-
Posts
929 -
Joined
-
Last visited
Content Type
Profiles
Forums
Events
Shop
Articles
Everything posted by Cairobill
-
I owned a very interesting Dingwall AB1 six string for a brief period a few years ago. It went bye byes (as all my six strings sadly tend to do) but I did manage to demo it with a dirty B15 sound on a bass/vox-less Tom Sawyer OG backing track. With the news of Rush effectively touring their own tribute with Anika Nilles on drums, a decision I heartily approve of, I thought it would be fun to spin this up as a first review with the clip I recorded. I hope to see them for a third time on this tour if they make it over to the UK. Construction and ergonomics This was a beautifully built bass. Light at about 7lbs and well balanced, it's an extremely playable six string. Finish was perfect and everything worked beautifully. The multi-scale approach is, of course, a matter of taste and context, but it works very well in terms of playability. I'm not sure it's an overall 'improvement' on a standard fretboard as you win some and lose some; chording on a six string like this allows for shapes that you can't achieve on a standard scale, but you simply can't fret an equivalent number of chords. The playing angle for the wrist is a definite innovation, however. All in all, it was great to spend some time on one, but it certainly did not make me turn my back on standard neck construction. Sound I did a lot of A/B testing with my producer pal. The much vaunted 'piano-like' tones that people talk about on the lower strings were there in spades. Huge bottom end, huge sustain etc BUT (and it's a big but) we decided that there was a blandness on those low notes. It all sounded a bit characterless. My producer pal conjectured that the cleanliness of those low notes on the Dingwall was dues to less overtones and tended to disappear in the mix. He pored over the waveforms from the bass when it was DI'd and, lo and behold, it looked very 'clean' with little harmonic dips and bumps across the board. Anyway, we did some experimentation with pickup settings and drive and this thing really came alive, with the added colour of the drive helping the bass sit in the mix. Soooo, I put the thing through this UAD B15 emulator on a very hot setting and it worked really well...(vid/recording link below) Conclusion Very comfortable but also very marmite and with a tendency to tonal blandness, these things take effects very well. It's no coincidence that they find a home with progressive music that often involves a huge pile of processing. Not my thing really, but a well made instrument that def has a home in certain types of music. They also look a bit Lovecraftian with all those frets on the tip! Anyhow, here's the vid. Massive gronk on this one (not a canonical version!). I have been playing this bassline for a LOOOONNNG time. Looking forward to R50 gigs in the UK!
-
- 1
-
-
-
-
- 12 replies
-
- 17
-
-
PRICE DROP to £595 Also up for a trade with an MIJ Ibanez or Yamaha semi-acoustic guitar e.g. 335 style? Up for sale is my Wilkes fretless - a rare one from a somewhat unsung but excellent and innovative luthier who sat happily alongside the JayDees/ Statii and Wals in the bass friendly music stores of the mid-eighties. I was after one of these for a long time as I used to gravitate towards them at the Bass Centre back in the day. Sadly, I have to trim back and it's always six strings and fretlesses that go to the block first. It's a fabulous sounding and great playing fretless. Extremely well made with a dark ebony board with lines, super stiff maple neck and a Honduran mahogany body. This is a bass with a lot of deep end and sustain. Action is great and it's a mwah-some, singy fretless if you get my drift. The pickup in the P sweet spot is unusual; it's a Schaller Bassbucker and has a very hot output and (as mentioned before) a tonne of low end. Apparently these pickups used to go into the early Carl Thompson basses. These pickups sound very full and punchy. They also have a useful coil split switch which sets the bucker to single coil mode (for those moments when you want a bit less beef...there is a lot of beef on offer here). Schaller hardware completes the bass and is rock solid. Condition is pretty good given the age. The headstock, neck and board are in great nick while the body has a few dings but no missing finish. Looks pretty mean in its black plumage. The piezo slap plates work and add more attack if you were inclined to hit this bass with a thumb. The controls are vol/tone and piezo mix. I've found the piezo mix knob also works as a presence knob. It sounds great. Comes with a gigbag. I could ship in a keyboard box with the neck separated and lots of padding. vid and pics!
- 17 replies
-
- 18
-
-
-
Ah, such a fantastic player. Genius.
-
-
- 1
-
-
Up for sale is this Behringer Monopoly. A great little clone of the Korg original. Four Oscillators can be played in unison for massive basses/leads etc or played in a polyphonic mode for chords. Lots of sync/ mod options too. This one is pretty much mint and comes with the box. Only used for a short recording project and never gigged or even rehearsed with.
-
Up for sale is this very neat little synth box. A powerful sequencer with four FM voices, FX etc It sounds absolutely fantastic and the Elektron design people know what they’re doing. I would hold on to it but I’m using an external sequencer so it’s not being used it to its full potential. Part ex with a Behringer Model D or pro 1 plus cash would also work. Happy to ship!
-
- 1
-