It's nice to see you review a more affordable bass. All those basses that cost thousands of dollars are great and amazing, but I think this kind of video is good also for bass players who are new or people who want to get into bass.
I just received mine, and I am very, very pleased. Frets were perfect, no sprouts or rough edges. Neck was straight, and string height was almost perfect. Fit and finish are flawless. I seriously can't find any bad spots. The wood grain is very nice, as well. Tuners work smoothly, and hold tune. As for the sound, it has a very distinct P-bass thump. Honestly, it is one quarter of the price of the cheapest Fender, but it holds it's own! Definitely better than anything Squire makes. The only thing that I am going to change is the strings. This bass is just screaming for a good set of flat wound strings! If you want a vintage looking, and sounding P-bass, I highly recommend it!
It’s so great that HB actually put a vintage correct neck on this thing! I totally didn’t expect that. I get that beginners want thin necks, but I don’t. I want big, fat, meaty necks on my guitars and basses. And most of the time you need to go custom shop for that. Go HB! Cool move!
Whats better than a $9k Fedora? A really great sounding inexpensive bass! I have always said, with an unlimited budget it's hard to NOT make a great bass. But to me the real magic, ingenuity and engineering cleverness is displayed in a great sounding "cheap" basses or guitars. That is WAY harder to pull off. I own a couple boutique-ish basses, and sometimes my fave to play is the $175 NEW el cheapo. I won't name it cause I don't wanna step all over this review with a name drop.
I think the same. I own a number of "hi-end" basses. My best sounding one is still a cheap Sunn P-Bass from the 80s that I bought for 170€ on eBay. Unfortunately it's a fretless...
The problem I have is everybody that makes a '51 or '54 P bass always uses the P-bass rout or the '50's SCPB rout. I have one that's a Chinese one that uses a standard Strat single coil rout, and it sounds GREAT with hot alnico bladed pickups.
I would be highly tempted to buy one of these and install something like a Seymour Duncan Hotrails pickup in it. Personally I think that this type of bass is more attractive to seasoned players than newer ones as most new players are more likely to go for either a more modern P bass, Jazz bass type or a budget contemporary instrument.
i own one. best money i have ever spent ! infact i own 3 Harleys, a pb shorty , the pb50 and the MB4 sb. they are just the most unbelievable basses for the money. buy one !
I have one of these and after some minor setup adjustments (action, truss rod) and some experiments with different strings I like it very much. Keep it in my den so I can pick it up whenever. Lots of fun. Amazing value/fun ratio!!!
I have this bass and I love it, didn't have to make any alterations to it, came out of the box ready to go, no even fret buzz, I now own 3 Harley Benton basses and wouldn't play anything else, great value for money and solid guitars
I found the notion of beginners needing and benefiting from thinner necks to be a misconception. That advice was the norm, so I started with an Ibanez SR bass because of its "fast neck." I then moved to a Squier Jag with a jazz style neck. My fretting technique platuaed and I developed carpel tunnel. I fell in love with the Pbass sound and picked one up - I instantly noticed that my playing was more comfortable, smoother, and after a few weeks carpel tunnel symptoms disappeared. When I try to play on a small neck today, all of the sloppiness and discomfort returns. The chunky Pbass was key for me. Side note - I have small hands.
Cool review. I play such a Bass. Excellent wood, body as the fat neck (maple on maple!). The tuners are good. I painted this instrument candy apple red, the pickguard antique white. Then I put on flatwounds. And I replaced the PU by a Symour Duncan. My upgrades costs about the same as the bass. So I got a valuable bass, outstanding look & sound. As a double bass player it fits perfectly to me. A very cool instrument for very little money.
Ahh, the tone wood thing. If you think that an early 50's P bass is or has the tone of bass playing angels.....the inconvenient truth is very unromantic. Leo used 8/4 boards (planks) of Ash as it was cheap (a box wood) easily available, took machining well and reasonably stable to keep the strings tight. 8 quarters are 2 inch, hence 8/4 in lumber speak. 8/4 board or 'eight quarter' means you have just enough wood to plane and then sand both faces, hence the usual Fender body thickness of 1 and 5/8ths to 1 and 11/16ths. Cheap, available, suitability to machining in a nutshell. There are other woods that meet this parameter so Fender changed a few times, then marketing wised up to vanity woods, afterall a bsss isn't just for Christmas so why not make them pay for a pretty one.
