I found the coolest bass in Nashvile

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  • Опубликовано: 4 окт 2024

Комментарии • 147

  • @christopherkelley3185
    @christopherkelley3185 Год назад +11

    "Some trees want to be a guitar and some want to be a boat" - haha, that was good and I'm sure there is some truth to that. No matter what, old guitars have character.

  • @charliewesley94
    @charliewesley94 Год назад +11

    That 61 is pure James Jamerson. I think part of the thing that attracts us to these old guitars is that they are THE sound that we are familiar with from so many old records. That familiarity is comforting and nostalgic. You are essentially owning a piece of rock and roll history.

  • @forthecreator1
    @forthecreator1 Год назад +11

    “Some trees want to be a guitar and some trees want to be a boat”

  • @backlinebeat
    @backlinebeat Год назад +3

    As a guitar player, I have always wondered why the finger rest was at the bottom. Never made sense to me. THANK YOU Philip for answering that curiosity.

  • @MC-qe5qb
    @MC-qe5qb Год назад +12

    Love these kinds of vids. I live in a area where the closest music store is around 5 hrs away and there’s no way they have this kind of stuff. Thanks Philip for letting me enjoy this through you!
    PS: ‘61 P!

  • @Flying_turnip187
    @Flying_turnip187 Месяц назад

    Great list ! I saw John entwistle live with the who in atl in 2001. Loudest concert I ever saw. Also my last concert in atl was rush at Lakewood arena circa 2004. Lots of amazing concerts and players I saw in atl back in the day! Thanks!

  • @Forever28tat2
    @Forever28tat2 10 месяцев назад

    Thanks!

  • @octavelocity
    @octavelocity Год назад +2

    I played that blue bass a couple months ago. Vibe machine. Color is perfect.

  • @treyanderson8657
    @treyanderson8657 Год назад +6

    Amazing! That color is so nice. I just picked up a 1967 EB2 in cherry red a few weeks back at Strum here in Portland. The neck, strung with flats, that I’ll prob never swap out, feels amazing.

    • @vayabroder729
      @vayabroder729 Год назад +2

      That’s a great thing about flatwounds. They hurt your fingers less and they last FOREVER.

    • @sagittated
      @sagittated Год назад

      Yay Strum! 💀

    • @mikewithers299
      @mikewithers299 Год назад +1

      ​@@vayabroder729I think mine has the original flat wounds from '66. I don't have any idea but I've never seen black satin strings like that since

  • @MG-vo7is
    @MG-vo7is Год назад +2

    My favorite was the 1964 Gibson EB2D. Thanks for sharing!

  • @MartyHagwood
    @MartyHagwood Год назад +2

    Dude, that Gibson is bad ass. I know a lot of people don't like them, but I want an old Thunderbird so bad I can't stand it.

    • @jasondorsey7110
      @jasondorsey7110 Год назад +1

      Those pickups make those old gibsons...limited use, but what they do, they do like no other

    • @mikewithers299
      @mikewithers299 Год назад

      ​@@jasondorsey7110I agree. Mud buckers shovel deep. Good thing that "baritone switch" can brighten things up when needed.

  • @andrekunsch4268
    @andrekunsch4268 Год назад +1

    Had the pleasure of playing a ‘64 Single Pickup EB2 with rounds in London a couple of years ago and I’m still dreaming of the sound.

  • @Scoots1994
    @Scoots1994 Год назад +3

    That Gibson mudbucker sound.

  • @dchauser4
    @dchauser4 Год назад +2

    I love Carter's. It was one of the stops when me and a couple of buddies went up to Nashville purely to go through music stores. I hate that Carter's got bought by North American Guitars, though. Last I saw, they'd gone to appointment only, which limits the browse factor if you're dropping into town. I do still get their emails of what's new, and there is some definite drool factor there. :)
    And I love Rhett being a perfect enabler wanting you to have that Gibson.

  • @randybecker7339
    @randybecker7339 Год назад +2

    Since subscribing, I've come to appreciate Bass much more now. You're a great player and I like how you love Basses like I love 6 string acoustic guitars. Great video!

