SteveXFR Posted 15 hours ago Posted 15 hours ago I realised that I don't touch my G string (the one on my bass) while playing with either of my metal bands or while playing any of my favourite covers at home. Is this unusual? I play notes that exist on the G but find they sound better on the D or A string. I have quite a bright tone with quite a lot of high mids so maybe Ive made it unusable. Whatever the reason, I replaced a probably unused G with the rest of my strings earlier. Quote
ezbass Posted 15 hours ago Posted 15 hours ago (edited) I use the G quite a lot in my band, but that’s down to the genre (Mod, Northern Soul, etc) and the original recordings use that part of the neck quite a bit it seems (early systems being less able in the low hz dept). However, I reckon I could go a gauge heavier on the G, just for a more even tone (I already use 45-100 to try & achieve that). Edited 14 hours ago by ezbass 1 Quote
James Nada Posted 14 hours ago Posted 14 hours ago If I didn't use the G I'd replace it with another E the same octave as the regular E. May as well have a spare ready to go. Quote
Lozz196 Posted 14 hours ago Posted 14 hours ago I’m pretty much the same, rarely use the G, preferring the thicker sounding notes of the A & D strings. On some songs this isn’t practical but whenever possible avoid the G. 1 Quote
mr4stringz Posted 14 hours ago Posted 14 hours ago Given that’s the case and with you being in metal bands I’d be tempted to go BEAD. Loved my time playing in that tuning for a few years. 5 Quote
Reggaebass Posted 14 hours ago Posted 14 hours ago 8 minutes ago, mr4stringz said: Given that’s the case and with you being in metal bands I’d be tempted to go BEAD. Loved my time playing in that tuning for a few years. Ive got one jazz strung permanently like that, I like that tuning 1 Quote
Woodinblack Posted 13 hours ago Posted 13 hours ago 1 hour ago, SteveXFR said: I realised that I don't touch my G string (the one on my bass) while playing with either of my metal bands or while playing any of my favourite covers at home. Is this unusual? I don't think so. I am in a general cover band and a metal band. The metal band almost never go past the first 2 strings, the cover band does all of them. I guess metal just stays in the mud! 1 Quote
RAY AGAINST THE MACHINE Posted 13 hours ago Posted 13 hours ago 53 minutes ago, mr4stringz said: Given that’s the case and with you being in metal bands I’d be tempted to go BEAD. Loved my time playing in that tuning for a few years. Good shout ! I have this setting on my Warwick corvette . Had it done a couple of months ago, and wondered why I didn’t do this much sooner! 2 Quote
SteveXFR Posted 13 hours ago Author Posted 13 hours ago 57 minutes ago, mr4stringz said: Given that’s the case and with you being in metal bands I’d be tempted to go BEAD. Loved my time playing in that tuning for a few years. I have done that in the past. The only thing that puts me off now is the thought of modifying the expensive bridge and brass nut on my Spector to accept the heavier strings and the cost of putting it back to original. Maybe I should trade it for a 5 string. Quote
itu Posted 12 hours ago Posted 12 hours ago 57 minutes ago, SteveXFR said: ...and the cost of putting it back to original. I have my Status MM4 neck that Rob built to BEAD tuning. I use it now with EADG tuning and obviously thinner strings. Works like a dream. No need to modify anything. Quote
SteveXFR Posted 12 hours ago Author Posted 12 hours ago 6 minutes ago, itu said: I have my Status MM4 neck that Rob built to BEAD tuning. I use it now with EADG tuning and obviously thinner strings. Works like a dream. No need to modify anything. Id need to file the nut and bridge to accept the thicker stings. I can only just get a .110 string in the E string slot in the bridge. Quote
itu Posted 11 hours ago Posted 11 hours ago Bridge needed just some filing, and nut was made by Status. E (.95) and B (.120) are interchangable without issues. No buzzing or any other unwanted moving. Quote
Mottlefeeder Posted 11 hours ago Posted 11 hours ago I had been playing BEADG fives when I decided to try fretless. I started with a borrowed BEAD four to see how I got on and the band almost immediately added 'Crazy little thing called love' to the set list. That triggered a rethink and I quickly moved on to a BEADG five fretless. Unfortunately I found it was not for me, and I now only play fretted fives. David Quote
Ed_S Posted 10 hours ago Posted 10 hours ago For me it's more that I don't like the sensation of playing on the string closest to the floor whatever it's tuned to; if I play a 6 I'll find myself happily incorporating the G which I'd normally avoid on a 4 or 5. As it stands I play 5s which I mostly treat as BEAD 4s, but I can't actually use one of those because I treat them as 3s. 1 Quote
super al Posted 9 hours ago Posted 9 hours ago I play 5 string basses mainly and used all the strings when playing in a function band (I resisted 5 string basses until the keyboard player said "you wouldn't need to change bass mid set if you had a 5" lightbulb moment 😄). Now I'm in a rock band I think in 2 songs I use the B string and never use the G string at all. I could go back to a 4 string and occasionally do in rehearsals but I'm scared I'd have to sell my lovely 5s. Could you use the G string for your other passion @SteveXFR ? Are G strings any good as brake/gear cables? 😄 Quote
Leonard Smalls Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago 11 hours ago, Woodinblack said: . I guess metal just stays in the mud! Unless, of course, it's Mudvayne... And I tend to use the G string all the time. It's useful for excessive widdling. Quote
SH73 Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago Depends which Iron Maiden song I play , it's used a lot. Quote
Hellzero Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago Buy a 3 strings bass, or start a D-A-D cover band. 😂😉 Funny as it's often the opposite, the thicker string being used as a thumb rest... Strange that you find that the notes normally played on the G string sound better on the D string as they lack depth and harmonics (you can't change the laws of physics). That said, if it suits your needs and playing, why bother except for that unused string you throw away at each strings changing. Perhaps, just buy 3 new separate strings instead of a full set or ask Newtone to make you 3 strings sets. PS: I've always used all the strings on my sixer (fretless) basses, but that's the way I play and I guess that's certainly why I exclusively play piano now as I wasn't a frustrated guitarist, but a frustrated pianist. 🤦🏻🤪😂 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.