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Posted
12 minutes ago, cetera said:

Scott's Bass Lessons next vid:

 

"Why Boutique Basses Crush Everything!"

 

The one after that:

 

"Why You Shouldn't Buy a Boutique Bass!"

  • Haha 5
Posted
1 hour ago, cetera said:

Scott's Bass Lessons next vid:

 

"Why Boutique Basses Crush Everything!"

The video two weeks before: “Pro bass player has huge gear revelation”.
Scott gives away boutique basses in charity giveaway.

2 weeks later, big shipment of boutique basses arrive at Chateau de Scott and your video drops. 

  • Haha 1
Posted (edited)

Thanks for this thread. It’s prompted me to take out my custom build by our own @Andyjr1515. Boutique? Maybe, but if so it’s the only boutique thing I have in my universe. Suit courtesy of Oxfam.

 

 

FDBD85DB-AA6A-4F0C-B46C-8A7A47C8C4A2.jpeg

Edited by Len_derby
  • Like 5
Posted
6 hours ago, tegs07 said:

does it include the 10 most difficult bass lines ever on a boutique bass 

and come with an AI photo of a lady in a very tiny bikini?

 

I'm in.

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Posted

I always equate boutique bass to people that have to have that bass because cheaper basses dont offer everything they 'need', but they also play much cheaper basses most of the time because they dont want to take the expensive one out, even though these offer so much less as far as playability goes 😎

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Posted (edited)
11 hours ago, dave_bass5 said:

I always equate boutique bass to people that have to have that bass because cheaper basses dont offer everything they 'need', but they also play much cheaper basses most of the time because they dont want to take the expensive one out, even though these offer so much less as far as playability goes 😎

Maybe for some... 

 

I'll confess I have a collection of 'boutique' basses. The collection as a whole, as well as each of them individually do bring me joy. I enjoy playing them at band practice, I enjoy switching between them, I sometimes just enjoy holding them and spending time marvelling at the skill of the person who made it, I also enjoy them as playable 'art' hung on my studio wall. I play them at home and each of them has been gigged more than once. A few I've had made specifically for me (Binky and a few ACGs) and some I've picked up here and elsewhere for a 'good price', so should I ever need to liquidate them, I could. It's each to their own, but I very much enjoy my basses, and I don't consider them purchases due to me 'needing' them. Though my personal 'wants' in a bass are:

 

• 6 string (7, 8, 9, 10 also fine!)

• Active

• 24 frets

• Through neck

• Wood top

 

There isn't a HUGE number of basses that offer those specs and are genuinely 'good' from my experience (Cort A6 is perhaps an exception) so I've found my sweet spot within the boutique basses world. 

 

Nowt wrong at all with a 4 string Harley Benton P-Bass, they're great for the price point, but they don't meet my personal bass 'wants'. There'

are definitely others in my camp, don't write us all off as pretentious just because we like something different! 😋

Edited by binky_bass
  • Like 5
Posted

You are not alone @binky_bass... 😉

 

Instead of speaking of boutique basses, I prefer the term luthier basses, because this is what are my basses and if I've gone that path, it's because I couldn't find what I was looking for in mass produced instruments when I started playing fretless bass 40+ years ago, yes I really started with a fretless as it's the bass tone I hear in my head.

 

Before the first fretless I had an awful Maya EB-2, then a way better Ibanez SoundGear SDGR 800, but I was simply noodling, and then came the first fretless, a now long gone Aria Diamond Violin that had been defretted by Christophe Leduc to my request and fitted with EMG pickups including a piezo pickup: It sounded ace and made me want to take lessons to learn music, but I was attracted by the fretless ERB, hence these luthier made basses that started my love for these instruments, because I had no other option available back then.

 

That said, I like some vintage instruments too for what they are, and even if I'm a vintage Fender expert (some mates here can confirm this), I don't own any Fender vintage instruments anymore, because they don't meet my requirements at all.

 

It's all about tone, nothing more, and, yes, I fancy coffee table fretless basses as well as ultra well thought instruments designed around efficiency and tone.

 

So, please, accept that we don't all like the same stuff. 😉

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