  • @craigdamage
    @craigdamage Год назад +1

    I am 100% a "Fender" guy. I love Jazz, Precision and Mustang basses and can never have enough. .....I would get that Gibson.

  • @ashtongundersen7515
    @ashtongundersen7515 11 месяцев назад

    The covers on the tele P bass were also for noise reduction with the standard single coil.

  • @honkytonkdragon
    @honkytonkdragon Месяц назад

    that Gibson is sick!
    I love double cut basses, and they are so rare.

  • @ricardodubatti657
    @ricardodubatti657 Год назад +2

    That Gibson sounds (and looks) fantastic.

  • @craiganderson6880
    @craiganderson6880 9 месяцев назад

    Fantastic. Just down the street from me

  • @jonathanhorne6503
    @jonathanhorne6503 Год назад +1

    My main bass since the mid 70’s has been a ‘67 Gibson EB-2c in sparkling burgundy. I just use it to record now. Learning to control the mudbucker can be a challenge.

  • @johnl.6930
    @johnl.6930 Год назад +1

    I own an epiphone rivoli that is basically the same bass. One of my favorite instruments!✌️❤️

  • @gamezharks
    @gamezharks Год назад +1

    Your vids have such a cozy vibe to them, this one especially, I haven't played the real deal but I've played a few japanese copies of EB-2s and they're really cool basses.

  • @alextinsley9117
    @alextinsley9117 Год назад +1

    The Gibson!

  • @RokDAWG1
    @RokDAWG1 Год назад +1

    As a guitar player…one who’s played one of Elvis’ guitars all the way to various current rock star guitars…this video makes me happy! I want that $2,500 bass too!

  • @scottm7720
    @scottm7720 Год назад +1

    I dig this type of video, very cool basses! I look forward to more content.

  • @HoosierRooster
    @HoosierRooster 3 месяца назад

    The Gibson hollow body is the nuts

  • @peteaos
    @peteaos Год назад +2

    I don’t have a “forever” P bass so I’d probably go the way of that 61 if I had the money and choice. But the Gibson is by far the coolest.

  • @conorlarkin1111
    @conorlarkin1111 Год назад +2

    Yeahhhhhh that Gibson is rad

  • @kevinclements4962
    @kevinclements4962 Год назад +2

    Semi hollows are by definition the coolest instruments in any emporium.

  • @timwatson4118
    @timwatson4118 Год назад +1

    Trees spend a great amount of time thinking about what they want to be next.

    • @mikewithers299
      @mikewithers299 Год назад

      I mean they only have a couple hundred years of time on their hands 🤣

  • @ATotalDork
    @ATotalDork Год назад +1

    I don't know why you don't see mutes like the one on that Gibson. I'm not the target audience for muted sounds, but every time I look into it it's always people sloppily taping foam or something to the bridge. That Gibson is a genius bit of engineering. Companies should bring that back as an option

    • @mikewithers299
      @mikewithers299 Год назад

      I asked a musician years ago about those mutes and he said it was a thing way back when ('50's, '60's) but people don't use those anymore. I guess what's old becomes new again.

  • @jamesmarkham7489
    @jamesmarkham7489 Год назад +1

    Leo got the thumb rest idea from classical French bow players at the time. Who were plucking with their thumbs for pizzicato. He wasn’t a dumb man. He asked players how they play.

  • @Shred_The_Weapon
    @Shred_The_Weapon Год назад

    In the dialogue, it was mentioned that Leo Fender never liked distortion. That’s not the only thing he wasn’t fond of. When he and Harold Rhodes were collaborating on their version of the electric piano, Harold had built the prototype of the 73-note variation which Leo never liked. He only ever liked the piano bass. At least one published book that I own a copy of states that the existence of that prototype is what led to the corporate absorption of Fender into CBS in 1965.
    Phillip, you made that comment about holding that particular ‘61 Precision bass and how anyone with $16,500 should just go to Nashville and get it. Real cute. I wouldn’t even touch one at that price point.

  • @MidtownSkyport
    @MidtownSkyport Год назад +17

    I think with old instruments, the good ones are the ones that were treated well and have survived.

