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LeftyJ

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Posts posted by LeftyJ

  1. I got a lefty 1981 MC924 today, in like-new condition (including the original lefty case, in perfect shape) at an incredible price. The electronics need some attention, but other than that it's perfect! Pics soon.

  2. Interesting way of winding the strings around the tuners :)

    They really are great basses, both the old Korean and Japanese ones and the current Indonesian ones! I have three MIJ's (two ATK300's and one ATK305) and they're great. I love the all-black look without the pickguard. I wonder how it would look with a black 3-ply pickguard like the old ones used to have.

  3. I still have my last one, and the one before that, and so on. I currently own 11 basses and I wouldn't say any of them really excells above the rest. In versatility and playability I would say my Ellio Martina Forza 5 is a favourite, but sometimes I just need a different tone I cannot obtain from the Martina and I'll grab one of my Ibanez ATK's for their punch and bright edge, or my Rickenbacker 4003, or my Italia Torino hollowbody... They're just different, not so much better or worse.

    Basses I sold in the past weren't necessarily less good than the ones I kept, they (or their sound) just didn't suit me anymore. There's one I regret selling though: my Yamaha TRB5II. That was a great bass, very versatile. It lacked character and a personality of its own, but playability was excellent, it had an incredibly tight low B and I could really use it for almost anything.

  4. I own a fretless Sandberg Bullet 5, one of Sandbergs own models, and I love it. Very fast neck, and a beautiful tone. Workmanship is absolutely flawless. And I love the finish of the body: it has a matt tobacco burst lacquer finish over a sandblasted ash body. During the sandblasting, the dark softer parts of the grain were etched somewhat deeper, creating a beautiful texture.



  5. Here in Holland, there seems to be a distributor. There are a few stores that sell these. But all of them only stock 'your basic average Strat, Tele, Precision and Jazz' and some startersets, and not the really interesting models.

    There are some UK dealers listed [url="http://www.lxdb.co.uk/guitars/sx-guitars.php"]here[/url].

  6. [quote name='josh3184' post='490822' date='May 17 2009, 09:18 PM']waaaaant[/quote]

    My point exactly! :rolleyes:
    And they're incredibly affordable too, at $160: [url="http://www.rondomusic.com/product2459.html"]http://www.rondomusic.com/product2459.html[/url]
    They also offer a slightly upgraded version with a heavier bridge, different pickups and different tuners, and a shortscale fretless version.
    The full line of lefties can be found here: [url="http://www.rondomusic.com/BassLeft.html"]http://www.rondomusic.com/BassLeft.html[/url]

    [quote name='BigRedX' post='490925' date='May 17 2009, 11:08 PM']Two observations. It's nice to see a bass with a bolt-on neck that has been finished in the same colour as the body.

    And now I have guitar GAS for RH version of the sharks-fin shape... You got a link for that?[/quote]

    I certainly do: [url="http://www.rondomusic.com/electricguitar.html"]http://www.rondomusic.com/electricguitar.html[/url] (you'll find the first ones on page 5)
    Look for the SJM57 and SJM62. The 57 is a maple board version, the 62 has a rosewood board. They have them with both chrome-covered humbuckers and P90's, and both with the Fender Jaguar-style tremolo and with a stoptail.

    Sorry for the slight hijack :)

  7. [quote name='MuseMatt' post='488638' date='May 15 2009, 11:53 AM']as we're posting different basses... mine's a mapleneck/jazz too and I have to say: I wouldn't go back to rosewood anytime soon![/quote]

    Lovely Van Der End!

    I usually prefer maple too. I have three MIJ Ibanez ATK's, an MIJ '75 RI Jazz and an Ellio Martina Forza 5 with maple boards. My only exceptions are my fretless Sandberg Bullet 5, my Rickenbacker 4003 and my G&L SB-2. I've been playing that '75 RI Jazz most of the time during the last two months, and love it to death!

  8. [quote name='Biggsy' post='487995' date='May 14 2009, 04:26 PM']Hi guys,

    I don't know if this has been mentioned elsewhere on the site, but there's a good sale at Bass Central at the moment, and they will ship internationally. I'm told their sale prices are negotiable, and they've got a large selection of lefties in:

    [url="http://www.basscentral.com/2003/lefty.shtml"]Bass Central lefty deals[/url][/quote]

    You may also enjoy the website of Drumcity / Guitarland in Wheat Ridge, Colorado:
    [url="http://www.drumcityguitarland.com/drumcitygl/stores/1/Left-Handed-Basses-C81.aspx"]http://www.drumcityguitarland.com/drumcity...Basses-C81.aspx[/url]
    Check out those lefty Modulus basses, for example, or that crazy 37" ESP!

  9. I have no favourite brand, I am a true gear whore. I play anything as long as the tone and playability suit me (oh, and the looks of course). I do have a slight thing for G&L though. They're everything Fender could have been but isn't, especially in terms of availability of lefty versions of their instruments. At this moment, Fender USA will only get you a lefty American Standard P and J, and only in sunburst with a tortoise guard or black with a white guard, and in either case only with a rosewood fingerboard. The only exception in the past 10 years was the Hot Rodded American Precision, which was also available in see-through white, sunset orange and natural (all with a tortoise guard). That really freaks me out...

