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12-16-2012, 12:58 PM
|  | DethByDoom | | Join Date: Sep 2012 Location: Houston,Tx | | Quote: |
Originally Posted by Jeff Scott
Tonally, yes. | +1 | 
12-16-2012, 01:32 PM
|  | Total Hyper-Elite Member Independent Contractor to Bass San Diego | | Join Date: May 2000 Location: Groom Lake, NV | | | If you're looking for a bass that sounds like a Fender, Fender is a good place to start.
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12-16-2012, 01:36 PM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Oct 2011 Location: Saturn, Solar System | | Quote:
Originally Posted by Munjibunga If you're looking for a bass that sounds like a Fender, Fender is a good place to start. | you sure about that
ive heard squire be butter than fendar | 
12-16-2012, 02:16 PM
|  | Registered User | | Join Date: May 2004 Location: Highland, CA | | | I'm on board with the following reasons:
1. Easy to purchase
2. Millions of parts to modify the Fender bass.
3. You can easily personalize them to your liking
4. MIA and MIM seem to hold their value well.
I call them the Small Block Chevy of the bass guitar world.
I didn't notice anyone say that many producers push the Fender or higher end Fender style basses (Lakeland, Sadowsky etc) for recording purposes. It's all about the way they sit in the mix.
There are also the preconceived ideas about a J-bass or P-Style bass from other musicians. Whenever I'm invited to play with some new people I always bring my 4-String Fender Jazz. I never show up my ATK 305. Now in reality 95% of people don't care what you bring as long as it's a bass, especially when you are playing with people who not professionals. But there is always that one band leader or worship pastor that says "What kind of bass is that"? or "What does that thing sound like"? That has never happened to me persdonally but I have seen it happen to a guy that I played with at chruch who used a headless Steinberger Spirit. He was playing it a rehersal that we were doing with another church and everbody was weirded out by it becasue we were preparing to record some of the sessions. I took note of that.
I was also involved in a recording session a few years ago (I was on drums because our drummer was out of the state) and my friend Pat was going to play bass on the recording. He brought his 5-String Ocean brand bass. The engineer asked about the bass and was looking at it kinda funny. He asked if the electronics were noisy and was concerened about the bass sounding right. He recorded a couple tracks and told him he didn't like the bass. He asked if we had different bass to use. Preferably a P-Bass. None of us owned a P-Bass (personally I think he should have had one in the studio for reasons like this) but I offered up my jazz basses. The engineer was happy with that. Pat ended up re-tracking the two songs using the Fender Jazz 24 that I used to have and he used my passive Fender Jazz on the other songs. All was right in the recording engineers world after that.
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Last edited by srxplayer : 12-16-2012 at 08:07 PM.
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12-16-2012, 02:19 PM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Feb 2009 Location: Santiago de Chile | | | They look cool, most basses are made with Fender in mind so they feel good as well, quality of construction is fairly good (perhaps not the best ever, but really really good), they sound good cuz it's the sound you spect from a bass, also very easily modified (the sound, I mean, the bass too anyways).
That's why I use them, I don't know other people. I really like my P bass and J Basses are awesome too. Of course, I have another bass and I'd like to have many more (non-Fender), but no money atm. | 
12-16-2012, 02:20 PM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Oct 2011 Location: Saturn, Solar System | | | i like the fender sound. jazz and precision. even though i "only" own a squier im already sold on these instruments.
im excited to see what new AVRI line will be put out | 
12-16-2012, 02:32 PM
| | | | I have had "many" basses in 43+ years I don't really like the way they look But I keep commig back ! For me You just can't beat that sound !! | 
12-16-2012, 02:39 PM
|  | Steve Doner Custom Theme Guitars for Donation to Non-Profits | | Join Date: Jun 2012 Location: Metro Chicago | | | The classic Fender shape (regardless of brand) is the only one that feels "right" in my arms.
Swap the pickup and/or electronics and you can make it sound however you want. | 
12-16-2012, 02:40 PM
|  | RnFnR | | Join Date: Feb 2007 Location: Philadelphia | | | FWIW, I currently play in a shoegaze/dream pop band and use a Am. Std. Precision and play with my fingers. | 
12-16-2012, 02:46 PM
|  | Walter Woods or Aguilar to LDS - the best! | | Join Date: Apr 2006 Location: NE Ohio | | Quote:
Originally Posted by backup i like the fender sound. jazz and precision. even though i "only" own a squier im already sold on these instruments. im excited to see what new AVRI line will be put out | Can you afford one? 
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12-16-2012, 02:47 PM
| | | | Leo's Precision body shape is nearly as standard as the 3/4 size upright. But, why? I still don't know. It's just one of those things. | 
12-16-2012, 02:53 PM
|  | Registered User | | Join Date: Jan 2001 Location: Big Bethel, Virginia | | Quote:
Originally Posted by DethByDoom Ah fender, the vanilla of the bass world. Ill take just about any other bass over a fender. They're safe and average. I'll never buy another. | Common as dirt, yes. Vanilla, no. I can find no more strongly flavored voice in the bass world than the split P, overpoweringly so in austere settings where the more reticent blended J fits so much more civilly, but more than welcome in dense mixes, particularly when mixing it up with a Hammond or Rhodes, a rompin', stompin' Mark VI bari, or a paint peeling tenor with a Brilhart when he stomps downstairs to the basement.
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12-16-2012, 03:30 PM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Jan 2011 Location: Montreal | | | i have 5 different basses with 5 unique tones to each. But i still go to my fender copy as a main bass or in live situations. Unless it really can't pull it off. But to me, fender and knock offs (not all), are reliable, affordable, and built to last. I've heard a myth of a bass player or just some random dude back in the day, who took a fender precision bass, all the way to the 12th floor, and let the bass drop. When he went to pick it up, it was intact. And he could still play it. Like i said, it's probably a myth but this sounds like a true testament of how much fender can withstand such beatings
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12-16-2012, 04:18 PM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Oct 2011 Location: Saturn, Solar System | | Quote:
Originally Posted by Jeff Scott Can you afford one?  | haha no.
i cant. if i could id buy the current AVRI. but i cant. however when they are going to be released i will definitely be closer than ever. | | Thread Tools | Search this Thread | | | |
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