DiceSociety Posted Monday at 10:50 Posted Monday at 10:50 To cut a long story short, I've decided to go over to the dark side and get a 6 string bass. The sort of stuff I (attempt to) play is sort of king Crimson crossed with Miles Davis, with a healthy dollop of funk, and a smattering of metal when we're in the mood. My budget is around 1500 quid and I've narrowed it down to either the Sire F10 6, or perhaps a Yamaha Trb; does anyone have any opinions/advice on either of these? Quote
DiceSociety Posted Monday at 11:12 Author Posted Monday at 11:12 Yeah, did initially look at a Btb 806, but seems very difficult to get any clear sound examples which aren't heavily processed. The ones I have heard didn't sound as good to me as the Sire. But this is going by you tube videos though, so hardly scientific. Would you recommend them then? Quote
nige1968 Posted Monday at 12:06 Posted Monday at 12:06 Haven’t played a TRB but if they’re anything like other Yamaha basses they will be well made, sweet sounding, and pretty heavy. The 35in scale may also be good or bad, depending upon your own dimensions Quote
DiceSociety Posted Monday at 12:53 Author Posted Monday at 12:53 45 minutes ago, nige1968 said: Haven’t played a TRB but if they’re anything like other Yamaha basses they will be well made, sweet sounding, and pretty heavy. The 35in scale may also be good or bad, depending upon your own dimensions Cheers for that. The weight doesn't really bother me to be honest. I think the 35 scale would be preferable, but I've no personal experience to verify this. Quote
Burns-bass Posted Monday at 13:40 Posted Monday at 13:40 Im about to sell a Pedulla 6 which is a hand made mega bass but its fretless. Quote
BassApprentice Posted Monday at 13:45 Posted Monday at 13:45 Would throw in MTD Kingston to your list. I had the most basic Kingston model and was really impressed with it. Sad I sold it tbh. Quote
DiceSociety Posted Monday at 14:17 Author Posted Monday at 14:17 35 minutes ago, Burns-bass said: Im about to sell a Pedulla 6 which is a hand made mega bass but its fretless. That's a bit of a curve ball. Would be rude not to have a look, could you send me some details please? Quote
Burns-bass Posted Monday at 14:35 Posted Monday at 14:35 17 minutes ago, DiceSociety said: That's a bit of a curve ball. Would be rude not to have a look, could you send me some details please? Of course, just being set up at the moment. I collect tomorrow. Quote
jonno1981 Posted Monday at 15:01 Posted Monday at 15:01 Yamaha trb6 is brilliant. Pickups don’t sound hugely impressive outside the context of a band, but in a mix they just work so well. Quote
Hellzero Posted Monday at 16:24 Posted Monday at 16:24 There are plenty of excellent sixers in your budget, but you'd better buy a second hand model as you'll get a higher range one for the same price. The Yamaha TRB-6P is certainly a great bass, with piezo pickups, a through neck, ebony fingerboard, 33 7/8 inches scale length, often around 5 kilos and is the basis of the John Patitucci model, so, certainly ticking all the boxes and was also used by Abraham Laboriel as a fiver. Quote
Hellzero Posted Monday at 16:53 Posted Monday at 16:53 At the moment, here in the classified are these basses in your price tag, in order of appearance: 2 Quote
DiceSociety Posted Monday at 18:30 Author Posted Monday at 18:30 cheersd for allthe help guys, really appreciate it. Quote
neil___lien Posted Monday at 21:04 Posted Monday at 21:04 The RMI is awesome! Used to own one! Loved it.. Quote
crazycloud Posted yesterday at 00:25 Posted yesterday at 00:25 Ibanez SR from the 206 and up, both new and secondhand. Ibanez BTB Cort A6 FMMH. I own all of them in one form or another. More detailed answer when not typing on my phone. Quote
bassmayhem Posted yesterday at 08:20 Posted yesterday at 08:20 The thing that makes most six string basses feel unfamiliar and awkward is that the string spacing often differs a lot from a four or five string bass. Personally, I prefer the same string-to-string spacing regardless of number of strings. Unfortunately, that is a specification that more often than seldom is left out in the info when you google different bass brands. I prefer 19 mm, but 18 will do. My six string is 18 mm with the possibility to adjust out to around 18.5 mm. Try different basses! Also, the neck profile is of importance, as well as the balance of the instrument. Quote
Hellzero Posted 23 hours ago Posted 23 hours ago As I've owned so many sixers which are my go-to basses, I can maybe help you find the bass you really want/like just as @binky_bass can too. He is on the fretted side when I'm on the fretless side. It's up to you @DiceSociety 😉 Quote
DiceSociety Posted 23 hours ago Author Posted 23 hours ago 41 minutes ago, bassmayhem said: The thing that makes most six string basses feel unfamiliar and awkward is that the string spacing often differs a lot from a four or five string bass. Personally, I prefer the same string-to-string spacing regardless of number of strings. Unfortunately, that is a specification that more often than seldom is left out in the info when you google different bass brands. I prefer 19 mm, but 18 will do. My six string is 18 mm with the possibility to adjust out to around 18.5 mm. Try different basses! Also, the neck profile is of importance, as well as the balance of the instrument. Yeah, that makes total sense, I hadn't really considered the string spacing. It's a bit of a rabbit hole really. The difficulty for me is that where I live there aren't any music shops that have 6 string basses, so have to go largely by advice from fellow bass players and you tube videos. Quote
DiceSociety Posted 23 hours ago Author Posted 23 hours ago 20 minutes ago, Hellzero said: As I've owned so many sixers which are my go-to basses, I can maybe help you find the bass you really want/like just as @binky_bass can too. He is on the fretted side when I'm on the fretless side. It's up to you @DiceSociety 😉 Cheers for that! I've messaged Binky... 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.