As you say this is a great bass, it looks cool, plays well and sounds great. It is a very affordable way to get a bass of this 50's design. BUT on my particular sample the nut has a curved bottom and the neck slot has a flat bottom. They cut the nut pretty low to start with and over the short period I have had this bass it has developed bad string buzz in the first position, it seem the curved nut is slowly collapsing under string tension. The second problem is that the pickup is starting to fall apart. Like a lot of basses the pickup is fitted on top of a block of hard foam rubber to act as a spring. Unfortunately the rubber block is quite short and the pressure from it against the screws holding the pickup down has bent the bottom plate and started peeling it away from the coil and the magnets.
Music man has a LOT of expensive instruments made of basswood. And my Fender jazz MIJ for like 1500usd is basswood. But still I want one of these aswell
Sold out in Thomann. Deliveries in two months or so. Partly your fault ;) I think it's a great option for such a particular bass. I wonder how has to sound with a high end pickup.
Hi! Great video, very informative in sound and specs! My question is: does it buzz? As a single pickup this can be an issue that I'd rather not have. Thanks!
I hear zipper effect as he moves on the neck,and it's not him.The bass looks great and not bad sounding but maybe a good set up will do it.Potential is there.I was thinking of this because I wanted a red 50s p. the shipping costs almost as much as the bass.
If you think about it, why would you use anything but "bass wood" to build a bass with? I would think if one were to build a table, table wood would be the way to go and so on....😁
Great bass, I have red one and it holds itself quite good with distorted Fender , Peavey and Ibanez guitars in my band. Only thing it needs is a good setup and better nut. Also would be nice if that pickup (that has very good sound) is noiseless. Of course impossible thing at that price.
My fender squire works great, as a novice bass player, im interested in New bass left handed bass players, and noteation also- Thanks for the information, play on-- Bassmen! from a disabled veteran who loves playing🎼🎸🔢
Have you seen the Harley Benton PB-20 yet? I own that bass since 2014 and I would like to know what do you think about it (in my opinion, it's a good bass for beginners and really affordable)
they're made to the same quality and often in the same factory of the Squier range from fender, they're just cheaper because Thomann cut out the middle men
@@richardrichard5409 Harley Benton come out of lots of factories in south east Asia like Korea, Vietnam, China and Indonesia The production lines rub shoulders with (and are built to the same standard as) Squier, Epiphone, LTD, Gretsch, Schecter, Vintage (the Wilkinson brand), and even Solar and Chapman when coming out of the World Music Factory in Seoul While we’re at it, Some squires are produced by The Cort Korean factory but turns out so are some Harley Benton’s, also other Squier’s are made elsewhere my Jazz Bass was made in Indonesia and my Tele was milled in China and assembled in Mexico ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ you don’t know everything mate
that bass sounds great! according to my state forester brother basswood is the only tree in the forest that emits an actual not when struck by an axe handle or pole...it is very resonate
Hi! I find your reviews very usefull, and I would like to know which model from Harley Benton try to imitate the Fender Musicmaster or Fender Mustang, just in case they have done this. I appreciatte any comments. Thanks!
I got this bass and my action at the 12th fret is like 4.5 mm, its my first bass but surely thats very high? The strings start out low and as they go up the neck they go what seems like really high. Also the pickups catch these really odd frequencies if I do anything more than the lightest of pluck.
@@basstheworldofficial Thanks a lot! I just tried that, and also lowered the saddle so it plays much better. Only thing is notes further down the fretboard aren't quite in tune, I've heard it takes some hours to settle, but what is the adjustment that impacts intonation the most? Also, what are the screws going into the saddle for (that are going in in the direction of the strings), should they be as tight as possible?
