-
Posts
7,846 -
Joined
-
Last visited
-
Days Won
3
Content Type
Profiles
Forums
Events
Shop
Articles
Everything posted by Bassassin
-
I like these, which is just as well 'cos I've got one. These appeared around 1985 at the same time as the Hohner B2 licensed Steiny copies, which were also made by Cort. They have the same licensed Steinberger hardware and neck-through construction, but the neck's a bit more porky feeling and the finish not quite as good. I think I prefer the P/J setup to the rather sterile-sounding EMGs on the Hohner - and this one's worth keeping an eye on, if only for the Barts. Jon.
-
Vintage MIJ (formerly J@pCr@p) Spotting
Bassassin replied to Bassassin's topic in eBay - Weird and Wonderful
Well - he dropped the price to £75 so I had no choice. Bought it. And so it begins again... J. -
(Lefty) Wilson Rapier Bass - rare gem? or skip material?
Bassassin replied to syntaxerror's topic in Bass Guitars
I picked up a scruffy '63 Watkins Rapier 3 guitar at my local car boot a few years back. I bought it along with a wreck of a Strat copy & paid 15 quid for the pair - after a good clean up, the Rapier fetched £250 on Ebay. If you bung the bass in a skip, make sure it's the one down the bottom of my road! Jon. -
Vintage MIJ (formerly J@pCr@p) Spotting
Bassassin replied to Bassassin's topic in eBay - Weird and Wonderful
Buy this instead: http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/BASS-GUITAR-JAPANESE-EROS-II-/261344010689?pt=UK_Musical_Instruments_Guitars_CV&hash=item3cd95121c1 Early 70s Matsumoku Jazz copy, Eros Mk II brand, £98 BIN. Someone buy this so I don't have to! J. -
Vintage MIJ (formerly J@pCr@p) Spotting
Bassassin replied to Bassassin's topic in eBay - Weird and Wonderful
Remember that names like Avon, Columbus etc were importer's names stuck on the heads of generic no-brand instruments, which is all this one is. Electra was a US importer brand who sourced from Matsumoku, Fujigen and Kasuga. This little LP bass really isn't anything special - cheap ply body, junk hardware and single-coil pups in humbucker cases. J. -
Doesn't need much info - that's an early 80s MIJ Yamaha, missing the pickup surround - probably because the pup's not original - but otherwise complete & fairly tidy. £30 is ridiculous & I'd be taking a trip to Ayrshire if I wasn't off to Birmingham this afternoon! Jon.
-
Vintage MIJ (formerly J@pCr@p) Spotting
Bassassin replied to Bassassin's topic in eBay - Weird and Wonderful
[quote name='allighatt0r' timestamp='1385470524' post='2288570'] Consider punt made then in that case! Just spotted this too.... [url="http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Washburn-B-20-Stage-Series-Bass-Guitar-Cherry-Sunburst-MIJ-1980s/321255048977"]http://www.ebay.co.u...0s/321255048977[/url] Now THAT is gorgeous. [/quote] B20 Stage Series - had one of them back in the 80s - beautifully made but neck-dive from hell! Still wish I'd never sold it, though... Very best of luck with the Vulture then, hope you get it for £150! BigRedX - three of those tuners are original - early ones of these & other MIJ Washburns hd these tuners (AFAIK the ones assumed to be made by Yamaki) and later Matsumoku builds had very nice Schaller M4S clones. J. -
Jolana D! Had Faker GAS for one of these for a good few years, missed a few on Ebay back in the day, but never seen one in the flesh. We played in Prague a few years back & I had high hopes of picking one up cheap but no joy. The shops were all full of bloody Rickenbackers! Jon.
-
Vintage MIJ (formerly J@pCr@p) Spotting
Bassassin replied to Bassassin's topic in eBay - Weird and Wonderful
[quote name='Paul S' timestamp='1385379655' post='2287458'] What about this Washburn Vulture? [url="http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/111224594009?ssPageName=STRK:MEWAX:IT&_trksid=p3984.m1423.l2649"]http://www.ebay.co.u...984.m1423.l2649[/url] [/quote] I want that so much it hurts. Worst GAS I've had since coming back to BC - I'll have to drop him a note & see if he'll post it! Anyway - decent project JapCrap Jazz for £45 BIN: [url="http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/Grant-Jazz-Bass-MIJ-Lawsuit-Copy-/251388708480"]http://www.ebay.co.u...y-/251388708480[/url] He reckons it's a Grant, might be, but more likely a Columbus. J. -
[quote name='BigRedX' timestamp='1385307452' post='2286644'] Overpriced by at least £31... [/quote] Shocking, the price of firewood these days! Jon.
