juggernaut
Member
- Joined
- Oct 25, 2009
- Messages
- 5
and a Bongo.
Agreed! In the proper hands and with the proper EQ many (but not all) basses can sound fine for slap, but MusicMans reign supreme.
that's not true, 'cause really slap tone player should produce somewhere around last fret with thumb and pick strings near neck end, so there's a plenty of space before neck pickup...etc.
Slap technique, you either have it or you don't and it really doesn't matter what pickup configuration you use, single or double humbucker,
Ask the great Ed Friedland and he would tell you. Also have a look at this guy with a Bongo 5HH, you think that 2 humbuckers restrict you from slapping? watch these videos and think again...
YouTube- Slap Music Man Bongo Bass
YouTube- Slap Music Man Bongo Bass 2
YouTube- MUSIC MAN BONGO. orangefunk by FENKBASS
Here's the thing:
The Bongo has a 24-fret neck, unlike the Stingray. So the end of the fretboard is very close to the neck pickup. There's maybe an inch or so (perhaps 3 cm) of space there.
There's more space on dual-pickup Ray because of the shorter fretboard (same scale length, of course), which puts the end much farther away from the pickup.
Look at that video of Louis Johnson. His plucking hand is all over the place. If he were to play like that on a dual-pickup Bongo, his forefinger would be whacking into the neck pickup pretty much constantly.
Can you pop on a dual-pickup Bongo? Of course you can. But there really isn't all that much space to get your finger in there.
Unless of course you retrofit it with a sliding pickup....![]()