jonno1981 Posted 11 hours ago Posted 11 hours ago I’d say no, but having any bass with a P pickup is really, really useful! 1 Quote
Misdee Posted 10 hours ago Posted 10 hours ago 5 hours ago, HeadlessBassist said: Now you're setting off my OCD about people calling it a bloody guitar! 🤣 It is a guitar, a bass guitar. Quote
HeadlessBassist Posted 10 hours ago Author Posted 10 hours ago 11 minutes ago, Misdee said: It is a guitar, a bass guitar. Aarrggh! 🫣 Quote
Misdee Posted 10 hours ago Posted 10 hours ago (edited) 7 hours ago, HeadlessBassist said: Okay, so I've owned quite a few Precisions over the years, from 2008 American Standard to AVRI to Nate Mendel & early Classic Vibe to Mexican Standard. Latterly, the only one I ever kept and used for about 5 years was the first generation American Professional (the white/mint one that was used in several Andertons videos - yes, that very bass), due to its lovely clear top end from the excellent V-Mod pickup. Sadly, after I left a named 60s band continuation to join another live show, it sat for two years unplayed, so I moved it on as per the rules of basses not earning me money. Oddly, I've never been specifically asked to play a Precision for a session, gig or show of any kind, but it's sort of received opinion that you should have one. Playing wise and sound wise, I've always been more on the Jazz bass side, both for it's relative delicacy and adaptability. What's feeding this line of thought? I played a £5000 Olinto Precision at Andy Baxter's the other day. Obviously I'm not going to pour that kind of money into one, but maybe another 1st/2nd gen American Professional may be on the cards..? Whadda-ya'll reckon? Discuss... Whether you need a Precision might be the wrong question. Maybe you should ask yourself if you enjoy a Precision. If no one has asked you to provide one in a professional context then in an immediate sense, no you don't need one. Whether you would you get some extra joy from playing one would seem to be the more pertinent question. If you would then it could be a good purchase if you can easily afford it. My go-to bass for well over a decade has been a USA Lakland PJ with a Jazz neck and roundwounds that I use mainly as a P Bass. I've had it a long time and it serves me very well for just about everything. It's boringly reliable and I seldom find it can't sound appropriate for whatever style of music I'm massacring at any given time. Most of the time though just the Precision pickup sounds right for the music, whatever the genre. Edited 9 hours ago by Misdee 1 Quote
Misdee Posted 10 hours ago Posted 10 hours ago 2 minutes ago, HeadlessBassist said: Aarrggh! 🫣 OCD - controlled exposure and response. It's the only way. 2 Quote
LowB_FTW Posted 10 hours ago Posted 10 hours ago Betteridge's law of headlines, applied to forum thread titles … 6 hours ago, BigRedX said: No. Mark 1 Quote
Rosie C Posted 9 hours ago Posted 9 hours ago 7 hours ago, HeadlessBassist said: I've always been more on the Jazz bass side, both for it's relative delicacy and adaptability. You answer your own question, you have a jazz, that's all you need! 1 Quote
Chiliwailer Posted 9 hours ago Posted 9 hours ago Never thought I’d be happy without a P, but have since proved myself wrong. Still feels odd typing that - but my playing situation has a lot to do with it too, so it’s no real issue. Quote
Geek99 Posted 9 hours ago Posted 9 hours ago 1 hour ago, Misdee said: It is a guitar, a bass guitar. Where did I put that kindling? stake ? Check matches ? Check howling mob? Check Quote
roger Posted 8 hours ago Posted 8 hours ago 8 hours ago, HeadlessBassist said: Okay, so I've owned quite a few Precisions over the years, from 2008 American Standard to AVRI to Nate Mendel & early Classic Vibe to Mexican Standard. Latterly, the only one I ever kept and used for about 5 years was the first generation American Professional (the white/mint one that was used in several Andertons videos - yes, that very bass), due to its lovely clear top end from the excellent V-Mod pickup. Sadly, after I left a named 60s band continuation to join another live show, it sat for two years unplayed, so I moved it on as per the rules of basses not earning me money. Oddly, I've never been specifically asked to play a Precision for a session, gig or show of any kind, but it's sort of received opinion that you should have one. Playing wise and sound wise, I've always been more on the Jazz bass side, both for it's relative delicacy and adaptability. What's feeding this line of thought? I played a £5000 Olinto Precision at Andy Baxter's the other day. Obviously I'm not going to pour that kind of money into one, but maybe another 1st/2nd gen American Professional may be on the cards..? Whadda-ya'll reckon? Discuss... Olinta £5000! 🤣 Seriously? The world’s gone mad🤦 how in the world can that ever be better than a 2nd hand US standard or Pro at 900-1000 quid 1 Quote
Terry M. Posted 7 hours ago Posted 7 hours ago 8 hours ago, HeadlessBassist said: Oddly, I've never been specifically asked to play a Precision for a session, gig or show of any kind, but it's sort of received opinion that you should have one. This is because the answer to your question is no. I think swapping "received " for "perceived" is more to the point. The instrument does what we tell it to. Of all the gigs I've been to I've never had an issue with the bassist's weapon of choice.If I have any issues other than sound engineering it's usually the player to "blame" 1964 all-original P-bass with flats or not. 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.