So, I had a gig this past Saturday night, and, to avoid further embarrassment, I rented a Stingray for the gig. Holy crap, the difference was night and day. The rental bass sounded so good. people were actually commenting about it after the show. It just confirmed that something is very wrong with my current Stingray. I think i'm going to get a new one, and then send my old one up to get fixed. It's just good to know that the problem wasn't just in my head or my amp.
I've had my 4 string stingray since the mid 1990's. recently i have been playing a lot of gigs and recording in the studio and everyone (live sound guys, studio engineers, audience members) has been telling me that my bass sounds horrible. I'm not sure what to do. The D and G strings are basically dead. When I play notes on those strings they are significatly quiter than the top two strings. In addition, the E and A strings are really loud and sound distorted. I've taken the bass into the shop to get some lovin' but that didn't help. I've changed the battery several times... no luck. I've tried every brand of strings i could find... nothing. I'm about to give up on it, but i love the bass so much i would hate to do that. plus, i play funk music, so the stingray should be perfect. any suggestions would be appreciated.
I use ULTRA LIGHT (.035-.085) strings and I have no issue with it being too twangy...... New strings will do that sometimes.
Probably just an EQ issue. Start out flat and adjust accordingly.
Ritchie