on my Coalition album." For present-day soloing dates, Chuck carries his pedalboard. It includes flanger, octaver, digital delay, digital reverb, and compressor pedals made by Boss; chorus, digital delay, EQ, and compressor pedals made by DOD; and an old Maestro Echoplex. He also stomps on Ernie Ball volume and wah-wah pedals, and he stays in tune with a Boss tuner, switched into his circuit with an A/B box.