Boodang Posted Tuesday at 18:35 Posted Tuesday at 18:35 The OP drops a bone with the barest morsel of meat on it and basschatters make a banquet out of it.... but I guess it is a place to chat about basses... even so! 2 Quote
Hellzero Posted Tuesday at 18:46 Posted Tuesday at 18:46 7 hours ago, MacDaddy said: Meh. Already done in the 80 Indeed, but it looked like it was designed by Elon Musk... That said, I really like my BassLab L-Bow V, excellent on all aspects, and feather light as it's hollow carbon: 3 Quote
Merton Posted Tuesday at 21:11 Posted Tuesday at 21:11 On 08/09/2025 at 20:31, Dan Dare said: Is this a complete the sentence competition? If so, I suggest: Boutique basses are bought by lawyers, medics and well-paid weekend warriors in the vain hope that spending lots of cash will make up for lack of talent. Over to you lot. Stop talking about me 😟 😀 2 Quote
Rich Posted yesterday at 09:24 Posted yesterday at 09:24 "Is this the end" is a daft clickbait question. First, what is "this"? Secondly, what is "the end"? Thirdly, if by "boutique" you mean custom built basses, then of course it isn't. As long as there are people wanting instruments built to their own desires and specifications, and as long as there are luthiers willing to build them, then there will be 'boutique' basses. 3 Quote
Misdee Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago (edited) I remember a time when the relevant question would have been are Fender-style basses dead? When it comes to trends in bass design, it's a classic example of that old adage about swings and roundabouts. There was a general consensus that Fenders had become outmoded by such "useful" innovations as active electronics, graphite necks and neck-thru-body construction. I know it's hard to believe nowadays, but it's true. In the mid to late 1980's if you went shopping for a nice new bass (and by nice I mean pretty expensive) in the UK then the shops had plenty of boutique basses but a scant selection of Fender-derived designs. You could go into mainstream retail shops and buy a Wal, Status, a proper German-made Warwick, Jaydee, Overwater Music Man ect but the plethora of fancy Precision and Jazz-style basses that proliferate now just weren't there. The basses Fender were making weren't very appealing to most discerning players, and it was harder to find vintage examples than it is now, for various reasons. At some point in the 1990's someone must have plugged a Fender bass into an amp ( probably an Ampeg), tried playing some songs with a band, and said "Hang on a minute, this actually sounds quite good!" and we've all ended up where we are now. Edited 3 hours ago by Misdee 1 Quote
Hellzero Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago Your analysis is good @Misdee, but you forgot that those playing guitars or basses nowadays are, by 80%, old people like us (what's the average age here on BassChat, 50 to 55, I guess, or even 55 to 60) and have decided that older is better, so went back to the Fenders they couldn't afford when they were younger and skint... 1 Quote
Mrbigstuff Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago 1 hour ago, Misdee said: At some point in the 1990's someone must have plugged a Fender bass into an amp ( probably an Ampeg), tried playing some songs with a band, and said "Hang on a minute, this actually sounds quite good!" and we've all ended up where we are now. Ah that would be Pino Palladino! Quote
MacDaddy Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago On 09/09/2025 at 19:46, Hellzero said: Indeed, but it looked like it was designed by Elon Musk... That said, I really like my BassLab L-Bow V, excellent on all aspects, and feather light as it's hollow carbon: IIRC you are not in the UK and therefore unable to bring this to a Bassbash so I can have a go? 😟 Quote
Misdee Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago 18 minutes ago, Mrbigstuff said: Ah that would be Pino Palladino! Him, and also various young men from Seattle in need of a good wash. Quote
Misdee Posted 54 minutes ago Posted 54 minutes ago (edited) 2 hours ago, Hellzero said: Your analysis is good @Misdee, but you forgot that those playing guitars or basses nowadays are, by 80%, old people like us (what's the average age here on BassChat, 50 to 55, I guess, or even 55 to 60) and have decided that older is better, so went back to the Fenders they couldn't afford when they were younger and skint... I'm sure that's also a factor. But it was harder to find old Fenders in the U.K, and dealing directly with oversees builders was also much more difficult. Transatlantic phone calls in those days cost more a minute than a lap dance does nowadays. Bass players were limited to what retailers wanted to stock. The internet changed everything. When I first went to the USA in the mid-'80's it was a revelation. The guitar shops were chockablock with Fender basses of every vintage. I'd been on the lookout for ages for a nice ',70's Jazz Bass in the U.K. In America I had literally a dozen to choose from locally.They weren't particularly cheap, but they were certainly plentiful. The biggest problem was how to get one back to the U.K. Edited 54 minutes ago by Misdee Quote
Woodinblack Posted 54 minutes ago Posted 54 minutes ago 11 minutes ago, Misdee said: Him, and also various young men from Seattle in need of a good wash. Seattle? Like Krist Novoselic and his Gibson RD Artist and thunderbirds, or Jeff Ament with his Hamer 12 strings? Quote
Misdee Posted 42 minutes ago Posted 42 minutes ago (edited) 27 minutes ago, Woodinblack said: Seattle? Like Krist Novoselic and his Gibson RD Artist and thunderbirds, or Jeff Ament with his Hamer 12 strings? No , like other players using Fenders, like Ben Shepherd. Come to think of it, the first time I saw Jeff Ament he was playing a fretless Precision, if I remember correctly. Edited 25 minutes ago by Misdee Quote
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