    • @mofateam1
      @mofateam1 Год назад

      depends, I have a beaten-up Gretsch Tennessean - it sounds killer and her look tells a story. From a players standpoint I can´t like these mint-condition collectors item guitars fom the 60s who never received any love as instrument and ended as investment. Truely sad.

  • @kevinallen1761
    @kevinallen1761 Год назад +1

    I bought my 66 p-bass in 1976. It was cheap, I knew it, but I needed a p-bass. Fast forward to now. That chu k of wood learned to be a bass. The pickups were crap and replaced in 1981. Still my best friend.

  • @erikmeyer2323
    @erikmeyer2323 Год назад +1

    1:50 Two more minutes of that and the speaker will be gone. The Mud-Bucker Strikes again.

  • @drewsmyser7065
    @drewsmyser7065 2 месяца назад

    The Hofner Verythin bass might be your vibe after watching this. Semi-hollow like the Gibson and Hofner tones and mojo

  • @mightyV444
    @mightyV444 Год назад +2

    That Gibson semi-acoustic bass is very cool indeed and also *my* favourite of this bunch 😊👍 Possibly modifying or repairing the electronics would be a nightmare, though. And hopefully it won't create feedback at higher Volume!

  • @paul_solis
    @paul_solis Год назад +1

    That Gibby is gone by now I'm sure. 😭That mute design is crazy rad though. Bass luthiers take note!

  • @1234drums
    @1234drums Год назад

    Thanks for the amazing trip, Sir

  • @michaelweinman9051
    @michaelweinman9051 Год назад

    Awesome!!! more please!

  • @smackothy
    @smackothy Год назад +1

    Ah yes my favorite bass youtuber

  • @Scoots1994
    @Scoots1994 Год назад

    Hofner's you have to play to them. They are a different animal.

  • @ejmusicofficial
    @ejmusicofficial Год назад

    I was there last week! Nicest people working there!

  • @JETallacksen
    @JETallacksen Год назад +3

    I was at Carter Vintage just a week ago, and I believe I may have played a couple of those basses. They were incredible, but my wallet was screaming at me for even looking at them. (And that room was closed and locked when I was there, which isn't always the case. Might I have been there during this shoot?)

  • @mikewithers299
    @mikewithers299 Год назад

    Since i have a P bass and a Gibson EB2D, i would get the Gibson only bcuz of the variety of tones and the short scale. Yes the "mud buckers" can get pretty deep but that "baritone switch" can change that in a hurry.

  • @EdSpargo
    @EdSpargo Год назад

    I believe the pick up cover on the tele style originally had a ground wire running to it(?) Not sure if it had any effect on the sound.

  • @andrewbowen6875
    @andrewbowen6875 Год назад

    You never see any of those huge Bigsby bass that Jonnie Paycheck played with George Jones band

  • @maddoxbruce4621
    @maddoxbruce4621 Год назад

    so funny you post this, i was just looking on the carter vintage website and saw this thing. thought it was the most perfect thing, just beautiful. so glad someone agrees

  • @martinheath5947
    @martinheath5947 Год назад +1

    15:37 Rhett touching nose indicating he doesn't truly believe what's coming out of his mouth?

  • @squittieri
    @squittieri Год назад

    I believe the first bass guitars were designed with guitar players in mind, not bass players, and hence the lower finger rest on the telecaster bass: they were made to be played like a guitar, with a pick. The picture of Leo "holding" the bass by the finger rest oozes publicity shot. I really don't think anyone would play it like that.

  • @Kevinscottbass
    @Kevinscottbass Год назад

    I have played both of those basses at Carters. In my opinion the best bass there was this refin 66 P Bass I found in the acoustic room up front.

  • @rafbass
    @rafbass Год назад

    I can see you’re happy. 😊

  • @devinmasters7038
    @devinmasters7038 Год назад

    I just bought the baby sister of that 1953 from carters a month ago. Haha 1968 telecaster bass with the lollipop tuners 👌🏼

  • @kwillis7779
    @kwillis7779 Год назад

    The bridge cover on that '53 Precision is on backwards. Thanks for your videos, Philip.

    • @vayabroder729
      @vayabroder729 Год назад

      I asked the same question and got schooled in my post above. Great info.

    • @hpblack1953
      @hpblack1953 Год назад +1

      Many players reversed the bridge cover to get more room for playing with the fingers, not the thumb.