  10. [quote name='bubinga5' post='485428' date='May 12 2009, 12:15 AM']Not a 75 bridge pup position on the MIJ? really.. im sure it is on the USA..i could be wrong...I cant see Fender getting that wrong on a reissue..[/quote]

    Yep, on the USA they placed the bridge pickup correctly, but on the MIJ it's in the regular '60's position. On the MIM '70's Jazz the bridge pickup is placed correctly too, so it's really just the MIJ that's different... I'm not sure if that goes for the Marcus Miller and the Geddy Lee too though, as they're based on the same bass.

  11. [quote name='steve-soar' post='478467' date='May 3 2009, 08:51 PM']P.S., I put a Badass on it too. Great upgrade, as the original bridge saddles slid from side to side. :)[/quote]

    Yes, the saddles on the bridge of my MIJ '75 RI Jazz have that tendency too. I'm thinking of upgrading that too.
    Don't know about those custom shop '62 pickups, but there are Fender USA pickups in my MIJ too (it comes stock with Fender USA '75 RI pickups) and they're absolutely GREAT. The MIJ '75 RI is not an entirely accurate replication of a '75 Jazz, the bridge pickup is not in the '70's location, but still it mimics that bright and punchy tone very well. Great bass, definitely not my last MIJ Fender! They also produce a very wide range of lefthanded instruments (even a 5-string) whereas Fender USA only offers some standard models, in a very limited colour range (American Standard P and J, in black with a white guard and sunbust with a tortoise guard only, and only with a rosewood board :lol: ). So I've come to like Fender Japan a lot :rolleyes:

  12. I am very curious about the Beluga too! They're producing a lefty version of the twin humbucker solidbody, and I really like the look of it. I don't know much about the Dean, apart from being somewhat of a mix between a Warwick Dolphin and a Warwick Thumb lookwise. I wonder about the tone, I feel the pickup is placed very close to the bridge so it probably won't produce an accurate Stingray-tone but something between a Thumb and a Stingray. I see on their website it's all mahogany with a rosewood fingerboard now, I believe the old model had an ash body and an all maple neck. That one will sound even punchier and brighter.

  13. The low B may also sound tighter on a proper 5-string because of the thicker and wider neck. More wood = tighter. I do find the high strings to sound a bit too tight on some 5-strings. I have tried both, I've owned several 5-strings and have tuned one of my Ibanez ATK300's to BEAD, and for the music I play on the ATK's I preferred the 4-string tuned down to BEAD because it sounded much fatter whereas the ATK305 5-string I also own sounded very tight and the highs were somewhat thin.

    Give both options a try, it really is a matter of taste. If you prefer the feel of a 4-string over the wider neck of a 5-string and don't really need the G-string, a 4-string tuned BEAD may be the better option. If you like the greater range of a 5-string and the added tightness, get a 5-string. It will save you the hassle of filing the nut and intonating the bridge, and possibly back again when you find you prefer a real 5 after all.

  14. I may, this looks tempting. For me this is THE colour combination for a Stingray: black on black with a maple fingerboard (I feel every Stingray should have a maple board). Vintage white with a black pickguard and maple board comes as a close second.

    I'll give it some consideration. Thanks!

  15. If I were to buy a new lefty Stingray, it would either be black with a black 3-ply, vintage white with a black pickguard or natural with a black pickguard. In all cases it would have to have a 3EQ and a maple fingerboard, preferably birdseye but I don't think they do that anymore. Unfortunately that's as far as it goes for us lefties: colours, fingerboard wood, pickguard and EQ. We can only pick the standard single humbucker-configuration, whereas righties can also get 'em with HS or HH setup.
    I would love a lefty HH... :)

  16. [quote name='Bobo_Grimmer' post='469733' date='Apr 22 2009, 05:44 PM']**run's over and hug's you** lefty with a rick! :rolleyes:[/quote]

    LOL, thanks!

    I'd been wanting one for a long time but never found an affordable one. New they were nearly all well in excess of 2400 euros and the only affordable secondhand 4003 that I ever found when on the lookout was sold before I could say 'MINE!'. When the exchange rate of the British Pound dropped so low last January, I bought one new from guitarguitar.co.uk for 1516 Pounds, which at that moment was about 1600 euros. So I saved about 800 euros in comparison to the European mainland prices! I haven't regretted it even once, the only thing I regret is that I didn't buy one sooner! What a great bass! In The Bullfight it has replaced my Ellio Martina as my main axe. Both are amazing basses in their own right, but the Martina sounds like a '70s Jazz Bass on steroids with those big singlecoils and the built-in Aguilar OBP-3, so lots of punch and a bright edge, much more modern than the Rick. The Rick fits our music perfectly :)

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