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What gives a bass 'growl'


Mr. Foxen
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Neck wood could be one factor, Warwicks are often described as having growl in abundance and feature hard dense woods such as wegne and laminate construction. This also gives a very stiff neck ( My dolphin suffered from too little neck bow when using .100's) so perhaps the stiffness of the neck is more of a factor than the material, perhaps people with experiance of carbon necks might shed some light on this.

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its a black art. there are probably quite a few different ways to achieve it by balancing the various tonal characters of materials, pickups, construction, hardware, electronics etc. Usually it starts with the wood and either a choice of species or a combination of species that gives rise to a prominent mid-peak somewhere between 250 and 600 Hz.

the reason why its a black art is because wood is such an inconsistent material so for a manufacturer to produce consistently growly instruments is a bit of an accomplishment.

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[quote name='Born 2B Mild' post='376610' date='Jan 11 2009, 09:34 AM']+1 for the humbucker. It's not the only reason, but it boosts your chances with all the other elements.[/quote]
plus perhaps a straight thru neck for an uninterupted vibration path, Badass bridge to get the tone into the body and good tuners too, add a nice lead, some valves.............

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[quote name='Mr. Foxen' post='376523' date='Jan 10 2009, 11:35 PM']If you were having a bass made, or making a bass, or picking one out, what properties give a 'growly' sound. I tried this with punch, and the answers were fairly contrary. See how this one goes.[/quote]

These terms are a little subjective, but a growly sound might simply be attributed to a little bit of overdrive (so an active bass might help - or a valve preamp in your rig) or it could just be a question of EQ, boosting low mids would add a degree of 'aggression' to a bass sound.

I suggest you try a bass you know well through a good graphic equaliser and see what difference each slider makes.

However, the growliest bass I ever owned was a rick 4001 (and that had single pole pickup!)

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[quote name='steve-norris' post='376558' date='Jan 11 2009, 12:51 AM']Neck wood could be one factor, Warwicks are often described as having growl in abundance and feature hard dense woods such as wegne and laminate construction. This also gives a very stiff neck ( My dolphin suffered from too little neck bow when using .100's) so perhaps the stiffness of the neck is more of a factor than the material, perhaps people with experiance of carbon necks might shed some light on this.[/quote]


My stingray has more growl with its carbon neck than it did with its maple neck ;)

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My Warmoth is really growly and that only has a single, single coil pickup.

As far as I am aware, the combination of Mahogany for the body, Wenge for the neck, a hot pickup, having a valve preamp running high and digging in when playing makes my bass growl.

2 of the growliest basses other than this one that I have owned have had mahogany bodies- Epi Thunderbird & 30th Anniversary Stingray


I'm a big fan of mahogany

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[quote name='silverfoxnik' post='377178' date='Jan 11 2009, 09:32 PM']That confirms it then!! I always thought that the luthier's craft was somewhat close to being a practitioner of the black arts!![/quote]

Plus the one!

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  • 1 month later...

Just to throw my 2p into the mix...

My corvette had two MEC jazz pick ups in a Swamp ash body with Ovangkol and Wenge neck and fingerboard - Very Growly

My Stingray has one Humbucking pick up bass wood body with maple and rosewood neck and fingerboard - Velvet smooth

Go figure!

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My Vette $$ is very growly, my Hohner Pro Jack Custom was also very growly. I suppose a firm definition of [b]Growly [/b]is required. What frequencies, or absence thereof, are the main factors in what we perceive as [b]Growl[/b]. I firmly believe growl is only possible with roundwound strings. I might put some flats on the Vette and see if it can still growl.

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[quote name='budget bassist' post='415531' date='Feb 20 2009, 04:32 PM']Basswood body?
Either ash or alder depending on the year/finish :P
Bongo = basswood though[/quote]

You are right of course... anyway nothing spectacular wood wise ;)

Can you tell what my next bass is going to be yet?

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I used my new setup for my first get together with drummer &new guitarist on tuesday.
I use Aguilar AG500 plus DB112 (NO TWEETER) The bass I was using was my Steiney xm2 custom version
with split pick ups(not 2x humbuckers).

It sounded very growly . No effects or anything. I did't realise it till next day but,
all knobs were dead centre with gain turned 3 quarters up. Master was only turned up a little bit.

I played a gig about 2 or 3 years ago in front of a deaf dog,( Fred)and he did growl ....

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