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LawDaddy

Well-known member
Joined
May 3, 2009
Messages
764
Location
Auburn, CA
Prior to getting my SR4 earlier this year, I have played blues lead guitar for many years with EBMM's. Here's a pic of me with Blues/Soul legend Frankie Lee with my main axe, a rosewood Axis SS. He insists I play this:

DSC_0085.jpg


To emulate the style of some of my bass heroes, like Duck Dunn, I find myself playing finger-style. However, the hand placement with the single humbucker proved to be uncomfortable for me, and I felt I needed to be playing closer to the neck to get a more round tone.

<Warning: Modification Photos Ahead!!!>

So I did what anyone would do in my situation, I got a thumb rest, a drill, and installed it:

IMG_0118.jpg


I placed it approximately where the screwholes of a second pickup would be. At first, it was too tall and was nearly taller than the string height. So I sanded it down to approximately the same height as the other pickup:

IMG_0119.jpg


Then I did what everyone recommends on this forum, I put flats on it!

Incredible difference.

The hand position is very natural now, right where the wrist wants to naturally break, and at the sweet spot for classic STAX tone. The flats are surprisingly punchy, with zero finger noise.

While I know this mod is not for everyone, I just want to pass this along to this amazing community here. This has really increased the playability of an already great instrument for me, much to my wife's dismay (who insists I'm a guitar player first!).

I can already hear the forum now: "GET A BONGO FOR THE BLUES!"

Yes, that's next.

Or maybe a 25th...

Cheers!

Layin' down the law blues style,

-Tim
 

bovinehost

Administrator
Joined
Jan 16, 2003
Messages
18,200
Location
Dall-Ass, TX
Tim, it's great to see someone else playing Stingrays (and in my case, Bongos) in what most people think of as "P bass" territory. Too often, and in accordance with Standard Accepted Internet Wisdom, Stingrays are considered "funk machines" or "slap basses" or whatever other silly labels people come up with....they're BASSES. You play BASS on them.

There is something monstrous and good about a Music Man with flats.

And I like your thumbrest. If it works for you, then it's good.

Jack
 

CElton

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Joined
Apr 9, 2007
Messages
122
Location
Cincinnati, Ohio
I played and SR4 with local Blues Legend, Lonnie Mack for years. I think they work great. Apparently so did Johnny B. Gayden when he played with Albert Collins.

Congrats on your mod.
 

oli@bass

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 23, 2007
Messages
4,272
Location
Switzerland
I like the thumbrest that comes installed with the StingRay HH.... the neck pickup! Which also provides a great round big tone and a couple of other sonic choices. Check one out if you can!
 

LawDaddy

Well-known member
Joined
May 3, 2009
Messages
764
Location
Auburn, CA
I played and SR4 with local Blues Legend, Lonnie Mack for years.

I have a Lonnie Mack Flying V, he is one of my major influences! I have that Carnegie DVD laying around somewhere... Would love to hear stories someday.

Frankie Lee, in the pic above, sang for Albert Collins in the '60s before Albert decided to sing.

Small world!
 

T-bone

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 12, 2005
Messages
1,274
Hey Tim,

My two Ray's will be singing the blues all night tonight. One with flats, for that warm phat sound, the other with rounds cause I love the tone. These are the perfect instruments for blues, singer songwriter style, pop, zydeco, cover tunes, whatever. They're just the perfect bass.

Oh, and don't be swayed over to the Far Side where the bongoloids hang. 9 volts and 4 strings are all you need. :D

tbone (the other Tim)
 

CElton

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 9, 2007
Messages
122
Location
Cincinnati, Ohio
I have a Lonnie Mack Flying V, he is one of my major influences! I have that Carnegie DVD laying around somewhere... Would love to hear stories someday.

Frankie Lee, in the pic above, sang for Albert Collins in the '60s before Albert decided to sing.

Small world!

His twin Roland JC-120's with everything dimed left me with tinnitus...:D
 

OldManMusic

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 13, 2008
Messages
726
Location
Centennial, CO
My Bongo HS and SR5 HH have the curved-edge pickups. They make excellent thumb rests. I like the mod you made but you may not need them on other MM models.

+1 on Jack's comments. Blues, rock, jazz, folk, funk, alien mating ritual dance music - it doesn't matter to a good bassist with a great MM bass.
 

DTG

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 13, 2007
Messages
1,759
Location
Ireland
i really like it,i tend to play just off the pickup myself but i think it just looks cool.

the bass player in the first photo is playing on top of the bridge....pretty far away from the thumb rest on his fender,maybe he should get a stingray might sort his tone !!
 

oddjob

Well-known member
Joined
May 12, 2004
Messages
2,839
Location
Monroe, Ohio
I see nothing wrong with the Ray mod... like Jack said, if it works for you, then it's good.

LOVE the rosewood Axis... very nice for a skinny stringer
 

R Upsomegrub

Active member
Joined
Mar 7, 2006
Messages
35
The blues band that I play in went to the International Blues Challenge in Memphis this past February. I was able to catch several other acts while we were there and I only saw 2 p-basses. Frankly I saw a little bit of everything, I didn't see a predominate bass or brand.

Oh yeah: I played my '88 SR5 and I saw 2 other EBMM basses being played: another SR5 and a SR4 HS.
 

fidooda

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Joined
Dec 18, 2006
Messages
467
Location
Montreal
that should seal the deal!

[ame=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mg0cGVJJH7w&feature=related]YouTube - John Lee Hooker - Boom Boom[/ame]
 
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