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I wish I knew a young person who was interested in learning to play bass


DeepEnd

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The Squier Bronco Bass typically sells for $150 new so I wouldn't be expecting a professional caliber instrument but if it were in good condition I could set it up properly to make it playable. It doesn't really matter because I don't know anyone to buy it for and I don't normally flip gear.

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Definitely get it before Lug decides to buy it. Lord only knows the mayhem that would ensue.

 

I have already converted my EBO to a piccolo bass, mayhem has already been ensued. My stat personally thanked me for doing this. :D

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Pick it up and make a piccolo bass out of it.

Sorry but I don't really see the point. If I want an instrument that's tuned an octave higher than a bass, I have guitars for that. In fact, I normally work out bass lines on guitar first. It comes from being a guitarist who noodles on bass rather than an actual bassist.

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If I were to come across something like that locally' date=' I'd give serious thought to going BEAD with it. . . .[/quote']

I assume you mean BEAD as a variation of picolo tuning. We're talking about a cheap short scale bass so I wouldn't expect it to do well dropped down to B. If I didn't already have a bass I'd be interested but I'd keep it in standard tuning.

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No, I meant low B. I don't see why lower would be problematic. It's just a matter of getting the string gauge correct, and again, I don't see an issue. I can't find one for anywhere near that price locally, but there is a cheap off-brand J-bass for $80, so I might give it a try.

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Sorry but I don't really see the point. If I want an instrument that's tuned an octave higher than a bass, I have guitars for that. In fact, I normally work out bass lines on guitar first. It comes from being a guitarist who noodles on bass rather than an actual bassist.

 

The timber, sustain and feel are so different when you go for such a longer scale length. For $30, you can't go wrong. I did it as a lark on my EBO and have used it a ton for recordings since.

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A longer scale allows higher tension and a thinner string, which makes it harmonically richer. A shorter scale means a fatter string and less tension, which sounds deader. A B string on a short scale bass is a little bit better than just flopping around.

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Lug played me an MP3 of his work. Talk about flopping around...I was lucky to be standing by the time it was done.

 

My MP3's are the only known antidote for an overdose of Viagra. Local hospitals call me in to consult all the time

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No' date=' I meant low B. I don't see why lower would be problematic. It's just a matter of getting the string gauge correct, and again, I don't see an issue. I can't find one for anywhere near that price locally, but there is a cheap off-brand J-bass for $80, so I might give it a try.[/quote']

 

I think you'd have better luck with the J-Bass - trying to drop the low E on a 30" scale bass is not really easy to do. Even in standard tuning, the low E on a lot of those short scale basses flops and farts and it's generally is a weak area for them.

 

The Bronco is a decent little bass, but I think the Jaguar SS Bass is put together better, and uses slightly better materials. Of course, its not thirty bucks, but like the Bronco, it's well under two hundred new.

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For decent low-bucks basses, Ibanez is a good choice. $200 gets you a GSR200, $300 puts you into an SR250. Both can handle a low-B tuning, have nice playability, and feel like quality basses. The overall feel of the low-end Fenders has always been iffy, even into the Standard range.

 

We're far from the $30 used price range this thread started out at, but some of these low cost instruments really make learning more difficult, and I have to wonder how many have given up as a result of frustration with a cheap guitar.

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. . . We're far from the $30 used price range this thread started out at' date=' . . .[/quote']

Yes, we are. My original thought, if I knew of someone who was interested in learning (probably a young person, given that it's a short scale), was to buy the bass, assuming it was worth playing, set it up, change the strings if necessary, and give it as a gift, along with a gig bag and practice amp. If the bass turned out to be a POS, I would've simply walked away. However, since I don't know of such a person, it's moot but that was the intent. I'm not in a position to give away a new Fender or Rickenbacker but I could do a used Squier.

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I think you'd have better luck with the J-Bass - trying to drop the low E on a 30" scale bass is not really easy to do. Even in standard tuning, the low E on a lot of those short scale basses flops and farts and it's generally is a weak area for them.

 

The Bronco is a decent little bass, but I think the Jaguar SS Bass is put together better, and uses slightly better materials. Of course, its not thirty bucks, but like the Bronco, it's well under two hundred new.

 

The Ibanez is a 34" scale bass. I wouldn't try to BEAD a 30" bass. I missed that the bass in the original post was a Bronco.

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Yes, we are. My original thought, if I knew of someone who was interested in learning (probably a young person, given that it's a short scale), was to buy the bass, assuming it was worth playing, set it up, change the strings if necessary, and give it as a gift, along with a gig bag and practice amp. If the bass turned out to be a POS, I would've simply walked away. However, since I don't know of such a person, it's moot but that was the intent. I'm not in a position to give away a new Fender or Rickenbacker but I could do a used Squier.

 

Perhaps consider buying such an instrument, and have it ready to go. At some point you may find the opportunity to gift the bass to a worthy beginner, and it'll be ready to go. This gives you the time to get it set up well...if you can and do play it, you know it'll be good for a beginner. If the chance never presents itself, I'm sure there's a local school that could put it to good use.

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