no, but its still my thurs night, so its cool.
Well alrighty then.
no, but its still my thurs night, so its cool.
almost bought a warwick yesterday.
I tend to roll off the treble quite a bit too, depending on the situation.
It also just may be a matter of taste. Music Man has a good and diverse set of instruments in their line-up, you just may prefer something different.
Had a Bongo 5 for a while but the sound too big, god I'm fussy!!
i feel the same way about my 4 string stingray. my "other bass" sounds alot better. shouldn't have to change amps to get a good sound.
if you cant get warmth out of a stingray, i guarantee that the real loss of tone is occurring further on up, earlier in the signal chain. more than likely the insert point right after the strap, but just before the bass. pay special close attention right around where the sound waves meet the pickup. this is beyond a doubt the most notorious, but least talked about tone sucking culprit. this spot is many times the weakest link in the whole chain. it can be such a shoddy leaky sieve joint responsible for much carelessly wasted, yet precious, warmth and tone. ive seen leaks more akin to whitewater rapids or gushing geysers than anything else, but the bass owner will totally ignore "old faithful" so he can compete in the endless lowest bass weight witch hunt, obsessively weighing strings, machine heads, bridges, pickguards, etc in search of potential minor drips. thats what i think. or maybe i just happened to luck into owning 5 random total freak of nature "warm" stingrays.
I could actually remove the treble knob from all my basses and never really get around to thinking 'Yeah, that was bad.'
I went from AG500 to RH450, and I couldn't be happier. I like some zing, so I basically just boost the bass a wee bit and that's it. The speaker boxes that come with the RH450 have a pretty shy tweeter compared to the ones found in my old GS112 boxes.