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Vanheusen77

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Everything posted by Vanheusen77

  1. If you really want the Sherwood green P and can afford it then I say sell the Sandberg and get it! Sandbergs are great but personally I feel they are better off being their own thing rather than trying to mod it into a vintage Fender. Then after a while if you get tired of the Sherwood green P, you can send it to me!
  2. I would try before buy because the sound is very different from more traditional designs If this is your first stingray. I would definitely get the new series of specials because of the light weight.
  3. I own and have played several BBP and Sandberg California TT basses (active and passive). Build quality is about the same - really good! Maybe slight advantage to the Yamahas for the generally super solid feel. The Yamahas are about the same weight as new Fenders, the Sandbergs are slightly below that I would say. The Sandberg TT’s sound a lot like classic jazz basses to me (especially the passive). The Yamaha BB sounds a bit more “unique”. Whether that is a plus or minus is a matter of taste. The necks are both very comfortable. The Yamaha neck is slightly wider, but not like a P bass.
  4. I’ve had a lot of passive BB’s. If you are after a Fender then nothing else will satisfy that itch. Personally, I like the Yamahas as much or more. I sometimes think the BB’s get unfairly criticised for not sounding enough like a jazz or P. They have their own great sound and feel! I never felt I needed the active preamp on my passive BB’s.
  5. Yes, having an engineer that is competent and knows the music really helps in my experience.
  6. Looks like the P is starting to look like a winner in this poll (happens quite often in my experience). If you on top of that factor in the Yamaha BB votes that was for P pickup only, it’s starting to look like a landslide. I might have to do a new “P-off” between a BB and the Fender at some point! Thanks everyone!
  7. I also should have made separate options for Yamaha both pickups, and Yamaha P pickup only….
  8. I made this video a couple of years ago. Since then I have made better ones, but not with all of these basses at the same time because I have not had them in the same place (some I have sold). The Stingray special is better than the Ray4 for sure, although it’s the same type of sound. When I have comparisons between entirely different types of basses I generally play them the way I would on the track. More to get a feel for the different flavours so to speak. When I have made comparisons between the P pickup of a Yamaha and a P bass, or the PJ sound compared to jazz I have tried to play them the same way since they are within the same category to me. The fact that votes cannot be changed was by mistake and not intentional. If someone knows how to change this after posting, please let me know!
  9. I actually ended up buying a used Stingray Special after this Ray4. I was not disappointed. It’s amazing!
  10. Merry Christmas everyone! I found this video I made quite a while ago. For some strange reason I did not make it into a poll here!
  11. If you have a bass you love, play it out on gigs! Otherwise what’s the point unless you are more of a collector? Get insurance if it is expensive. I also play upright, and in that world people routinely play £1k+ instruments on bar gigs. Instruments that are way more fragile and bulky than a Wal or something. Interesting topic from another angle though… What do you guys look for from the bass itself at home/studio vs live? Personally I value things like reliability and sound that cuts while being easy to manage for front of house. This is probably why I gravitate towards passive P or Yamaha basses, especially live.
  12. I have both a passive and an active TT. To me they are about as bright as Fender jazz basses. If you boost the treble on the active, it’s a whole different thing of course.
  13. The recent BB’s are somewhat in the middle weight wise in my experience. About the same as new Fender jazz basses. Not very heavy but definitely heavier than my Sandberg or Stingray special.
  14. I have tried the ”cheaper” versions of these and the difference in sound is minimal. Slightly more of a difference in feeling but still not much of a difference. I’m probably not keeping both of these btw which is why I wanted to test them.
  15. Hello! I made this short comparison, and of course a poll for anyone who is interested:
  16. Great basses and what a cool finish! I have a TT(gold) and just got a new TT passive in marley blue, but I kind of regret I did not get this finish instead.
  17. I would also say Stingray. More attack but still ringing mids. Jazz basses have a quicker attack but less of a ringy sustain compared to a P bass or Stingray.
  18. Personally I prefer the newer BB’s. Slightly less aggressive mids (but still a lot more so than a jazz bass) with everything on full. The ergonomics are also a lot better for me at least. M
  19. I was hoping for a more 80’s looking blue finish, but I’m getting the white BBP for sure. Amazing basses, and my old white BB1024x needs a similar coloured less damaged friend.
  20. To me nothing sounds like playing with a pick except actually playing with a pick. If you want more high end clang when playing with your fingers try a lower setup and digging in slightly more. But it will not create that super focused ping at the start of each note that a pick gets you. Same on a jazz or PJ.
  21. I believe the new Sandberg Central has the pickup in the Stingray spot.
  22. The more I play my Stingray special the more I love it. It really can do it all.
  23. Well actually I kind of had the same issues but the new “specials” did it for me. Faster neck, a lot lighter weight, slightly warmer sounding mids. Very expensive in the EU now though! Other than that maybe the new Sandberg Central or the Flea Fender active thing (don’t know about weight on that one though).
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