Anyway, I feel the body wood contribution to sound is not convincing for me, I think the state of the wood (dry etc) and the construction of the instrument has more to do with the sound, like neck joint, bridge, and the amp you play through. And today, with active electronics you can improve the sound as much as you want, but try to construct a great sounding bass with passive circuits, it is hard because active electronics have changed our expectations concerning how a bass should sound
I'm kinda on the fence about getting a bass with simple controls. In the beginning it seemed to appeal me more but in the end I got a bass with an active EQ and sometimes I still think about getting a no frills bass.
Hey Gregor, even if I am German too I write you in english. So that more people understand ( I hope so ;-)) My question; How about deadspots? That's for me always important. I found them very often even on high priced basses. They can be really annoying. Thanks for your reply and thumbs up for your channel. Great stuff. All the best
I actually bought this bass in red color, it is great for the money, however, it had some issues. The nut was cut too deep on the D string so it buzzed and almost muted while played open D. The high mass bridge is cool but it started to lift a little bit after a year. The pickup poles were not alligned with strings and the E sting was almost above the pole, so when I was picking upwards, the string was too far away and the signal was weak to none (and when finger picking you're only striking upward). But the sound was nice and I kind of made an emotional bond so I upgraded it. New nut, drill strings through body, new electronics and - of course - new pickup. I put a Seymour Duncan Antiquity Jazz Single coil to the bridge position and threw away that horrible Roswell thing. However, my luthier who did the upgrade noticed there is a bow on the neck between 1st and 5th-7th fret that couldn't be fixed without taking the frets off and basically filing a new fretboard profile. Still it's very playable.
Pascale Zimmermann me too I couldnt pass this bass its too good ive always wanted a maple fretboard p bass and tgat 50s style is just killer,cant wait for another two weeks until it arrive.
The "only" work I have done was frets levelling and painting unpainted fretboard between 2 frets. Everything else great for it`s price.... Friend of mine also got one without painted fretboard in between 2 frets... - what da hell?
It's nice to see you review a more affordable bass.
All those basses that cost thousands of dollars are great and amazing, but I think this kind of video is good also for bass players who are new or people who want to get into bass.
I just received mine, and I am very, very pleased. Frets were perfect, no sprouts or rough edges. Neck was straight, and string height was almost perfect. Fit and finish are flawless. I seriously can't find any bad spots. The wood grain is very nice, as well. Tuners work smoothly, and hold tune. As for the sound, it has a very distinct P-bass thump. Honestly, it is one quarter of the price of the cheapest Fender, but it holds it's own! Definitely better than anything Squire makes.
The only thing that I am going to change is the strings. This bass is just screaming for a good set of flat wound strings!
If you want a vintage looking, and sounding P-bass, I highly recommend it!
still liking it ?
Hows the noise with the single coil pickup and wiring? Debating if I should change pickups when mine comes
It’s so great that HB actually put a vintage correct neck on this thing! I totally didn’t expect that. I get that beginners want thin necks, but I don’t. I want big, fat, meaty necks on my guitars and basses. And most of the time you need to go custom shop for that. Go HB! Cool move!
A proper early 50s Fender P (not a reissue) neck is bigger than this...they are proper bassball necks in comparison 😎
unfortunately the finish on it feels terrible and the frets are unreasonably sharp 🫤 going to get it set up eventually but it's still very annoying
The best bass i've ever bought. It's cheap and it plays awesome.
I plan on buying one in about a week. My biggest fear is that they'll get so popular that Harley Benton will raise the price!
Really enjoy seeing Lars play in these videos!
Baswood is also used on guitars costing 1000's euros. Suhr and many other companies
Yes, it all depends on the care when choosing the particular slab of wood and the effort put into preparing it to become an instrument.
And most Fender Japan instruments!
I'm falling in love, with this PBass!!! I need one! :) Thanks for this video!
7:24 Sabotage! WAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA!
Hell yeah
This is a great review. Your channel is invaluable for bass reviews. Seriously thorough and to the point! Nice work!
