JazzyJ Posted 11 hours ago Posted 11 hours ago (edited) https://www.facebook.com/marketplace/item/1238010064525230/ Ā https://ebay.us/m/S5NwaJ Ā As an electric bass player for over 50yrs, I've never been down the DB route. Obviously, I haven't got a clue but nothing ventured, nothing gained. I've done research on these but as always, everyone has differing opinions. There are a couple of rockabilly guys around here who could possibly try it out for me, it's only 25 miles away. I'm sure the price is negotiable, lots of variables I guess. Is itĀ worth a punt ? Ā CheersĀ Ā Ian Ā Edited 5 hours ago by JazzyJ Ebay link added Quote
Burns-bass Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago 7 hours ago, JazzyJ said: https://www.facebook.com/marketplace/item/1238010064525230/ Ā https://ebay.us/m/S5NwaJ Ā As an electric bass player for over 50yrs, I've never been down the DB route. Obviously, I haven't got a clue but nothing ventured, nothing gained. I've done research on these but as always, everyone has differing opinions. There are a couple of rockabilly guys around here who could possibly try it out for me, it's only 25 miles away. I'm sure the price is negotiable, lots of variables I guess. Is itĀ worth a punt ? Ā CheersĀ Ā Ian Ā Hi Ian. Ā Stentor make good, reliable and affordable instruments from what I can tell. Ā I have one and itās well built and sounds good. Itās limited in terms of the tone, but when someone with talent and skill (not me) plays it, then it sounds great. Ā The pickup here is a good one and the bass looks in good order. The bodies are small which can be a blessing if youāre not as tall as me, but you may find the sound isnāt as strong or loud as a bigger bass. Ā Set up is important. It may be perfect but more likely itāll need a tweak so factor that in to your costs (and inconvenience). Ā Looks good to me. Ā If you want to play rockabilly on it Iād look for a more affordable and durable ply bass.Ā Quote
petebassist Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago I don't think you could go wrong with this bass, as long as you don't plan to jump up and down on it mid-song like Lee Rocker. These are fully carved I think, so if you want to use it for jazz & other non-slap styles as well as rockabilly, you'd have the tone you need with the right mic or pickup. I used to have a Stentor 1950, ply back n sides, which was small bodied and light, perfect for tight gigs. Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.