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Old 12-28-2008, 10:18 AM
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Roger Vaughan Roger Vaughan is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by John McGuire View Post
Roger: no problem, I don't mind. I had the same question. I have tried to use the Smith for those type of classic rock and jazz standard gigs with not much luck being able to get a tone which can work in the mix. However, for the fusion jazz, chordal stuff I also do, the Smith is the best. ... I did a large club a couple of weeks ago (+600 people), mostly classic rock type stuff with some jazz Christmas songs in for good measure. I tried my new Smith out. I couldn't get it to cut through, especially in the upper registers. I pulled out the old Rickenbacker and it ripped ...

I know I am going to get shot for saying this: I wish there were tone selectors on the smith ... So we could have both the best in modern tone and abit of old school when you need a dose. That way I would only take one bass to all gigs.

The Smith's feel, playability, quality is what impresses me most! It is unbelievable!

Cheers, J.P.
You shouldn't get 'shot' for your comment, no instrument can do everything (Edit! superlatively well. I see that a majority of Smith players are doing jazz, funk, other non-'old-school rock' ensmbles. Meanwhile, that's the answer I was (not ) looking for, thank you John!

Now I'm believing it's still possible to find what I'm after with it I think, I'm going to try anyhow. Things don't always finish the way you'd expect, and some things work in ways you'd have never expected! I'm using an ART Tube EQ from out of a mixer for my preamp, and the rest of my rig is pretty much non-boutique, rock-band fare. A Sansamp might find it's way inot the signal-chain as well... maybe I can tailor it close to what I want if it's a challenge. A sound solo'd is not the way to judge a sound in a band mix... however your testimony does stand pretty clear.

This Burner I have is the best player in my little quiver here. I have a Peavey Dyna-Bass Unity which is so easy to play it's almost embarrassing, but it doesn't have the well-distributed 'heft' or the thoughtful and integral construction of the Burner- tight as a drum, solid, and just feels very right. That was the reason for keeping it- not even the sound, really. Bass-friendly mods (no drilling) might make a needed adjustment if I find it necessary later. Trade/re-sale value is not an issue.

I've seen guys play instruments in rock bands that were pretty surprising. But your post does make me a tad wistful about my old '76 Rickie 4001, "Buzz"... I sold it for worries about a blooming nerve issue. Dumb. Anyway, thanks for the reply John.
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