Grand Wazoo
Well-known member
I love the Bongo because Im still having to prove it. I love the bongo because I think it was a unsafe move for a company to try and most would have given up....It makes me happy because it proves to me that I still have the same ideals and mindset that I had 25 years ago....I wanted to try to create ergonomically sound instruments that we would be patient with and refine. It started with the Silhouette guitar and when I lose that perspective Ill join the old mans morning golf group and fade away. It may sound strange that I'm happy for what the Bongo means to me because by some standards it was rejected. The standards I count it has been a hit and when I read new converts it makes me happy. I love that you guys have a name Bongoloids The one that tops the whole deal is that Bongo shows that I am my fathers son. My Dad thought differently and didnt get too upset or distracted if someone thought his ideas were bizarre. He was creative and a classic serial entrepeneur
As a bass player I still play a Bongo. I actuall play a little Sterling 5 also. I have a bunch of our stuff but usually have no idea where they are...but I always have a Bongo as my go to bass. It will be interesting to see if I end up with the 25th as the replacement as it really is the next step..those new humbuckers are classics
BP many thanks for your own personal insight, it is refreshing to read your first line in your post "I love the Bongo because I’m still having to prove it" believe me when I tell you that the work your father pioneered couldn't have been taken forward by a better man than yourself.
In my original post in this thread, I have mentioned a "culture shock" well that is exactly what I have experienced and perhaps the other bassists here have too.
The Bongo shakes the foundations of the conventional belief of what the mass think about the electric bass guitar.
I've bought my Bongo using a dealer which I have been a client of for over 22 years, these people are a very good family owned 6 strings guitar only shop, however because of their selling top line guitars such as Gibson, Fender, PRS and of course EBMM products, they can get me any bass I want including EBMM. It is through them that I have bought my 2 Stingrays and when it came to get the Bongo I thought of no better dealer than them.
The day the bass arrived I was away at sea and only managed to go and collect it a couple of days later when I disembarked the ship, they did what they do with any instrument they sell, i.e. they give it a PDC "Pre Delivery Check" where they do a general check, and setup action and intonation, neck relief where needed.
When I went to collect it, I had so many compliments about it, it was really flattering, they referred it as "that monster in that case you've just bought" is awesome, we've never tried one before and by God that bass is ####ing scary, it plays amazingly well, and sounds great both on the magnetic pickups and on the piezo. When I played it through one of their bass amp all the other guitar clients were equally astonished and gathered around to see and hear, swearing that their respective bass chums should all have one.
It is definitely "culture shock" and definitely a pioneering instrument that will continue to be appreciated by players as time goes by, mark my words, I am not sure I'll be here in 20 years time but I firmly believe that by that time the Bongo will be the solidly established as the standard by which all other basses are built and copied and as popular as the Stingray is today.
Thank you Mr. Sterling Ball
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