Thanks 🙂
Whats better than a $9k Fedora? A really great sounding inexpensive bass! I have always said, with an unlimited budget it's hard to NOT make a great bass. But to me the real magic, ingenuity and engineering cleverness is displayed in a great sounding "cheap" basses or guitars. That is WAY harder to pull off. I own a couple boutique-ish basses, and sometimes my fave to play is the $175 NEW el cheapo. I won't name it cause I don't wanna step all over this review with a name drop.
I think the same. I own a number of "hi-end" basses. My best sounding one is still a cheap Sunn P-Bass from the 80s that I bought for 170€ on eBay. Unfortunately it's a fretless...
The problem I have is everybody that makes a '51 or '54 P bass always uses the P-bass rout or the '50's SCPB rout. I have one that's a Chinese one that uses a standard Strat single coil rout, and it sounds GREAT with hot alnico bladed pickups.
Just a thing - ingenuity means being dumb.
You guys should do the Harley Benton B-650! There aren't many budget sixers out there, so it would be awesome to see a good review on that one.
@Meon - you know what to do ;)
Sounds like a plan! :)
ruclips.net/video/JA-dFxGyHaU/видео.html
I would be highly tempted to buy one of these and install something like a Seymour Duncan Hotrails pickup in it. Personally I think that this type of bass is more attractive to seasoned players than newer ones as most new players are more likely to go for either a more modern P bass, Jazz bass type or a budget contemporary instrument.
(three years later.....) you should check the video in which Bully Thakidd (that's the name of the channel) did exactly this
i own one. best money i have ever spent ! infact i own 3 Harleys, a pb shorty , the pb50 and the MB4 sb. they are just the most unbelievable basses for the money. buy one !
3 Harleys? For one moment we thought you meant Harley Davidson motorcycles ;)
Do more Harley Benton reviews!
+Jmb Cool aye aye Sir ;)
That blues solo was fantastic!!
Theres a Band in Berlin that the Bassist Uses one. Awesome sounds and very versatile
Every bass sounds great when Lars plays them! :)
The opening sample reminded me so much of Tim Bogert's sound in the old Beck, Bogert & Appice days. That's got to be a good thing IMO.
I have one of these and after some minor setup adjustments (action, truss rod) and some experiments with different strings I like it very much. Keep it in my den so I can pick it up whenever. Lots of fun. Amazing value/fun ratio!!!
I have this bass and I love it, didn't have to make any alterations to it, came out of the box ready to go, no even fret buzz, I now own 3 Harley Benton basses and wouldn't play anything else, great value for money and solid guitars
Great to see an HB on BassTheWorld!!
I found the notion of beginners needing and benefiting from thinner necks to be a misconception. That advice was the norm, so I started with an Ibanez SR bass because of its "fast neck." I then moved to a Squier Jag with a jazz style neck. My fretting technique platuaed and I developed carpel tunnel. I fell in love with the Pbass sound and picked one up - I instantly noticed that my playing was more comfortable, smoother, and after a few weeks carpel tunnel symptoms disappeared. When I try to play on a small neck today, all of the sloppiness and discomfort returns. The chunky Pbass was key for me. Side note - I have small hands.
Cool review. I play such a Bass. Excellent wood, body as the fat neck (maple on maple!). The tuners are good. I painted this instrument candy apple red, the pickguard antique white. Then I put on flatwounds. And I replaced the PU by a Symour Duncan.
My upgrades costs about the same as the bass.
So I got a valuable bass, outstanding look & sound. As a double bass player it fits perfectly to me.
A very cool instrument for very little money.
Ahh, the tone wood thing.
If you think that an early 50's P bass is or has the tone of bass playing angels.....the inconvenient truth is very unromantic.
Leo used 8/4 boards (planks) of Ash as it was cheap (a box wood) easily available, took machining well and reasonably stable to keep the strings tight. 8 quarters are 2 inch, hence 8/4 in lumber speak.
8/4 board or 'eight quarter' means you have just enough wood to plane and then sand both faces, hence the usual Fender body thickness of 1 and 5/8ths to 1 and 11/16ths.
Cheap, available, suitability to machining in a nutshell. There are other woods that meet this parameter so Fender changed a few times, then marketing wised up to vanity woods, afterall a bsss isn't just for Christmas so why not make them pay for a pretty one.
