Questions tagged [electric-bass-guitar]

For general questions about the electric bass guitar instrument, and associated equipment such as amplifiers. Specific topics include history, general selection criteria, setup and adjustment, playing methods such as picked, fingerstyle (plucking) and "thumbstyle" (slapping), amplification questions,

The electric bass guitar, sometimes "electric bass" or simply "bass" in common conversation, is an instrument developed in the 1950s from elements of the upright bass and the electric guitar. The intent was to create an easily-amplified bass string instrument that could be learned easily by guitar players, and heard over the drum kits and brass sections popular in jazz and blues groups of the day. While Audiovox claims credit for the first fretted electric bass, the first mass-produced bass guitar was the Fender Precision Bass, made popular by Monk Montgomery, bassist for Lionel Hampton, as well as other bassists for famous touring acts such as Bill Black (Elvis Presley) and James Jamerson (The Funk Brothers). The instrument caught on in popular music genres, and new designs were introduced, such as the Fender "Deluxe Bass" which would evolve into the "Jazz Bass", Gibson's offerings such as the EB-3 based on their popular SG body style, and the Rickenbacker 4000 series, the first bass to feature a "neck through" construction as opposed to "set-neck" or "bolt-on" constructions favored by Gibson and Fender. In these various incarnations, the electric bass has all but replaced the upright acoustic bass in most genres, with the upright remaining popular mainly in country-western and Latin styles.

The typical bass guitar is a solid-body instrument, styled similarly to but larger than a solid-body electric guitar such as a Stratocaster, with four strings tuned to E, A, D and G, similar to an upright bass and one octave lower than the lower four strings of an electric guitar. More recently, basses with five and six strings, adding a low B and a high C respectively, have become popular in most genres as the extended range avoids the need to "detune" a four-string bass, common in classic rock and metal genres. The typical "scale length" of an electric bass ranges between 30" and 36", with the standard "long scale" for most instruments being 34".

The Precision Bass had only one magnetic pickup, originally a single-coil similar in design to a Telecaster bridge pickup, but evolving to a "split-coil" design allowing hum-cancelling operation. Most basses nowadays have two pickups, at the "neck" and "bridge" positions, of varying types, ranging from classically-styled "P" (Precision) and "J" (Jazz) pickups to more modern "MM" (Music Man) and "soapbar" pickup shapes, all with subtly different tonal palettes. Similar to guitars, some of these pickups are "single coil", offering a brighter, fuller tone with more detail at the cost of picking up and amplifying background electronic noise such as from fluorescent lights. Others are "humbucking" or "hum-cancelling", employing two coils in a single pickup that have the polepieces arranged with reverse polarity, and the wire coil wrapped in opposite directions; the result is that the actual signal from the string moving across the pickup's magnetic field is "in phase" between the two coils, but electromagnetic noise picked up by both coils ends up "out of phase" and cancels out. Humbuckers typically have a stronger signal than single coils due to the extra coil, but the same in-phase/out-of-phase design that rejects EMI can also cause the pickup to lose some subtleties of tone produced by the vibrating string, especially in the higher harmonics.

Unlike in guitars, where electronics for most classic styles have remained "passive" (relying solely on the natural induction caused by the string moving over the magnet and pickup coil to produce the signal), a significant portion of basses available today have "active" electronics, with a preamplifier powered by a battery to provide more flexible tone-shaping capability (and higher gain) than a passive tone circuit. Active electronics can be used with any pickup, but are required for certain types of pickups that produce a lower-strength signal or that require lower impedance (AC resistance) to operate properly. Examples of such pickups include piezoelectric pickups or "piezos", lower-impedance "active" magnetic pickups, optical sensors, and other designs. These pickups are similarly seen more often in basses than on guitars, though piezo pickups are commonly seen in acoustic guitars, where the pickup is prized for its natural sound incorporating both the vibrations of the string and the body of the guitar, and the resulting ability for the guitar to be amplified without requiring a microphone in front of it (useful in live performance situations where the performer wants to move around stage).

