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  #61  
Old 11-30-2012, 01:43 PM
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Another vote for the G&L L2000. Loads of useable sounds. Shame they look so very boring.
  #62  
Old 11-30-2012, 02:07 PM
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Try some pressurewounds. I've found pressurewounds, or rounds for that matter, to be far more versitile than flats on a pbass.
  #63  
Old 11-30-2012, 02:29 PM
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Originally Posted by Gab124 View Post
I will second the Lakland but you can save money with a 55-02 or 44-02 if you don't do fivers.
+1 to this. The Lakland J/MM setup is very flexible; J bass, P bass, and Music Man tone on demand. EQ you amp and effects right and you can get a Justin Chancellor-like tone.
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  #64  
Old 11-30-2012, 02:31 PM
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Originally Posted by kevteop View Post
Another vote for the G&L L2000. Loads of useable sounds. Shame they look so very boring.
and one vote more!
i actually really dig their look. especially with black or white finish and rosewood. the headstock logo and all those knobs and switches make it look very spacey.
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  #65  
Old 11-30-2012, 02:39 PM
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Originally Posted by two fingers View Post
Used Fender Roscoe Beck Signature. All passive. Two buckers. You can split the coils in series, parallel, or single. I haven't found a tone I can't cop yet. And it will have a familiar Fender feel. It's a J neck but you get what I mean. Seriously, you can't go wrong with one.
+1

A Roscoe Beck 5 string has been my main bass for over a decade now. I can get lots of different tones from that instrument thanks to the pickup switching options.

-Jazz bass? Both pickups in single coil mode
-Precision bass? Front pickup in parallel mode
-G&L? Both pickups in humbucking mode, crank the tone

Vary your technique and you've got even more options. I see RB5's turn up in the classifieds every few weeks. Just keep an eye out and you may be able to score one.
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  #66  
Old 11-30-2012, 03:44 PM
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Originally Posted by Joe Nerve

When I had one it was only briefly, and I was still kinda new to bass, so I can't and won't argue. If what you say it true, then there may be one of those things in my future. I liked it a lot at the time, but just for old school stuff. Remeber not being able to get a slap tone out of it fer nuthin, and I can get a slap tone out of ubass. Again, that might be attributed to the amount of experience at the time I had the one I did. I'm a peavey fan, and that bass is a tank.
max out everything, roll the bridge volume down to 6, and throw it out of phase. That phase switch is a lot more important than a lot of people realize.

The t40's electronics are the most versatile passive electronics I can name.
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  #67  
Old 12-01-2012, 12:24 PM
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I would say a Double MM bass would do. My first experience with a bass with numerous bass tone and eq options was the Ibanez SR700 i played around with at GC. Then I discovered Musicman 4HH and with those you can select between the coils in each pickup so in a sense you have 4 pickups to chose from (back of bridge PU, front of bridge PU, back of neck PU, front of neck PU) and can combined them to create some great tones
  #68  
Old 12-01-2012, 12:26 PM
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An active 5-string of some sort. I'd suggest an American Jazz Deluxe V.
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  #69  
Old 12-20-2012, 11:41 PM
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I like MusicMan basses -- I have one -- and I was interested in the Big Al for the versatility factor. But I found it didn't really have several tones -- it had several versions of the same tone.

Any bass can play any music. But if you want a specific characteristic, it will only comes from the instrument to which that characteristic is inherent. You might get CLOSE to Ric, or CLOSE to a P, or CLOSE to a J. But nothing sounds quite like the real thing.
  #70  
Old 12-21-2012, 12:08 AM
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Get a super jazz. By this I mean a 24-fret, active preamp, 5-string jazz bass by a good maker. I prefer the exotic wood makers such as Ken Smith with their Bsrj5 or Ibanez with their Grooveline. A lot of players love their Sadowskys.
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  #71  
Old 12-21-2012, 12:09 AM
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Spector anything. If you're at that price range check out the Legends, amazing basses!
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  #72  
Old 12-21-2012, 02:20 AM
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There's some wonderful technical knowledge in this thread, and enthusiastic information about some very smart basses. But the thing you can't account for is the acoustic quality of the room.

Sounds as if you are in a gigging band. We'd all love to be able to sound-check with plenty of time, and have someone on the sound board able to re-set as the room fills and the temperature rises. My experience, and I bet yours too, includes bar-men who can't hear orders with the room empty so get the sound-check turned down, guitarists who shred endlessly while I want to listen to my tone, and rooms which might fill up at the start of the gig and might fill in the final hour.

So by all means buy the fanciest bass you can afford and enjoy its practice-tones, but playing a good gig will be about cutting-through when necessary and grooving all the time. Any bass that makes you confident will do this, if you can.
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  #73  
Old 12-21-2012, 04:45 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Tuned View Post
The sound tech in me advises against this. With PA reinforcement the low end changes enough from bass to bass regardless of how even it sounds at the bass amp. I switch between fretted and fretless, but the change is drastic enough that I wouldn't want them balancing the exact same anyway. But if the PA is set up for a Rush Rickenbacker, it'll be night-and-day heavier when you pull the P bass out. Sure you'll make adjustments at the bass rig, but for example if the sound tech insists on pre-EQ DI and is having a smoke when you switch...

Rediculous, and typical soundman BS - there is no reason why a bassist shouldn't be able to use more than one bass, just like you wouldn't insist that a guitarist only used one guitar...

The last sentence really takes the cake - a bassist is supposed to bend over and take it because some sound monkey "insists" on a pre-EQ DI, but wants to be able to leave the board while the band is playing "for a smoke"(or whatever)???

I would do everything in my power to prevent such an unprofessional excuse for a "soundman" from ever working another gig that my band played...


- georgestrings
  #74  
Old 12-21-2012, 04:47 AM
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Regarding the OP - IMO, a Fender Active Jazz Deluxe is a very versatile bass...


- georgestrings
  #75  
Old 12-21-2012, 04:53 AM
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Originally Posted by Profania_bass View Post
Spector anything. If you're at that price range check out the Legends, amazing basses!

I like Spector basses, but IMO they always sound like a Spector - and alot of the sounds the OP named are Fender type sounds... Same reason why Warwick doesn't work so well here...


- georgestrings
  #76  
Old 12-21-2012, 05:03 AM
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  #77  
Old 12-21-2012, 07:18 AM
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And going in the Fender Jazz direction, you can probably cop a nice Lakland JO in the classifieds for cheap these days. I cover about the same styles and my JO5 does it well (the J Retro in it doesnt hurt either ).
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Agreed.
I'm sure I'm being Mr. Insensitive Butt Fungus again
  #78  
Old 12-21-2012, 07:25 AM
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I get by just fine with my P-bass. There is so much more to versatility than electronics. Right hand playing position, muting, dynamics, all play a role in tonal variations.
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  #79  
Old 12-22-2012, 12:27 AM
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Originally Posted by Phalex View Post
I get by just fine with my P-bass. There is so much more to versatility than electronics. Right hand playing position, muting, dynamics, all play a role in tonal variations.
Techniques is absolutely important, but I think it was assumed in the OP that technique must be mastered.
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  #80  
Old 12-22-2012, 06:42 PM
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where are you and where has your band been all my life? that's an awesome selection of artists to play.
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