As you say this is a great bass, it looks cool, plays well and sounds great. It is a very affordable way to get a bass of this 50's design.
BUT on my particular sample the nut has a curved bottom and the neck slot has a flat bottom. They cut the nut pretty low to start with and over the short period I have had this bass it has developed bad string buzz in the first position, it seem the curved nut is slowly collapsing under string tension. The second problem is that the pickup is starting to fall apart. Like a lot of basses the pickup is fitted on top of a block of hard foam rubber to act as a spring. Unfortunately the rubber block is quite short and the pressure from it against the screws holding the pickup down has bent the bottom plate and started peeling it away from the coil and the magnets.
Put some flatwounds on that thing and it will sound a million times better.
I know Im pretty off topic but do anyone know of a good place to watch newly released series online?
@Nolan Bridger I watch on FlixZone. You can find it on google :)
@Antonio Rhys yup, I've been using Flixzone for since march myself :)
@Antonio Rhys Thank you, I went there and it seems like they got a lot of movies there :) I really appreciate it!
@Nolan Bridger You are welcome :)
I always thought that those type of basses sound the best when you really dig into the strings
just to head stock should be at Le
Tele Style or 51p Style however for what it is this bass sounds great
Can you please review the Harley Benton PJ-74
Music man has a LOT of expensive instruments made of basswood. And my Fender jazz MIJ for like 1500usd is basswood. But still I want one of these aswell
Woyeah! Chuck Rainey, James Jamerson, Bob Babbitt, Duck Dunn and Rocco Prestia tones on the fly!
I like this thing...would you really recommend it?
Yes, it’s a very decent bass for its money
I was just considering this bass yesterday, thanks for the upload!!
I really wish this was sold here in Brazil! It's really good!
Sold out in Thomann. Deliveries in two months or so. Partly your fault ;) I think it's a great option for such a particular bass. I wonder how has to sound with a high end pickup.
Martí Sanmartí I put a Seymour Duncan quarter pounder in mine, the original wilkinson sounded better!
i would play that bass all day long :D
Four years later this is now on sale for 100 euros, I bought a b-stock one last year for 107 euros. It’s great!
Thank you for this review, I also cannot understand how it can be so cheap…will buy it and see!
Hi! Great video, very informative in sound and specs! My question is: does it buzz? As a single pickup this can be an issue that I'd rather not have. Thanks!
I hear zipper effect as he moves on the neck,and it's not him.The bass looks great and not bad sounding but maybe a good set up will do it.Potential is there.I was thinking of this because I wanted a red 50s p. the shipping costs almost as much as the bass.
How does that sound so good?
Very nice bass Gregor I prefer the thick neck because I have big hands.
I want to buy a cheap bass but is it this or the jb20 or the pb4 for the same price...why not do a compare 5 hb basses ?
If you think about it, why would you use anything but "bass wood" to build a bass with? I would think if one were to build a table, table wood would be the way to go and so on....😁
But if you really care about quality, treewood is the best.
Would Popular be popular too?
Green Gartside reckons Wood Beez good for bass.
Wish they had them in black!
Very cool bass and ultra inexpensive..
Dammit, I want a red one, until I saw your sunburst. Now I can’t decide which one.
Should do a hb vs. Fender 50s pbass. That would be interesting!
An original 50s? 😉
@@basstheworldofficial yeah! That would be a cool comparison! Thanks for your really cool videos!
Great bass, I have red one and it holds itself quite good with distorted Fender , Peavey and Ibanez guitars in my band. Only thing it needs is a good setup and better nut. Also would be nice if that pickup (that has very good sound) is noiseless. Of course impossible thing at that price.
Loving that blues riff mid video😎
My fender squire works great, as a novice bass player, im interested in New bass left handed bass players, and noteation also- Thanks for the information, play on-- Bassmen! from a disabled veteran who loves playing🎼🎸🔢
Very much enjoyed this review. Thanks !
