Just when you think the world has reached dips**t saturation, something like this crops up and raises the moron bar.
"Shore, Bubba! That there's a guh-RATE ah-dear! guh-hyeh! 'Joo put mo-uhr Mad Dog in mah Dr. Pepper lahk ah aysked ya tyoo?"
"Shore, Bubba! That there's a guh-RATE ah-dear! guh-hyeh! 'Joo put mo-uhr Mad Dog in mah Dr. Pepper lahk ah aysked ya tyoo?"
I could care less what a bass looks like, as long as it plays good and sounds great and - this is the catch - does what I want it to do. This bass meets that criteria: sounds great and (with the exception of 'fake fretless' mentioned above) is extremely flexible.
I'm pretty new as far as SR fans go, but even I can see why a Pre EB SR that's been cared for would go for a heck of a lot more than an Ibanez.
Hey, DRF...you've got a great attitude about this. Bravo.
Got a question for you...when I read sypicrider's post that said "Well this ends all those SR vs J bass polls," it struck me that he might have been on to something.
Was part of your reason for adding those J-bass pickups to your Stingray a desire to get a more J-like sound out of it?
Just wonderin' what the thinking was behind it.
PS: I've been known to fiddle with and tweak many of my toys in the past, sometimes with good results, often with the reverse. My Bongo is one of the first things I've ever owned that strikes me as perfect right out of the box. But that's just me.
I haven't tried any of the multi-pickup newer MMs and I would love to know if the MM bucker can be split to a single-coil mode to achieve "fake fretless" on these newer basses. My '04 StingRay is just a standard model
There's a sticky at the top of the forum:
http://www.ernieball.com/forums/music-man-basses/8760-new-2pu-bass-switch-functions.html