-
Vintage MIJ (formerly J@pCr@p) Spotting
Bassassin replied to Bassassin's topic in eBay - Weird and Wonderful
£280 is tongue-swallowingly mental for that, pretty or otherwise. They don't come up too often but when they do they tend to be well under £200 - essentially Ibanez Blazer or Westy Thunder money. After all, it's really just a Precision copy with a skinny top horn! Jon. -
Late to the party on this one - and I do like that a lot, hideous or otherwise! Dunno if I'd've twigged it was an MIJ Vox but not surprised seeing the logo. Never seen one of these before and tbh had no idea there was ever an MIJ Vox 5er. It's reckoned these came from Matsumoku, I'd say confirmed by the fact the Vox 24 guitar was pretty much the same instrument as the Westbury Standard guitar, and the Vox neck-through basses are very, very Aria-esque. As has been mentioned, a number of similarities to late Westones, I'd be inclined to put this around 1986/7, that being when Matsumoku packed in instrument manufacture. Jon.
-
[quote name='skankdelvar' timestamp='1385312807' post='2286743'] The 'top nut'. Meaning the nut. [/quote] To the Ebay seller, it's the "knut". Which can be found at the top of the arm (or "kneck") - which can be identified by its profusion of fretts. Unless, that is, it's a "frettles". If the instrument in question (a "base", to be specific) isn't a Squire, it's quite likely to be a Tokia, made in the Ibanez Factory. Bunch of stupid knuts. J.
-
Or Squier/Squire. Jon.
-
Withdrawn, due to an "error in the listing". It's pretty beat-up but I probably would have been all over that - I have a Track 2 (single P pup, bolt-neck) and have GASsed over a Track 4 for years. Top-quality Matsumoku builds, I also have a Westy Standard guitar & it's a gem. Jon.
-
Excellent! If the fretless neck was 5-string & lined it would tick every personal prog box I can think of! Jon.
-
Unmentionable Hondo Stereo bass
Bassassin replied to itsmedunc's topic in eBay - Weird and Wonderful
Not Japanese but Korean, as were 99% of Hondos. Plywood, too. Jon. -
None More Orange: [sharedmedia=core:attachments:72012] Ibby EDA900 - plastic fantastic. Jon.
-
why are Rickenbacker basses such a touchy subject?
Bassassin replied to -Virtue-'s topic in Bass Guitars
[quote name='badboy1984' timestamp='1384788182' post='2280699'] If Rickenbacker have some kind of cheap copies that made by them like epiphone and Squier or even made by another country, i think more people would buy them instead of third party copies [/quote] You're probably right but it's not a market RIC have any need of, or interest in supplying - as it is they struggle to fulfil demand for the "real" ones! John Hall's determination to keep RIC small & ,maintain the high quality reputation (deserved or otherwise) is a stance I respect, despite him being, err - [i]unprofessional[/i] - in other aspects of his role as CEO! [quote name='badboy1984' timestamp='1384780707' post='2280574'] Rockinbetters are pretty good actually. I personally think the Ric company are not too confident with their own products against the copies ...... [/quote] As far as some of the old MIJ basses are concerned, it's a fair point - the Matsumoku neck-through Fakers were head & shoulders above what Rickenbacker were typically producing in the early/mid 70s - there's even a 70s review of a Kimbara-branded copy knocking around that says as much. These copies had functional dual truss rods, necks & body wings that didn't de-laminate, tuners that didn't explode, and even tailpieces that didn't bend. I have limited experience with the current Chinese & Korean copies but imagine them to have the same manufacturing consistency as other good-quality mass-produced instruments from similar sources - plus the benefit of more modern hardware & components than RIC's products. The main reason though that Hall makes a public display of Faker-chasing is the US trademark legislation, which requires that a trademark owner must be seen to be pursuing and challenging infringements. If any copy, old or new, goes unchallenged, ultimately the trademark will enter the public domain, meaning that anybody & everybody is free to use it. Fender & Gibson did not take Japanese copies seriously in the 70s until it was too late, which is why there has been 4 decades of relentless Precision, Jazz, Strat, LP etc cloning. J. -
why are Rickenbacker basses such a touchy subject?