Have you seen the Harley Benton PB-20 yet? I own that bass since 2014 and I would like to know what do you think about it (in my opinion, it's a good bass for beginners and really affordable)
they're made to the same quality and often in the same factory of the Squier range from fender, they're just cheaper because Thomann cut out the middle men
No, they aren't. Squiers are made by Cort. The Harley Bentons come from factories, latest ones are coing out of Vietnam. 😎
@@richardrichard5409
Harley Benton come out of lots of factories in south east Asia like Korea, Vietnam, China and Indonesia
The production lines rub shoulders with (and are built to the same standard as) Squier, Epiphone, LTD, Gretsch, Schecter, Vintage (the Wilkinson brand), and even Solar and Chapman when coming out of the World Music Factory in Seoul
While we’re at it, Some squires are produced by The Cort Korean factory but turns out so are some Harley Benton’s, also other Squier’s are made elsewhere my Jazz Bass was made in Indonesia and my Tele was milled in China and assembled in Mexico
¯\_(ツ)_/¯ you don’t know everything mate
that bass sounds great! according to my state forester brother basswood is the only tree in the forest that emits an actual not when struck by an axe handle or pole...it is very resonate
😂😂😂 Brilliant
Great bass, but Lars is a great bass player!
i have mod the headstock .. now is look like an hold original p-50
How did you modify, Miky?
Miky ॐ Could you tell us more about it ?!
if you put a fender pbass pickup cover up there, is there still enough space to play near the neck? Great video as always!
Hi. Nice review. What about the weight? Any neckdive?
Hi! I find your reviews very usefull, and I would like to know which model from Harley Benton try to imitate the Fender Musicmaster or Fender Mustang, just in case they have done this. I appreciatte any comments. Thanks!
I got this bass and my action at the 12th fret is like 4.5 mm, its my first bass but surely thats very high? The strings start out low and as they go up the neck they go what seems like really high. Also the pickups catch these really odd frequencies if I do anything more than the lightest of pluck.
You need to tighten the truss rod. There should be an allan key in the package to do that
@@basstheworldofficial Thanks a lot!
I just tried that, and also lowered the saddle so it plays much better. Only thing is notes further down the fretboard aren't quite in tune, I've heard it takes some hours to settle, but what is the adjustment that impacts intonation the most? Also, what are the screws going into the saddle for (that are going in in the direction of the strings), should they be as tight as possible?
@@callmedeno The screws in your bridge that are holding the rollers that your strings lay on are what you use to adjust intonation.
If this guy talking advertised every bass in the world, I'd probably buy every bass in the world.
excellent reviews keep up the good work best wishes
+Paul Traynor thank you :)
Your welcome
Nice!!! Didn't expect such cool sounds. Also a really good demo, like always ;)
But does it have any noticable dead spots?
Mine has no dead spots. It really is a good bass.
is it possible to adjust truss rod and settle strings's action in this cheap bass model?
basswood is fine, check out Japanese jazz basses
....and Ernie Ball MusicMan Bongo Basses. They are made of basswood as well.
Anyway, I feel the body wood contribution to sound is not convincing for me, I think the state of the wood (dry etc) and the construction of the instrument has more to do with the sound, like neck joint, bridge, and the amp you play through. And today, with active electronics you can improve the sound as much as you want, but try to construct a great sounding bass with passive circuits, it is hard because active electronics have changed our expectations concerning how a bass should sound
And Suhr guitars.
Just ordered one to go with my telecaster. Ordered it in the red and ordered a white pearl pickguard.
I like mine enough that I’m getting the cherry Ted as a back-up.
How is the fretwork? Sharp edges? High frets? Is the nut cut correctly?
If they did one of these with a P pickup I'd buy it in a heartbeat!
well they do now: the P20
One question before I order this bad boy. Is this a single coil pickup? Will I have the 60 cycle hum?
Yes it’s a real single coil
@@basstheworldofficial Yes, I mean it wasn't really audible in the demo and I was wondering how it will be in rehearsals and home practice
Hallo. I saw some of this bass has different head shape also. It's like sting precision bass with jazz bridge. Does thomann has it? Thank you
Worth every cent
Sounds so good!
