Since I now have 2 basses I play a lot, I wanted to try out some Flatwounds, but my question is: on which bass shall I put them, on my my Gibson Grabber G1 or on my Fender Precision with some weird bridge pickup..
And maybe some tips for good flats, but there are already a lot of threads about that of course
P-bass and flats is a great place to start if you just want to experiment for the time being. I like D'Addario Chromes because they are cheap, but Thomastik flats, the opposite of cheap, rule fucking face. They might not be the best place to start with, or they might CHANGE YOUR LIFE like they did mine.
P-bass and flats is a great place to start if you just want to experiment for the time being. I like D'Addario Chromes because they are cheap, but Thomastik flats, the opposite of cheap, rule fucking face. They might not be the best place to start with, or they might CHANGE YOUR LIFE like they did mine.
This is so. I wouldn't worry about a bass with rounds in till you have over ten basses really.
Either one would be great with flats. The P-bass is maybe more versatile in general, so I might keep rounds on that one to maintain its versatility. Once you put the flats on, don't judge the tone right away.....flats really start to get sweet after you've had them on a month or two (or longer)....especially Chromes, which start out brighter than most other flats.
Flats on the P! Keep rounds on the grabber and play some DFA1979.
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rfurtkamp wrote:Bastard stepchild of modern delay times/looping and a Lexicon Vortex would have me whipping out the credit card faster than a hooker at a coke convention.
For a while I was all "Flats go on J! Rounds on P!". But now I just like flats on everything. I even like flats with mudbuckers. I have too many basses at this point so I can start putting rounds on the extra ones.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Louy7zH9guw
sonidero wrote:Roll a plus 13 for fire and with my immunity to wack I dodge the cough and pass a turn to chill and look at these rocks...
kbithecrowing wrote:Making out with my girl friday night, I couldn't stop thinking about flangers.
^also depends on the music and the band you play in. if the role of the bass is allaround like in Tool for example, rounds are the way to go. but in a "sonically normal" band, flats are the cat's paws.
rfurtkamp wrote:Bastard stepchild of modern delay times/looping and a Lexicon Vortex would have me whipping out the credit card faster than a hooker at a coke convention.
bigchiefbc wrote:Man, am I the only bassist in the world who hates flats? They just sound so dead and lifeless to me.
granted, I haven't dropped a shitload of money on the insanely expensive sets yet, but the couple sets I've tried just sound so dull.
I think they sound kinda nice, basically like an upright but worse. Had a set on my jazz for a while but I couldn't live without the bite and angry sharpness of rounds. YMMV When I have more than one bass I'll probably have flats on one because it is a cool sound, just not all the time.
rfurtkamp wrote:Bastard stepchild of modern delay times/looping and a Lexicon Vortex would have me whipping out the credit card faster than a hooker at a coke convention.