  • @edwinhurwitz6792
    @edwinhurwitz6792 Год назад

    My first bass was a '63 Gibson EB-2D. I ended up putting a Badass bridge and Bartolini pickups in it. I regret selling that bass more than almost anything else. But, I really wanted a Starfire. Eventually, I got a '67 Starfire and Alembified it, which is my #1 player, but still, that Gibson....

  • @Obscurity202
    @Obscurity202 9 месяцев назад

    That 61 was awesome. I would have loved to see a comparison with the 60 that was supposedly not as good

  • @gwawd
    @gwawd Год назад

    That '61 is dope af.

  • @Forever28tat2
    @Forever28tat2 10 месяцев назад

    If you like hollow bodies, you should check out Ferner Fine Instruments out of Memphis Tennessee. He’s built me some beautiful ones.

  • @WhiteRock_Mark
    @WhiteRock_Mark Год назад

    I did 😊
    (Buy your course)
    Enjoy that Gibson

  • @oldasrocks9121
    @oldasrocks9121 Год назад

    Fun!

  • @markeythesharkey6153
    @markeythesharkey6153 Год назад

    I need that t-shirt with the two tigers.

  • @dennismullins4930
    @dennismullins4930 Год назад

    Nothing sounds like a mud bucket. Even in a Fender. Grand Funk Railroad and Black Sabbath ☮️

  • @greyklopstock7155
    @greyklopstock7155 Год назад

    As someone who's primary bass is a Japanese 51 p bass reissue, I can absolutely attest that the pickup cover directly covers the sweet spot. In my opinion, you want to be picking just behind the pickup. That's where it sounds fattest.

  • @bassace854
    @bassace854 Год назад

    Another cool vid! A couple thoughts;
    - I wish you had tried the 60 P right after the 61, to see if you could quantify why the 61 was different/better.
    - I'd love to see a comparison of the location and severity of dead spots on these vintage beauties!

  • @Palindromeater
    @Palindromeater Год назад

    I’d love to try out that style bridge, very unique

  • @CaiquesAndCakes
    @CaiquesAndCakes Год назад

    The shop owner was funny as hell

  • @vayabroder729
    @vayabroder729 Год назад +1

    Those are so cool! The early P has the bridge cover installed upside down, what’s up with that? You play it exactly like I do mine; I anchor the right thumb at the end of the fingerboard. Not a good idea to take out the pickup cover and anchor your right thumb right on top of the pickup. I agree with your choice; a short scale Gibson with Mudbuckers is certainly a different flavor. I have a ‘67 EB-3 which is similar but obviously different since it’s solid but great feeling and sounding bass. I also have Hofners which are also great playing and unique sounding.

    • @michaelsusack5379
      @michaelsusack5379 Год назад

      People usually flip them around when they've got mute foam in there and don't want to use it

    • @vayabroder729
      @vayabroder729 Год назад +1

      @@michaelsusack5379Thank you for that bit of info! Why didn’t I think of that?!

  • @pirhala
    @pirhala Год назад

    Congratulations to me for making it through an entire video that features Rhett…

  • @cotyroberts
    @cotyroberts Год назад

    You look like Bubbles from Trailer Park Boys in the thumb nail.

  • @librasky
    @librasky Год назад

    I believe objects can have a soul , if you love them enough

  • @admarhermans1
    @admarhermans1 Год назад

    Great Gibson bass, Philip!
    When you play your own ‘66 P a lot, it will be like the ‘61 in a few years. She wants to be played. Her pickups will settle just fine!
    Better get a powerful amp and cab to go with that Gibson one. She has a lot of beautiful subby ‘thud’.
    Great basses!
    But, the basses you play are great too. Just keep on playing them!
    🖖

  • @michelleneeds4165
    @michelleneeds4165 Год назад

    The othe guy that isnt in your band, what was his name. Super funny dude anyway cracked me up a couple of times. Does he work at Carter's?

