country and soft rock
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country and soft rock
Here,s a cute question, does any one here play country and soft rock with their 4003 rics.I know it may be a funny topic but i,m very curious Thanks for any replies!!!
- cassius987
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Re: country and soft rock
I don't know what on earth "soft rock" is supposed to sound like (or feel like). I have played country gigs with my 4003FL; country is not my first choice but it is a lot of fun anyways, as a freelancer not committed to the project full-time. I am not talking about the country you hear on TV or radio as much as the country music of a couple generations ago which could often be more lively and did have audible and energetic--if simple--bass parts.
The country gigs I have played all paid really well so they gave my inner freelance bass player a bit of an ego boost anyways. A good break from the normal jazz and not-so-soft rock I was doing at the time.
Chris Brubeck [he plays a 4001FL] does a few songs with Peter "Madcat" Ruth that verges on early country music, definitely borrowing some of its stylings.
The country gigs I have played all paid really well so they gave my inner freelance bass player a bit of an ego boost anyways. A good break from the normal jazz and not-so-soft rock I was doing at the time.
Chris Brubeck [he plays a 4001FL] does a few songs with Peter "Madcat" Ruth that verges on early country music, definitely borrowing some of its stylings.
Re: country and soft rock
I've done Country gigs with an 8 string bass..
A 4003 will do country just fine, just select the neck pickup and let the volume knob do the rest. You will get that wooly warm sound with just a touch of grit that will support the band without getting in the way too much!
Eden.
A 4003 will do country just fine, just select the neck pickup and let the volume knob do the rest. You will get that wooly warm sound with just a touch of grit that will support the band without getting in the way too much!
Eden.
Re: country and soft rock
I recorded a country flavoured song of mine a few weeks back and I used my 4003. It sounded like it belonged and IMO it does. 
“We can't solve problems by using the same kind of thinking we used when we created them.” - Albert Einstein
"You do not really understand something unless you can explain it to your grandmother" - Albert Einstein
"You do not really understand something unless you can explain it to your grandmother" - Albert Einstein
Re: country and soft rock
Joshua,a local radio station here calls stuff by Abba,Jackson Brown etc, soft rock.We all know how growly a Ric can be so i was just wondering.
Re: country and soft rock
If I had a 4003 I'd use it to play country. At least I guess that's what one would call stuff by groups like the Desert Rose Band (which I'm listening to great gobs of right now.)
JimK
JimK
- rickenbrother
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Re: country and soft rock
All depends on how you play it.jagdeluxe wrote:We all know how growly a Ric can be so i was just wondering.
JETGLO should officially be renamed JETGLO ROCKS! 
- cassius987
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Re: country and soft rock
Oh. That kind of music usually has "sit-in-the-mix" bass which a 4003 can certainly do. But I've never tried it. Closest I've come was working on similar tones for dedicated dance music like acid jazz/house sorts of things. I dabble in that but haven't done a lot.jagdeluxe wrote:Joshua,a local radio station here calls stuff by Abba,Jackson Brown etc, soft rock.We all know how growly a Ric can be so i was just wondering.
Re: country and soft rock
Have rehearsal tomorrow and the gig on saturday so we,ll see thanks a bunch
Re: country and soft rock
Amongst other things, I have played in church bands and the likes.... and then there is the Bee Gees... I'd consider a lot of their stuff lighter type rock. The Ric works fine there as well. As Joey said - it all depends on how you play the instrument. I think the Ric basses are really some of the more versatile basses out there.
Re: country and soft rock
Your best bet is probably to use the neck pickup with tone only halfway up, adjust to taste. Should do fine.
Re: country and soft rock
I got some nice tones with the bridge pickup and the tone cut to almost nothing. Sometimes just a hint of the neck pickup blended in with the tone just about all the way up added a little needed presence to it.
- cassius987
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Re: country and soft rock
That was basically my formula and it did pretty well.jdogric12 wrote:Your best bet is probably to use the neck pickup with tone only halfway up, adjust to taste. Should do fine.
- antipodean
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Re: country and soft rock
Toss in a bit of mute and you have a great doghouse-esque tone! Perfect for that good ol' country sound...ram wrote:I got some nice tones with the bridge pickup and the tone cut to almost nothing. Sometimes just a hint of the neck pickup blended in with the tone just about all the way up added a little needed presence to it.
"I don't want to sound incredulous but I can't believe it" Rex Mossop
Re: country and soft rock
yep and if you do it with a pick near the bridge (low to no mute) almost a Thunderbird flavor (of course with Ric steroids)!antipodean wrote:Toss in a bit of mute and you have a great doghouse-esque tone! Perfect for that good ol' country sound...ram wrote:I got some nice tones with the bridge pickup and the tone cut to almost nothing. Sometimes just a hint of the neck pickup blended in with the tone just about all the way up added a little needed presence to it.
