Machines Posted January 9, 2022 Posted January 9, 2022 1 minute ago, Badscrew said: Too many is when you're afraid bringing one more in the family Same applies with girlfriends. Quote
uk_lefty Posted January 10, 2022 Posted January 10, 2022 Have you tidied them all away as best as possible? If you're still tripping over one, check the bass is ok, don't worry about your foot pointing the wrong way. If you're tripping over one and damaging the bass you have too many. Quote
Misdee Posted January 10, 2022 Posted January 10, 2022 Too many is a few more than I already have. All of which are absolutely necessary. 1 Quote
Jeffb28451 Posted January 23, 2022 Posted January 23, 2022 My Wife asks, “ How many are enough.” ? Quote
Ander87 Posted January 24, 2022 Posted January 24, 2022 Well. I'm back to 3 basses for 2 bands, 2 of which can do back up for each other and the other one a short scale to spice things up or when we need more space in the boot. Quote
cdog Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago Bringing this old thread back to life, and kind of following on from what @SumOne was saying, I currently have 7 and find myself a bit overwhelmed by them all. When I'm at home I end up playing one for 10 minutes, then swapping over to another, then another and get more obsessed by their different tones than with getting on with playing. I wonder if other people find this and how you deal with it? 2 Quote
SpondonBassed Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago 1 minute ago, cdog said: I wonder if other people find this and how you deal with it? Simple. Just buy another bass that covers all the tones you think you'll need. 2 Quote
Misdee Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago 10 minutes ago, cdog said: Bringing this old thread back to life, and kind of following on from what @SumOne was saying, I currently have 7 and find myself a bit overwhelmed by them all. When I'm at home I end up playing one for 10 minutes, then swapping over to another, then another and get more obsessed by their different tones than with getting on with playing. I wonder if other people find this and how you deal with it? It's an endemic problem when you have a nice selection of gear. Choose one as your main bass, get to know it well. Look at the other ones while you are practising on that one and count your blessings. 1 Quote
Franticsmurf Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago (edited) I have 10 basses of which I count 2 as my 'main' gigging basses. I like having the choice, though and I have gigged every one of the 10 over the last three years or so. My main band plays a wide range of covers which change quite frequently as we tailor the set to the function we've been asked to play. The feel of the set determines which of the main basses I use. For example, we play a long festival set every year which is usually heavier and rockier and for this I use my Sterling 34HH. We also have a regular Christmas gig for the Local Crown Court service and as this is a more laid back affair, the P Bass comes out. As we are a large band (13) if I know the venue is small I'll bring a headless bass and if space is particularly tight (I can think of two venues we've played several times) I have my Ibanez short scale headless. I like to have a spare guitar at gigs and it recently occurred to me that if I'm making the effort to match the main guitar to the gig, I should also match the spare to the main guitar. So I have a Squire PJ to use at 'Precision' gigs, and an incoming Sire Z7 to use at 'Sterling' gigs. The full list: Sterling 34HH Fender Precision Ibanez EHB100S Squire PJ (Sire Z7) Hohner 'The Jack' Spirit XZ2 Ibanez GSR 205 (5 string) Ibanez SR300 Ibanez AGBR 200 semi acoustic Edit: And a Harley Benton Fretless Jazz which I've used in rehearsal and on recordings but not gigged. Edited 3 hours ago by Franticsmurf Quote
Stub Mandrel Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago There's actually a precise formula: Too many = how many you have now + 2 That means there's always room for one more... 3 Quote
Stub Mandrel Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago I rotate my practice bass but often end up back with my 40th anniversary Squier P. I try (often unsuccessfully) to gig one of my favourites and one of the others. I've managed to gig all my basses except the two Kay short scales, and one of those has done an open mic. Some have only done short sets or a few songs. My main bass from the early 90s got its first full gig (rather than one or two outings for the odd set) in 30 years last weekend. So I rotate basses slowly but do have my favourites. Quote
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