While amplifier circuits based on older vacuum-tube diodes and transistors are commonly prized by bassists as well as guitarists for the warmth and character of the resulting tone, the sheer wattage needed to cleanly amplify bass to desired on-stage volumes typically precludes using tube-based "power amplifiers" to drive the speakers. While 100 watts typically represents the upper end of power ratings in guitar amplification, differences in human perception of bass frequencies, as well as the need for the bass to be heard over multiple guitar amplifiers and a drumkit, require most on-stage bass amplifiers to be rated for much higher wattages, up to 1000W (beyond that, bassists usually rely on the house's own PA system for additional amplification). High-end amplification systems for bass therefore typically uses a tube-based preamplifier circuit, giving a good measure of vintage-style tube tone, coupled with a solid-state power amplifier, typically combined into a single "amp head". All-solid-state circuitry is also common, especially at lower power ratings and pricepoints, and offers good sound quality and volume for practice and for smaller venues without the cost and weight of tubes.

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What are the disadvantages of buying a short-scale bass guitar

I'm considering buying my first bass. I already play guitar, and find that even though I'm an adult, stretching to a fifth is a struggle -- so handling a bass with its more widely spaced frets is going to be a challenge. It occurred to me that a…
slim
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What features should I look for in my first bass guitar?

I am looking to buy my first bass. What are the various aspects to look out for? I see the neck length as one. An other is the number of knobs it has. The minimum I usually see is 2. One for the volume and one for something else. Other basses have 3…
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String buzz on bass guitar

The A string on my Peavey T-40 bass buzzes quite loudly. I've found that duct tape on the string above the nut will quiet this, but only if it's pulled taut against a neighboring string. It doesn't hold for long, so of course I'd like to track down…
Goodbye Stack Exchange
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What is a violin electric bass?

I have seen advertised, electric violin bass guitars such as the following: Are they really any different from a normal bass guitar, and if so what makes them different and how then should they be best used?
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Are P-bass pickups noise cancelling?

I'm getting conflicting information as to whether the two halves of a P-bass pickup are configured so that they are noise cancelling, so Are the pickups in standard P-basses (say a Fender American Standard if we need a specific model) designed to…
Dave
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My hands hurt while playing bass

I play bass (right handed), I normally play finger style but when I play for minutes straight my fingering hand really hurts, I don't know if it's my fingering, and I have tried playing with a pick but it's the same.
user70910
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Bass guitar fret buzz: should I care?

I'm a beginner electric bass guitar player. I've been doing a tonne of practice, mainly late at night, so I've been using headphones. Today I tried playing something without the headphones, and was shocked at how much buzz and rattle was coming out…
David Given
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What does it mean for a bass player to play "on the one"?

I do not understand, as a bass player, what it means to "stay on the one", "on the five", etc. What do musicians mean when they tell the bass player to "stay on the one", or any other number?
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How do you control hum without humbuckers?

I have a Hohner Professional B-Bass 4 string bass with 2 single-coils. Controls are neck volume, bridge volume, tone (which I assume is the cutoff on a lo-pass filter). I get serious hum when using either pickup alone. And noticeable hum unless the…
luser droog
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In an active/passive instrument, does the passive mode consume battery as well?

I have a Warwick bass that is both active and passive. For the active mode it requires a battery, while for the passive mode it does not. While I have the instrument plugged in and on the passive mode, does it consume the battery the active mode…
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What is the purpose of this (?) rubber band?

I have seen many bass players that add this rubber band (not sure what it is) on the top of their basses' necks: What is this and what is the purpose of it? Usually I see it on the top of the neck, but on some players, I have seen it over the 1st…
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Do hollowbody basses feedback as much as hollow body guitars?

With a hollow body electric guitar, you'll have to manage (control or suppress) the feedback at any amplification level loud enough to be heard over a rock and roll drummer. Is the same true (in general) for hollow body electric basses? Mostly, I'm…
Dave
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Why is my bass making a buzzing noise?

I am a vocalist for a band and we use 2 different tunings, so my bassist ends up using my bass for another tuning until he finds a second bass. Last practice when plugging it in it made a very loud buzzing noise and nothing else; I tried turning all…
Travis
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What model is my bass guitar?

I bought it second hand on June 2019. It says Yamaha but I couldn't find anything about it. Click for full size
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Why do the bass guitars have so many knobs?

Electronics in electric guitars is often as simple as a pickup selector, a volume pot and a tone pot. Many guitarists consider even that excessive as the tone pot deteriorates the signal even in neutral position, and one can easily turn the tone…
user1079505
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