  • @jaehuilim7467
    @jaehuilim7467 Год назад

    All of em are amazing, but I want 10:40

  • @jasondorsey7110
    @jasondorsey7110 Год назад

    Basses with narrow string spacing like that hofner are great for pickstyle playing...could be a factor in why Paul never parted with it

  • @christopher-miles
    @christopher-miles Год назад

    dude! does shull even know how lucky he is to have a mate like you?

  • @PoppinDC4114
    @PoppinDC4114 Год назад

    61 p-bass would be my choice

  • @drew2dee2
    @drew2dee2 Год назад +1

    i love these kinds of videos but the volume levels are all over the place in this one, when theyre talking its too quiet and when theyre playing its way too loud

  • @ezbass
    @ezbass Год назад +2

    That P bass sounded great and evoked all those great bass lines where a P was used. However, that Gibson just growled and was way cool. Find $2.5k now!

  • @kevincothron5089
    @kevincothron5089 Год назад

    The 61 P bass was a winner. Hard to wrong on a P bass. Spending $16000 on a bass would be a hard sell for the wife.

  • @mikevonhohenstein5587
    @mikevonhohenstein5587 Год назад

    '61 P

  • @everythingjingabell8416
    @everythingjingabell8416 Год назад +1

    how much for the Gibson bass?

  • @Tattoed_soul
    @Tattoed_soul Год назад

    That 61 P. Wow

  • @martinheath5947
    @martinheath5947 Год назад

    People spend a fortune on fancy electronics but a (technically substandard) crappy bass sound will often add the character missing from a lot of modern music. Hi-Fi these basses were not, the fingers did the talking.

  • @ichouinard
    @ichouinard Год назад

    Do they actually put Chromes on every vintage basses? but why?!

    • @vayabroder729
      @vayabroder729 Год назад

      They all came with flatwounds at the time.

  • @matthewbeckwith663
    @matthewbeckwith663 27 дней назад

    P!

  • @Forever28tat2
    @Forever28tat2 10 месяцев назад

    I sent you 50 bucks which I hope helps if you put it in an envelope and write down what your next favorite bass would be. You’d be surprised how much money can wind up being in that envelope in one years time. What would be your favorite bass? I mean the bass of all basses if somebody were to allow you to walk into your favorite music store and pull one off the rack which one would that be and why? Hopefully it’s one that you’ve already been playing every once in a while it’s something that one day you will do what you can to make that bass yours… Knowing how the world is with everything going up in price and not value what base would you really want and why. I enjoy watching your videos more so than many of the other so-called big names, because I find you to be humble and very real, and I admire that very much Charge does that I’d like to see an answer… my favorite is my 1966 fender precision Jazz bass… Yes fender did make a Pbass with a Jazz bass neck and it was made in 66. I’ve heard so many people lose money on that bet. And I’m still making that bet Every chance I get.. I also have a 66 black jazz bass with matching black head stock that I have a red 66 with a matching red head stock and I have a 66 with a Factory overspray where after years of playing you can see the sun burst is showing through where the sea foam green paint job has worn off. It’s one of my favorites. Message me and I’ll send you some pictures. Now the best amplifier cabinet that I personally own is also a one owner, 1966 AMPEG B15 N PORTAFLEX FLIPTOP….. ask anybody who died and came back because it wasn’t there a time. Ask them what Jesus was playing up in heaven and they’re gonna tell you he was playing old PBass through a 66 Ampeg b15! Lol. I love saying that… I’m sorry it’s my own opinion I don’t think nothing sounds better than an old precision bass played through and Ampeg b15 and the year must be 66. Email me looking forward to talking to you…

    • @philipconradmusic
      @philipconradmusic  10 месяцев назад

      Hi there! That was very kind of you. Thanks for watching, your thoughtful comment. Glad to have you here. And as I type this I have a 1969 B15N sitting behind me; not the same as a 66 but I do love a 60s flip-top. Sounds like we have similar taste!

