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02-13-2006, 03:17 PM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Jan 2006 Location: Australia | | | Steve Swallow's basses?
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Hi all,
I just got around to purchasing John Scofield's CD "enroute [live]" with his trio a couple of weeks ago, with Steve Swallow on elec bass and Bill Stewart on drums. Love the CD!
My bass teacher and I were talking about Steve Swallow's sound/tone on this CD and she mentioned that he might be playing a hollow-body elec bass. We both don't know what's in his gear setup though.
Does anyone know? | 
02-13-2006, 03:29 PM
| | Registered User Wouldn't you like to know?! | | Join Date: Apr 2000 Location: Atlanta | | | Last I heard, he was a playing a Citron semi.
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There's a reason why women love us bass players.The tone is like Barry White's voice, and the strings are thick like Ron Jeremy's...well, you get the point.
Last edited by Woodchuck : 02-13-2006 at 03:48 PM.
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02-13-2006, 03:45 PM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Mar 2000 Location: London, UK | | |
Last edited by DaveBeny : 02-13-2006 at 04:24 PM.
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02-13-2006, 04:07 PM
|  | Bassist: Educator/Soloist/Performer Sales Rep: Benavente Guitars - Endorser: SIT strings, & Epifani Moderator | | Join Date: Jan 2003 Location: Atlanta/Lexington | | | I also remember him with a Parker Fly as well... | 
02-13-2006, 04:30 PM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Jan 2006 Location: Australia | | | Thanks for the info. I just did a google search, them's nice basses! Interesting choice of tunings though. Does anyone here have one of those Citrons? I'm assuming the hollow body is predominantly for tone and not volume?
I love that sound he's got in the 'enroute' CD, couldn't quite work it out but it makes sense now that we have confirmation that it's probably a hollow body. | 
02-13-2006, 04:45 PM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Mar 2000 Location: London, UK | | Just remembered that Steve is actually pictured holding the Citron in the liner notes of 'En Route':
He's on his third or fourth Citron AE5. His first also had a magnetic pickup which was later abandoned. With each version, the acoustic cavity inside the body has got larger. I think the AE5 can be called a true hollowbody since it doesn't have a centre toneblock. The body is fairly shallow though - perhaps only 3" or so. | 
02-14-2006, 06:51 AM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Apr 2000 Location: Boston, Taxachusetts | | | Dig the pickguard on his Citron...Steve uses copper picks which scar the top of the bass easily (see photos of the Froc and Parker).
I met Froc around 1981, anyone in the CT area know if he's still building basses? | 
02-14-2006, 07:27 AM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Mar 2000 Location: London, UK | | Quote: |
Originally Posted by brianrost Dig the pickguard on his Citron...Steve uses copper picks which scar the top of the bass easily (see photos of the Froc and Parker). | I've seen Steve live and don't know how he manages to put so much wear on instruments, as his picking technique is very clean, with good economy of motion. | 
02-14-2006, 11:44 AM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Dec 2004 Location: Los Angeles | | | Cool thread.
I would like to get his sound but don't want to do it by playing with a pick! | 
02-14-2006, 04:06 PM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Jan 2006 Location: Australia | | | He uses a pick?? I have to go home and have another listen... | 
02-14-2006, 09:04 PM
|  | Registered User | | Join Date: Nov 2000 Location: Boston, MA | | | I am sad to report that the Gibson EB2 pictured in the top picture was purchased by me in the mid 90s when I was doing a lot of riding around in a van, jumping around and crashing into guitar players who were doing the same. Said instrument met an untimely demise one night when I tossed it high in the air, got a light in my eye and completely missed it as it went past my outstretched arm and hit the ground- shearing the headstock clean off, smashing the top of the body and spilling some of the custom electronics across the front row. I solemnly polished the remains and put them in my bass case. Bits of teh bass hang in several Boston area repair shops as a reminder of my stupidity.
