Angel Posted yesterday at 13:38 Posted yesterday at 13:38 This is a video that I often put on at work as it's great background music, it's a live concert by two superb Japanese jazz fusion bands- Casiopea and T-Square. They all take to the stage at once and just share out duties. Anyway, I was watching excellent bassist Sutoh Mitsuru and for the first time I paid a bit more attention to the instrument that he was playing. It's an 8 string, and has a trem (!). I've been trying to find the bass on line but I've had no luck so far, so I was wondering if anyone recognises the shape? I'd just like to know what it is. The whole video is around 2h 44m long, but your best look at the bass in question is at 2h 14m when the bassists do a bit of showboating. Sutoh is the guy with glasses and a green bass. The other bassist is Yoshihiro Naruse, both very good! Anyone got an 8 string bass? What are they like to play? What does it give you extra sound-wise? Quote
velvetkevorkian Posted yesterday at 13:53 Posted yesterday at 13:53 I think it might be a Tune, based on the body shape? Can't find any 8 strings or trems on their site though... Quote
itu Posted yesterday at 14:03 Posted yesterday at 14:03 (edited) From the web: his main bass is Moon. I am on the same side with @velvetkevorkian: that green one looks a lot like Tune. Multistring basses, I think you can find fine instruments here made by @Basvarken. Edited yesterday at 14:04 by itu Quote
velvetkevorkian Posted yesterday at 14:03 Posted yesterday at 14:03 Aha! Different name but looks like the same band and bass??? Quote
Angel Posted yesterday at 15:11 Author Posted yesterday at 15:11 Tune is a reasonable suggestion, but I don't think it's a Tune. I had a go at a screenshot, this is the best I could find Quote
Basvarken Posted yesterday at 15:26 Posted yesterday at 15:26 Looks like Marleaux maybe? That string anchor behind the bridge is typical for Marleaux. Quote
simisker Posted yesterday at 16:04 Posted yesterday at 16:04 (edited) I'm pretty confident it IS a Tune; something based on the TWB line, by the looks of it. That tapered headstock with an elliptical logo; the slender wide-set horns [very elegant, IMO], and that rear strap-button 'hook' area of the body, like a reverse Dingwall shape. In fact, here you go: https://reverb.com/item/51095896-tune-japan-phoenix-twxt-8-qm-tremoro-pink Edit 1: Phwoarr! Edit 2: "Tremoro"?!? 😄 Edited yesterday at 16:08 by simisker 3 1 Quote
itu Posted yesterday at 16:18 Posted yesterday at 16:18 7 minutes ago, simisker said: Edit 2: "Tremoro"?!? 😄 In Japan people do pronounce R very close to L, which they do not even have in their kanji, hiragana, or katakana. Therefore the seller looks a lot like a Japanese person. I have heard that they have learned English with their own writing, where intonation is important. Many speak English, but if your intonation fails, some do not understand you. 1 Quote
Delberthot Posted 23 hours ago Posted 23 hours ago This is one of my favourite videos on YouTube with Abe Laboriel Sr on an 8 string Ibanez I think Quote
kodiakblair Posted 23 hours ago Posted 23 hours ago (edited) 3 hours ago, Angel said: Tune is a reasonable suggestion, but I don't think it's a Tune. It's a Tune, just look at the logo on the peghead. Lad from Casiopea has been playing them for years, so long there's even a model named after the band he plays in. I've a vague memory he's actually a dentist in real life 😃 Edited 23 hours ago by kodiakblair Quote
kodiakblair Posted 23 hours ago Posted 23 hours ago http://www.cc.rim.or.jp/~tune/tune/twx.trem/twx.trem.html That's the stock model but custom options are no problem. 1 Quote
Angel Posted 22 hours ago Author Posted 22 hours ago I stand corrected on the Tune suggestion! What do I know! many thanks people 1 Quote
MichaelDean Posted 20 hours ago Posted 20 hours ago 5 hours ago, itu said: In Japan people do pronounce R very close to L, which they do not even have in their kanji, hiragana, or katakana. Therefore the seller looks a lot like a Japanese person. I have heard that they have learned English with their own writing, where intonation is important. Many speak English, but if your intonation fails, some do not understand you. Slight tangent, but I once spent way too long at a bar in Japan trying to get a gin and tonic. I was asking for a "gin ando toniku". Took me a while to re-read the katakana and it was just "gintoniku". Dude got it immediately after that 🙄 1 Quote
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