Bassassin replied to -Virtue-'s topic in Bass Guitars
[quote name='Gust0o' timestamp='1384628174' post='2278960'] No, Simon, nothing wrong with protecting rights, so I'll have to join you in that minority - but I'll keep a toe-hold in the majority camp, who wonder if it was worth the brand damage to do so in such a fashion [/quote] Exactly this - I support RIC's right to protect their intellectual property, and appreciate that as a small business (certainly in comparison to their competition) it's particularly important to stay on top of potential infringements. However it's specifically Mr Hall and his behaviour which create & exacerbate the problem. This is nothing new - those who have been on BC for a while (and who have an interest in Ricks & vintage Rick copies) may well remember that I've had personal run-ins with him, resulting from my making innocent inquiries (from the perspective of a collector & enthusiast of vintage Japanese instruments) which ended up with Hall sending abusive and borderline threatening messages to me at my personal email address. It's hard to escape the conclusion that he is a thoroughly unpleasant, arrogant man who has nothing more productive to do with his time than trawl the internet looking for an excuse to harrass and alienate his potential customers. Much as I like Rickenbackers, I would never buy a new, or RIC - era one, and even feel quite discouraged from even GASing after an early 70s Fireglo 4001 with checked binding, full width inlays, cast bridge and wavy Grovers. OK, maybe not that discouraged... J. -
A certain bass guitar whom we shall not name...
Bassassin replied to Jigster's topic in Bass Guitars
Pickup cover on - nowhere to rest your thumb. Pickup cover off - big gaping hole with sharp metal edges designed to slice the end of your thumb off. Best just thrash it with a pick like Lemmy, or play a Jazz. Jon. -
why are Rickenbacker basses such a touchy subject?
Bassassin replied to -Virtue-'s topic in Bass Guitars
[quote name='LukeFRC' timestamp='1384556399' post='2278274'] Basically in the 70's and 80's, before Rickenbacker had european patents or trademarks (might be wrong on that) some nice people in Japan made copies of Rickenbackers for cheaper and in many cases better than the original. Some of your favourite famous rickenbacker players had japanese made ones... Nice basses - rickenbacker later stopped production of them and other copies - as is their right. [/quote] What's ironically amusing about this is that John Hall's Rickenbacker International Corp dates to the late 90s and his trademarks for the 4003 shapes & designs are actually some ten years newer - the basses being copied in the 70s were made by a completely different and now long-defunct company. One of those old Japanese copy brands was Ibanez, who were making Rick copies from about 1971, complete with checked binding & full-width inlays, just like the older 4001s. If they so chose, Hoshino Gakki, parent company of Ibanez, might have very good grounds to challenge RIC's claim to exclusivity regarding the 4001/4003 design. Despite all the bluff & bluster, RIC is a small, family-owned business (and realistically probably do not have the coin to pursue legal action against BC and its members) - so Mr Hall might want to take a moment to reflect on how fortunate it is that wealthy Japanese corporations have better things to do than take petty & pointless legal actions against inconsequential and anachronistic little American guitar-builders. Jon. -
Maton Ibis: http://www.grouseguitars.com.au/matonibisbass.htm Antipodean oddness from the early 60s - seems there was only a couple of hundred or so ever made. I actually encountered one in the flesh about 14 years ago, being played by an old-ish (60+) Aussie guy whose band was practicing in an Edinburgh church hall. Got chatting & he told me a bit about it, stupidly I never asked for a go! Always had vintage GAS for one but had no idea they were quite so rare. Doubt I'll ever see another, one day I might have a shot at building a replica though. Lovely looking thing, imo. Jon.
-
Its Back! 70's Fender Jazz made in Japan? Not!
Bassassin replied to itsmedunc's topic in eBay - Weird and Wonderful
[quote name='JapanAxe' timestamp='1384455436' post='2277004'] I believe Cimar guitars were made in the Ibanez factory. [/quote] [pedant]Technically there's never been an Ibanez factory - Ibanez & Cimar are brands owned by Hoshino, who use various factories to manufacture their products.[/pedant] Anyway, in the 70s & 80s Ibanez was made predominantly (possibly exclusively) by Fujigen Gakki, who are probably best known for MIJ Fenders & Squiers. Copy-era Cimars are quite a bit different from their Ibby counterparts & I tend to think they're from a different factory, although I couldn't say where. As for this J copy, actually Cimar's a possibility - I had a Cimar J yonks ago which shared a lot of the details you can see on this - round-end pups, little Gotoh tuners, big chrome trc etc. But then again an awful lot of JapCrap Jazz copies do. Really, it's not "an" anything - if it ever had a logo it's long-gone & most brands were pretty meaningless anyhow And I still think it was a Columbus. Probably. J. -