For
Sale:
Own a piece of guitar and bass history!
Selling to fund woodworking and fretting tools
to produce in limited quantities.
Please call or email
for pricing and information.
(800) 396-4155
Price: $4000
plus shipping
john@microphoneheaven.com
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Guitar Bass:
A little over a year ago I started having ideas for a new instrument...one
that would combine a four string bass with a six string guitar.
I played both the guitar and bass, and some of the musical ideas
I heard in my head required both instruments to be played at the
same time. I struggled to recreate these sounds using my six string
bass, to no avail. After Jake Kot introduced me to Portland luthier
David Minnieweather, my ideas started to become possible. David
took the design that I had sketched out on paper, and made a full-scale
drawing of the instrument he wanted to build for me. We worked out
some of the details, and he started building. Now, this instrument
I've had in my head for more than a year is finally in my hands.
Whenever I think about it, I smile. Thanks Dave. Thanks Jake.
~John Woolley 2/06/06 |
Specs for the first EVER guitar
bass:
Neck-through body, 9 piece flamed maple and purple heart neck.
The core body wood is african white wood, with a mouth-watering
flamed tasmanian black wood top and back(the pictures really don't
do the wood justice). The bass fretboard is palisander, the guitar
fretboard is ebony. The bass scale length is 34 inches, and the
guitar scale lenth is 25 1/2 inches. The bass side has 14 frets,
and the guitar side has 22 frets. The bass electronics feature the
Jake Kot signature Bartolini pickups and preamp. The guitar electronics
are Seymour Duncan ('59 in the neck Duncan Distortion in the bridge).
Two output jacks (one for the bass electronics and one for the guitar).
The bass tuning gears are Gotoh, and the guitar tuning gears are
locking Planet Waves (D'Addario). The knobs were made by THG out
of flamed maple, tasmanian black wood, and purple heart. Both the
bass bridge and guitar bridge are standard Hipshot models. If you
have any further questions about the guitar bass, contact me. Thanks
for your interest. -----(
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Me with the beast strapped on. And no, the neck is not too wide.
It's actually very comfortable; it's thinner than most bass necks.
I really wouldn't recommend anyone with very short fingers trying
to play it, though. It is a little bit of a stretch across to the
bass side. Chording on the guitar side is incredibly comfortable because
of this layout. If the guitar fretboard was on the top, chords would
be insanely difficult. I'm glad I thought of this important design
feature. It wouldn't be any fun to realize this after the instrument
was built. Oh, and the tuning is standard...EADG on the bass side,
EADGBE on the guitar side. Although, if I really wanted to mess with
people I could do piccollo bass tuning, and baritone guitar tuning.
=) |
| A much better picture of the figuring in the flamed
tasmanian black wood. Even this picture doesn't really show the depth.
And yes, the two fretboards each have their own radius, and seperate
frets. |
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A close-up picture of the guitar bass body. You can see a little
bit of the figuring in the top. The knobs on the bottom row from right
to left are as follows: guitar volume, guitar tone, bass active high
frequency boost/cut, bass active mid frequency boost/cut, bass active
low frequency boost/cut, bass passive high frequency tone. The top
knobs right to left are: bass volume(with a push/pull active to passive
mode), bass pickup blend. The switches right to left are: guitar pickup
selecter, bass low frequency selecter, bass mid frequency selector,
bass high frequency selecter. Yeah, I know...only three of the knobs
and switches control the guitar side. Bass guitar generally requires
a lot more tone sculpting than guitar, though. I tend to prefer active
bass electronics, but I like passive guitar electronics better. I'm
just weird like that. |
| A candid pose with my new guitar bass. Surprisingly,
it fits on a regular guitar stand. I think this is going to be my
new myspace picture. Notice the shirt I'm wearing? AccuGroove, got
groove? Yeah, now I do...with the new instrument. I already have an
AccuGroove cabinet for the bass. Now I'm going to have to get two
guitar-size AccuGroove cabs to set up the stereo-chorus guitar rig
I want for the guitar side of the guitar bass. |
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The original sketch I brought to the luthier, with almost all of
the details worked out. I wanted to make sure my insanity made as
much sense as possible before bringing the idea to a builder. Click
on the sketch to view all the details. |
| www.myspace.com/bigfunkandthefusionofabstractrealities |
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