How to get that typical Chris Squire sound?
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- iamthebassman
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I still think that he used both pickups and both going to their own channels and bridge pickup channel used with the effects (wah, tremolo etc.). Listen to the "Perpetual Change" for example: the riff he plays at 0:52 he uses only the neck PU, when he plays the same little riff at 6:48 he uses both pickups. Try with headphones.
OK, I know I have too much time on my hands.
OK, I know I have too much time on my hands.
The 'Chris Squire sound'? I just plug any one of my 4001 basses into my TR35B amp and play LOUD using a pick. Roundwound strings, of course, and both tone controls on the Rick set to treble, with volume from both pickups at half blast. Oh, and no effects whatsoever.
A Rickenbacker bass is much like the Jaguar E car - perennially ultra-fashionable.
- rickenbrother
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Marshall Super Bass amp w/4X12 Bottom, both P/U's on and pick between the trebble pickup and the bridge. All the knobs full "on". F/X boxes should be used like spice...less is more.
Not a great deal of low end (let the PA do that work for you) I played several marshall rigs like that for years and the tone just got better as the night went on (I could turn up a little more every set-hehe!) At the end of a lot of gigs and the crowd was dancing the most (AKA drunk-n-deaf)I was using only the bridge pickup and the tone cut right through. Most guitar players look at you 'sorta funny when you roll out a Marshall 1/2 stack and THEN thell them it's your bass rig. It's a lot of gear to haul around thou, I'm using a SWR redhead for portability but still have my favorite Marshall.
Not a great deal of low end (let the PA do that work for you) I played several marshall rigs like that for years and the tone just got better as the night went on (I could turn up a little more every set-hehe!) At the end of a lot of gigs and the crowd was dancing the most (AKA drunk-n-deaf)I was using only the bridge pickup and the tone cut right through. Most guitar players look at you 'sorta funny when you roll out a Marshall 1/2 stack and THEN thell them it's your bass rig. It's a lot of gear to haul around thou, I'm using a SWR redhead for portability but still have my favorite Marshall.
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jwr2
To approximate it, I use the same settings that I always use (same ones that I use to do Geddy as well), and then play right in front of the bridge pickup, striking VERY sharply with my fingers (or, as I have been practicing recently, with a pick). Let fret noise and such reign. Even more so that with Geddy. Extraneous noise IS YOUR FRIEND. Depending on the song, I either keep everything all the way up, or turn down the bass volume a tiny bit. Mostly, it's in the way I play, because I use almost the exact same setup (amp-wise and bass-wise) as I do when I try to emulate Geddy, or play as myself for that matter. Past a certain point, it's all in technique. And of course, it's an approximation.
- iamthebassman
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