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dazmon

New member
Joined
May 30, 2009
Messages
1
Advice needed please
looking to buy a stingray,should i get a (4 string) single or dual pickup ?
havent had chance to play either side by side(though i have played single pick up).At the moment i play a jazz (am deluxe) and
warwick corvette,both dual pick up,playing in a covers band the dual pick ups work from "reggae " sounds to "hollow "lead sounds
i am just a "normal " bass player,nothing fancy,would a sigle pick up be ok ?
 

7broccos

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Joined
Apr 4, 2009
Messages
261
Location
Overland Park,Ks.
Welcome Dazmon,Have you played a 5 string? MM is the best playing fiver on the planet! The B string is superb and to me the string spacing is perfect. I played my SR5H and Bongo5HH last night at a praise and worship service thru our big system,both sounded great.Our worship leader is a die hard old school Pbass 4 stringer guy but last night he asked me to help him buy an SR5 or Bongo5:D. A HH or Hs is more versatile than an H but you can't go wrong with any of the three. You will end up owning more than one any way,it is an addiction you never beat or will want to:)
 

syciprider

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Joined
Dec 23, 2005
Messages
2,995
Location
The 951
Hi and welcome long time lurker :)

If you are a simple, set and forget kinda guy then you will be very happy with a single pup Ray.
If you want instant access to multiple sounds at your finger tips and like to fine tune your tone then you will be best served by a double pup.
 

TheAntMan

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Joined
Jul 14, 2004
Messages
972
Location
Ft. Lauderdale, FL
Hi there and welcome :)

As a former Jazz bass player and current EBMM player I would recommend a HH SR either 4 or 5 string. I have an SR4H and tried an SR4HH and the tonal options with the second pu makes it a really nice addition to your arsenal of musical artillery. You will still get the the classic SR tone with the bridge pup and have a whole range of additional sweet tones.

Good Luck and remember to post pics when you get one :D

-- Ant
 

bradfordws

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Joined
Jun 21, 2007
Messages
386
Location
San Gabriel CA
The Stingray 4HH is the way to go because you can get many different tones with dual pups + you're already playing a couple of dual pup basses. That Corvette is a fairly small-bodied bass - don't forget about the Sterling 4HH or 5HH for their smaller body - might be worth checking out a few Sterlings too.
 

oli@bass

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Joined
Jul 23, 2007
Messages
4,272
Location
Switzerland
In my opiniong, the StingRay HH is the best combination of pickups and preamp (3 band eq) you can get. It's very versatile and you get 5 different usable sounds at the flick of a switch without any need to touch the equalizer. Most of the time, I run mine at position 5 with the bridge H alone, giving the classic StingRay sound. But there are those songs, where some of the other sounds are just perfect.

However, if the HH wasn't available I could also live with a single H and 2 band eq and just be happy with that.
 

Lynottfan

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 22, 2008
Messages
367
Personally, if you are looking to buy a Stingray and you are coming from a Fender jazz, I would go for the classic Ray, an SR4, yes the HH's have more options, the Sterling neck maybe a better fit, but if its the Ray sound you want, SR4 all the way, keep it mean, keep it simple. Good luck.
 

childersoh

Member
Joined
Feb 18, 2010
Messages
17
I don't know that I'll ever buy anything other than a straight-up, single humbucker Stingray. The other types don't make any sounds that I can't live without and, to be honest, they pretty much kill the Stingray look for me.
Just my opinion though, try them all out.
You might want a SLO neck if you are used to a jazz, though.
Or, as has been mentioned, a Sterling.
 
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kevins

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 13, 2005
Messages
559
i'd go with the classic. until they throw mutes back on the stingray 2H and the single H that would give you ridiculously wonderful tones for reggae and jazz after you prescribe your bass flatwounds.
 
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