Dead spots on basses

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Re: Dead spots on basses

Postby des mcneill » 24 Mar 2010, 05:25

bassboogie wrote:Hi All,

Thanks for your replies and perhaps I feel a bit better that it's not only me. Very impressed with the AC50/18" combination. Would love to hear that in anger, are any of you you coming to Scarborough ? As you can see from another thread I love Vox bass amps and now that they've made a tiny 10 watt Pathfinder I hope it grows rapidly into an all valve 12", 15", 18" monster !!

You don't need lots of sustain for 60's bass playing, I agree, but it is a bit frustrating when you hit certain notes, however briefly and there's nothing there but a duff note compared to the others.

I absolutely agree that there are no dead/flat notes when Jet plays, only lovely fat notes. On the subject does playing with a pick, which I don't, eliminate the flat spots ?

Regards, Luigi


Afraid not Luigi,I actually thought the other way round. I have several bass rigs,the AC50 is my favourite,- mid 60's JMI. Soundwise the AC50 is bass heavy which I like but very dynamic. I also have an old JMI bass AC30,this gives a very even tone but out of respect for the original "blue" speakers I don't use it very often outside the house.
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Re: Dead spots on basses

Postby David Martin » 24 Mar 2010, 09:23

Interestingly, I have installed original style Fender mutes into the ashtray of my Precision copy to limit sustain, and it sounds much more authentic....
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Re: Dead spots on basses

Postby George Geddes » 24 Mar 2010, 20:45

More information, please, David...

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Re: Dead spots on basses

Postby des mcneill » 25 Mar 2010, 00:49

David Martin wrote:Interestingly, I have installed original style Fender mutes into the ashtray of my Precision copy to limit sustain, and it sounds much more authentic....



Hi David,
As I use a plectrum mostly I use a soft rubber pad as a mute and prefer the sound that way. When using round wound strings for me it is compulsory but with flatwounds, which I mostly use, I sometimes remove it if the strings become too dead. The mute definitely delivers more punch which is what I like.
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Re: Dead spots on basses

Postby Iain Purdon » 04 Apr 2010, 15:23

I don't know! There doesn't seem to be a dead spot on either of my P-basses. There again, I do use the pick most of the time.
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Re: Dead spots on basses

Postby Iain Purdon » 04 Apr 2010, 15:26

David Martin wrote:I use an Esh Stinger bass http://www.esh-bass.com/ - No dead spots and incredible deep sounds...

Interesting David. What drew you to it, and is it 4- or 5 -string?
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Re: Dead spots on basses

Postby David Martin » 04 Apr 2010, 17:11

Iain_P wrote:
David Martin wrote:I use an Esh Stinger bass http://www.esh-bass.com/ - No dead spots and incredible deep sounds...

Interesting David. What drew you to it, and is it 4- or 5 -string?
Iain


It was recommended by Mark at Bass Direct and he was right!! It's a 4 string as my left hand won't cope with stretching round a 5 string neck.

Wonderful stuff...
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Re: Dead spots on basses

Postby David Martin » 04 Apr 2010, 17:13

George Geddes wrote:More information, please, David...

George


Having installed the pickup cover, I used some very butch self adhesive draft excluder, stuck to the "roof" of the ashtray, which sits tight on the strings as they emerge from the saddles... sustain deadened, and Jet Harris installed!!
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Re: Dead spots on basses

Postby Paulps » 05 Apr 2010, 10:23

David Martin wrote:
George Geddes wrote:More information, please, David...

George


Having installed the pickup cover, I used some very butch self adhesive draft excluder, stuck to the "roof" of the ashtray, which sits tight on the strings as they emerge from the saddles... sustain deadened, and Jet Harris installed!!


Any chance of a picture, David :?:
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Re: Dead spots on basses

Postby bassboogie » 05 Apr 2010, 15:11

The April 2010 issue of Bass Guitar Magazine has a good write up on the Esh basses. Lovely piece of kit, and put together by craftsmen. Well worth a read.

In the article there is also a picture of David playing one when he had very long hair and tight trousers. Well worth a look.

Regards, Luigi
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