  • @erikmeyer2323
    @erikmeyer2323 Год назад +1

    If money is no object always buy the most amazing sounding bass, even if you already have three of them. If you are looking for diversity of sound production, buy every model of bass produced in the 1960's and buy the amps that they BELONG to.. That '61 P-Bass sounds great through a B-15, but if you want that James Jamerson Sound you need a transistor amp with two 15 inch speakers (like the Kustom he played through). The Gibson (or Epiphone Rivoli) requires careful amplification as it will blow up every amp you plug it into, especially Fender Bass Amps, unless you play at low gain without the Bass Boost. Otherwise the guitarist will hate you for crowding his frequencies. The Hofner comes into its own when it is played with a pick and amplified to sound like a guitar; hence the close string spacing .... An Ampeg B-15 won't do it justice. The Hofner is just not tight enough for that amp. The "McCartney Coffin" with a super clean high gain head with a lot of high end is a better choice (but not for heavy metal).
    For my ears, the original "Tele" Bass sounded the best through the B-15. Its lower output didn't break up the amp (except when Rhett played it 😞).
    Incidentally, a 60's Super-Reverb at low volume is a surprisingly good studio amp for the P-Bass. Carol Kaye used one of these in the mid sixties cause it was lighter to carry in and out of the studio and it sounds remarkably like a 4 x 10 Bassman of the late fifties. You just can't turn it up loud enough to play live (which was never a problem in the studio).
    Ya da Yada Yaaa daaa.

  • @Scoots1994
    @Scoots1994 Год назад +1

    I have an EB3, but that Gibson is cooler.

    • @philipconradmusic
      @philipconradmusic  Год назад

      Yeah… that Gibson was a vibe. Thanks for watching!

    • @Scoots1994
      @Scoots1994 Год назад

      @@philipconradmusicI'd love a look at bass cabs from you ... 10", 12", 15", or the multi-size speaker and ported ones.
      I just learned that 4x15" cabs were made which seems insane.

  • @rojer9344
    @rojer9344 Год назад

    What strings are on that bass?

  • @johnniecameron8829
    @johnniecameron8829 Год назад +1

    The prices are absolute nonsence

  • @blackie75
    @blackie75 Год назад

    Now, if you could only find someone cool to play it....😁

    • @philipconradmusic
      @philipconradmusic  Год назад

      Thanks for watching. I don’t understand your comment: what do you mean by that?

    • @blackie75
      @blackie75 Год назад

      ​@@philipconradmusic Well...that was a joke. Seeing as it's you playing the bass in the video, it's implying that you're not cool. 😕😂

    • @philipconradmusic
      @philipconradmusic  Год назад

      You’re entitled to you’re opinion. Thanks for watching!

    • @blackie75
      @blackie75 Год назад

      @@philipconradmusic Wow, dude...it wasn't an opinion, I was busting your balls. I was expecting you to laugh and have a dig back at me.
      Honestly, interactions such as this make me worry for the future of the planet. Thanks for replying!

  • @Tom-Yum-Gai
    @Tom-Yum-Gai Год назад

    interestingly, I loved the Guild Starfire and always wondered about the cover of Jethro Tull's Benefit so I found Glenn Cornick's email and asked him about it...he said it was total crap and he hated it and never played it but only used it for publicity pics. I found it interesting that you skipped possibly the serious players old school fav, the Jazz bass.

  • @arturovod5847
    @arturovod5847 Год назад

    Good Sound!!!!

  • @IAMREIKI
    @IAMREIKI Год назад

    Greetings . All energy atoms that make up substance Are Conscious . There will be elemental Being that is Available to a Object . If We Share Gratitude Care Love Positive Feelings Emotions the said Object the elemental Being will share it's Oneness with us . If we name the object and interrelate Lovingly Wow What Fun .

  • @stevetuma2157
    @stevetuma2157 Год назад +1

    Dude, lose the man bun.

    • @1959LP4U
      @1959LP4U Год назад

      Yeah, seriously!!! Those were a "thing" for about fifteen minutes, ten years ago!

  • @whatilearnttoday5295
    @whatilearnttoday5295 Год назад

    Yup, sounds as crap as the copy I had.

  • @NMbass906
    @NMbass906 Год назад

    To each their own mang but I honestly just see vintage stuff like this as a been there, done that kinda thing these days. Get something with no traditional materials like an Aristides or a new shape we haven't seen a million times ya know?

    • @philipconradmusic
      @philipconradmusic  Год назад

      It’s cool that we can all be inspired by and enjoy different things. That’s part of what makes music beautiful to me. Thanks for watching!