It was a great sounding bass and it took me a long time to find another instrument that I had such a personal connection with. I would have liked another 60s Gibson, but couldn't afford one. All of Steve's modifications devalued the bass and I actually bought it for $500 originally. | 
02-15-2006, 06:23 AM
|  | Sam was a basket case!!!! | | Join Date: Aug 2002 Location: Corrupticut | | Quote: |
Originally Posted by brianrost Dig the pickguard on his Citron...Steve uses copper picks which scar the top of the bass easily (see photos of the Froc and Parker).
I met Froc around 1981, anyone in the CT area know if he's still building basses? | Last I knew he was still associated with Furlanetto over at F-bass. I met Froc a bunch of times as well. I was taking lessons over at Integrity in Wethersfield and they usually had a few of his instruments on the wall. I was admiring a guitar and this guy was asking me what I liked and ... it was Froc. One of my friends has a Froc guitar and it is sublime. It will also peel the paint off the walls. Great stuff and he was a real pioneer in custom axes.
Another weird one is a bass player in CT who has a Froc "custom" based on a Musicmaster bass body, single Bart pu with single volume control, and the Fender neck has a retrofitted fretless board. The neck is like a baseball bat, but it sounds fantastic.
And yeah, that copper pick thing is kinda freaky but Swallow gets a huge tone from it. When I use a pick I use the thickest Dunlop I can find and choke way up on it. I'd guess that Swallow uses a similar technique where you get the attack from the pick and the roundness from the finger/thumb in the grip.
Totally a guess on that, but I think that it is accurate.
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02-15-2006, 06:27 AM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Apr 2005 Location: Sweden | | Like a year ago, I hated Swallow's sound. But now i think it's really beautiful! Alot of things can happen in a year  | 
02-15-2006, 09:02 AM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Dec 2004 Location: Los Angeles | | | I'm thinking of getting a Godin A5, stringing it E-C and learning to play with a pick.
Am I crazy? | 
02-16-2006, 12:54 PM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Feb 2006 Location: New York City | | | I went through a huge Swallow phase, and tried the pick, but to do the chordal things he does, triple and quadruple stops in bass talk, I needed to use my fingers. Ended up developing a weird banjo bass technique, but I can hit triples all through Carla's "Sing Me Softly of the Blues".
I used a 5-string E-C tuned carvin, all koa with 5 piece koa-maple neck, got a very swallow like sound, even with my fingers. | 
02-16-2006, 04:02 PM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Mar 2000 Location: Houston, TX | | | I dig the pic above, of the early Scofield trio with my boy, Nussbaum, on drums.
Of all the basses Swallow has recorded with, my favorite tone is on the Home record. I think that was that Fender parts bass, with Bartolini (Hi-A, maybe) pickups. I saw him play with Gary Burton around the time Easy as Pie was released, he was using that bass. (Longshore Country Club in Westport, speaking of CT.)
__________________ Baby, did you forget to take your meds? | 
02-17-2006, 07:19 AM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Dec 2004 Location: Los Angeles | | | The early pictures of him make him look like a Russian comrade, or Cuban revolutionary.
Wicked beard | 
02-17-2006, 08:47 AM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Mar 2000 Location: London, UK | | Quote: |
Originally Posted by Lorenzini The early pictures of him make him look like a Russian comrade, or Cuban revolutionary.
Wicked beard | Here's Steve sporting his late '60s look:  | 
02-17-2006, 12:07 PM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Dec 2004 Location: Los Angeles | | Quote: |
Originally Posted by David Benyahia Here's Steve sporting his late '60s look:  | Swingin in style | 
02-17-2006, 12:20 PM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Jul 2003 Location: Lincoln, Massachusetts | | | Does anyone have more pictures of Steve Swallow's F-Bass or know anything about it? Is it a medium or short scale bass?
Maybe I'm imagining this but did he play that Parker for a while with the top horn broken off. Someone told me that Swallow's Fly Bass protoype didn't have the outer shell that Ken Parker typically uses.
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