I'm gonna have to play devil's advocate on this subject... I love the bright snappiness of new bass strings and change mine regularly. At least twice a year.
I'm gonna have to play devil's advocate on this subject... I love the bright snappiness of new bass strings and change mine regularly. At least twice a year.
'As long as there's, you know, sex and drugs, I can do without the rock and roll.'
I have a friend who is a semi-professional bass player who would disagree vehemently with you. Having said that, for many gigs he needs to use strings that have been well played in, as the brightness of new strings would be inappropriate./<\\/p>[]<\\/p>/Quote from dingobass on September 30, 2013, 16:12
Nope... Bass players NEVER change strings until one breaks..
Current:
GTH-1
Completed:
AST-1FB
First Act ME276 (resurrected curb-side find)
ES-5V
Scratchie lapsteel
Custom ST-1 12 String
JBA-4
TL-1TB
Scratch Lapsteel
Meinl DIY Cajon
Cigar Box lap steel
Wishing:
Baritone
Open D/Standard Double 6 twin neck
I can certainly understand why some bassists would want to change their strings more frequently than I do. Particularly if they're into slapping, popping or want an edge to their sound. But for me, playing a fretless with a bent towards jazz, I just love the smooth and fat sounds of 'well aged' strings. Horses for courses.
Regarding old strings, somebody showed me this clip a little while ago on how to get some more life out of old strings.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s8OYeN9mAL4
MarloweDK is a great bass teacher, but I can't tell whether this is serious, or whether he's trolling. Subsequently I haven't given it a shot yet to see if it works...
Funny that this thread has just had an entry. I was gigging last night and thought it was time to try and clean the strings up a bit. I love the sound of my well worn strings on the fretless but they're getting a bit gunky. So... I thought I would take them off today and take them into work tomorrow. We have an ultrasonic cleaner in the workshop and I thought I would see how that goes for getting the crud out. Watch this space!
PS. I can't the link to work Tim but I'm not sure if it's me or youtube.
Hehehe... Depends on the application and style of music. When I was recording a lot (back when Jesus played fullback for Israel/<\\/p>[]<\\/p>/Quote from dingobass on September 30, 2013, 16:12
Nope... Bass players NEVER change strings until one breaks..
) I would change strings every second session to maintain tonal consistency, but for gigging or home playing once a year is more than adequate. Or unless one breaks.
Most bass strings nowadays seem to be made to last quite a while. Certainly the set I favour (La Bella HRS 5string 45-128) seem to keep their snap for ages. The only bad experience I have had with bass strings was with Rotosound, which is ironic as they have the reputation for being the brightest back in the 60s. They may have improved now as it's been about 10 years since I tried them last.
It is an expensive exercise, but it takes a while to find a favourite. It's worth experimenting with a variety of sets- maybe pick up a mate's bass with different strings and see how they feel/sound.
"Music is in the air; it's my job to pull it out."- Jaco Pastorius
Weird... it embedded OK here. Try copy/paste http://www[dot]youtube[dot]com/watch?v=s8OYeN9mAL4
then remove the [dot] both times and replace them with a .
I've managed a bit of luck with strings lately. I use Ernie Ball's these days, but last time I was in JB hifi they had Marshall brand strings on sale, $5 for guitar and $10 for bass. Never even knew Marshall made strings, but $10 was way too good to refuse so I got the three last sets. Opened them up to restring my old Ibanez and what do you know, made by Ernie Ball. I reckon they are repackaged super slinkys.
So, hot tip of the day, if you use EB's, or you just want some cheap, good strings, check your local JB.
'As long as there's, you know, sex and drugs, I can do without the rock and roll.'
Tried it again and all is sweet. Weird.
So... I watched the clip and, an interesting idea that's easy enough to try. And he sure makes slapping look easy.
I wonder if they do 5 string sets.../<\\/p>[]<\\/p>/Quote from pablopepper on November 3, 2013, 14:05
I've managed a bit of luck with strings lately. I use Ernie Ball's these days, but last time I was in JB hifi they had Marshall brand strings on sale, $5 for guitar and $10 for bass. Never even knew Marshall made strings, but $10 was way too good to refuse so I got the three last sets. Opened them up to restring my old Ibanez and what do you know, made by Ernie Ball. I reckon they are repackaged super slinkys.
So, hot tip of the day, if you use EB's, or you just want some cheap, good strings, check your local JB.