I'm kinda on the fence about getting a bass with simple controls. In the beginning it seemed to appeal me more but in the end I got a bass with an active EQ and sometimes I still think about getting a no frills bass.
Had all the active basses over the years and.....
......now all my bassrs are passive. 😎
Hey Gregor, even if I am German too I write you in english. So that more people understand ( I hope so ;-))
My question; How about deadspots? That's for me always important. I found them very often even on high
priced basses. They can be really annoying. Thanks for your reply and thumbs up for your channel. Great stuff.
All the best
+Wolfgang Bachmann this one was fine, but the next could have some. You never know...
If you find a deadspot feel free to use the 30-days return policy of Thomann. They'll send you another one.
I actually bought this bass in red color, it is great for the money, however, it had some issues. The nut was cut too deep on the D string so it buzzed and almost muted while played open D. The high mass bridge is cool but it started to lift a little bit after a year. The pickup poles were not alligned with strings and the E sting was almost above the pole, so when I was picking upwards, the string was too far away and the signal was weak to none (and when finger picking you're only striking upward). But the sound was nice and I kind of made an emotional bond so I upgraded it. New nut, drill strings through body, new electronics and - of course - new pickup. I put a Seymour Duncan Antiquity Jazz Single coil to the bridge position and threw away that horrible Roswell thing. However, my luthier who did the upgrade noticed there is a bow on the neck between 1st and 5th-7th fret that couldn't be fixed without taking the frets off and basically filing a new fretboard profile. Still it's very playable.
Ofcourse compared to Fender p bass from the 50s this one lacks a lot of character,but HB PB50 still sounds very good for 109€ bass.
Good looking backup bass for a punk rocker, haha! :D
does anyone know if this neck would fit on the normal P-bass from Harley Benton? the neck pocket looks rounded...
Nice sound...what about the amp?
+Franco Gigi we didn't use any
straight to mixer?!
Which is better? The PB-50 or the JB-75 ?
+Jan Licek there's no better or worse, they're just different
I understand, but which do you like more ?
The jb-75's are said to be REALLY heavy, which is too bad because they look soooo good
Think the same, which is better?
You conviced me to buy one ! thanks :)
Pascale Zimmermann How much money ? for the HD?
Pascale Zimmermann me too I couldnt pass this bass its too good ive always wanted a maple fretboard p bass and tgat 50s style is just killer,cant wait for another two weeks until it arrive.
Hi, can you make a check of a new pickup Roswell VTN4 Vista Alnico-5P?
Vasco Maria Cleri thats the exact pickup that's in that bass.
Did you apply any post-production equalization or is the sound of the bass as it has been recorded?
+Alessio Cairo I rarely use EQ, but compression, sometimes a bit of overdrive (1st sample) and a cab simulation to add some warmth
thanks so much for answer 😊
Is there any difference in sound between this pickup and later P bass pickup?
Sure. This is a singlecoil so it has more highs and a bit less bottom end
nice tones!!
I've got the same bass, but mine was 10€ cheaper... but the body wood was described as "lime wood"
damn it's got some bite to it
I've got one of theolder ones with the Wilkinson PU
Best bass EVER for the money, guyz (Sting läßt grüssen) Get ONE, before they´re ALL sold;))
The "only" work I have done was frets levelling and painting unpainted fretboard between 2 frets. Everything else great for it`s price.... Friend of mine also got one without painted fretboard in between 2 frets... - what da hell?
Is the overdriven riff the Beasty Boys song "Sabotage"?
Not really overdriven AFAIK, I have this bass, it naturally distorts a bit on hard playing. That's part of what I like, though :P
Antonio Frascogna it is indeed. :)
Is the thumb rest removeable?
Is the neck wider than a standard PBass?
Not really
Got that big twangy tone.
Sounds like a 50s bass
I want one!!!!!!!!!
Help me out guys!!
Do you think that its possible to install a p bass pickups in this bass?
Only if you route out a bigger cavity for it
ciao, the neck dimension is the same of fender Tele bass '68?
thanks
“Size”
even a rubber band will sound great under Lars hand!!! :D