attention bass players!
moonhead
28 Posts
im thinking about buying a bass and learn how to play.anyone got any tips of any nice sounding bass?i would like a bass that sounds like the bass on funky nassau, something like that.. old gritty funk bass!anyone got tips for nice brands?but i dont wanna spent too much money
Comments
so....UNIVOX!!!
you cannot find a bass that sounds like a particular recording. you just can't. no bass will sound like "funky nassau" bass. there are way too many factors that affect the low frequencies (i.e. electric bass guitar) when they are mated to magnetic tape... the actual bass guitar itself, the amplifier, microphones used, the mixing board, effects, playing technique, etc...
i can recommend some great equipment that will get you in the that ballpark...
a vintage fender bass.[/b] precision or jazz. this is what almost everyone was using bass-wise in the 60s/70s. the new fender guitars aren't made as well. but they will work too for the most part.
a vintage tube bass amplifier.[/b] IMHO, this is more important tone-wise than the actual bass guitar. a 70s ampeg svt pushing a matching 8-10 cab is the best choice. but, that is expensive. and SUPER LOUD. other options include: vintage ampeg "flip-top" amplifier. acoustic 360 or 370. (acoustic is the brand name. and the shit is actually solid state. but awesome nonetheless.)
ok, realistically, you probably can't afford all that. hell, i can't either. get a cheap bass that can at least stay in tune and a cheap amplifier that works, and decide for yourself if you really want to play in that ballpark down the road:)
tip two
90% of all bass is recorded direct into the mixing board. so i wouldnt sweat the bass amp much unless you wanna play live.
most bass is recorded direct into the mixing board. but i seriously doubt dude, who is just thinking about getting into playing bass, will 1) be recording any time soon, and 2) if he does end up recording, land his hands on any mixing board that will get him the bass tone he desires... so, i think the amp would be very important, for now at least... learning to play an electric bass without any amplification is pretty much pointless.
so i wouldn't exactly miss rent payment to get an SVT stack...
who would? especially if they don't even know how to play yet? i was just giving pointers as far as gear is concerned. read my original post again. i didn't tell dude to buy shit...
Me too. 15+ yrs on mine.
If you're starting out, get a used Mexico-produced Fender Jazz or Precision. Should set you back $150-200 or so. Have your local guitar shop 'set it up' which entails adjusting the neck, intonation, new straaaangs - Probably $30 or so. No need for spendy badass gear if you're just getting started.
Vintage Fender basses go for bank, so they're not just floating around any more.
- spidey
Our bassist from the last 2 years is moving to FLA. We have a recording coming up with a great label and we need someone who understands the deep funk groove. All the craigslist guys want to be Jaco, we need Fred Thomas. I figured soulstrut headz know the deal.
Send a pm or email [email]otisfunkmeyer@yahoo.com.[/email]
See videos of us on
www.acrossthehudson.com -> episode 7
You can play it live in your basement and use all the diffrent preset sounds which emulate the old amps and stuff. The variety you can get out of those programs is worth couple of thousand bucks if bought in hardware.
IK Multimedia Amplitube
NI Guitar Rig
are some good programs, but there are more programs than that.
Peace
Hawkeye