Dear John hall part 2
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Casiraghi22
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Dear John hall part 2
Is there any plan to bring back the 4001v63? No more 4003 for now 
Re: Dear John hall part 2
I have no doubt that someday we'll do something with a bass but it won't be a 4001V63, that's for sure.
- sloop_john_b
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Casiraghi22
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Re: Dear John hall part 2
Re: Dear John hall part 2
There's always the 4004...
I have NO idea what to do with those skinny stringed things... I'm just a bass player...
- cassius987
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Re: Dear John hall part 2
Casiraghi22 wrote:4003 is getting old already. It's a beautiful bass but rickenbacker needs to come up with something new
/thread?cjj wrote:There's always the 4004...
- sloop_john_b
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Re: Dear John hall part 2
A model from 1964, reissued in 1984 = "new"?Casiraghi22 wrote:4003 is getting old already. It's a beautiful bass but rickenbacker needs to come up with something new
Buy a used one?
- deaconblues
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Re: Dear John hall part 2
Yeah, what I was thinking too.sloop_john_b wrote: A model from 1964, reissued in 1984 = "new"?
- cassius987
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Re: Dear John hall part 2
Thank you John, sometimes I feel like this can't be said often enough!sloop_john_b wrote:A model from 1964, reissued in 1984 = "new"?
Re: Dear John hall part 2
wellll... there's always the 4005 .......as I seem to have misplaced my $17,000.00 to buy a used one

♪♫♪♫I need new strings, these ones have a bunch of dang wrong notes on 'em ♫♪♫♪
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Re: Dear John hall part 2
How about a vintage 4003S? That was my first Rickenbacker bass and I really wish I had not sold it.
- cassius987
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Re: Dear John hall part 2
I think offering an S version of the current 4003 would be cool for those who don't care for binding or big inlays (but don't want the other massive departures of the 4004). I'm not sure why people want another vintage reissue. Is it the desire to buy new with the combination of getting something that appears old and collectible?krohawk1 wrote:How about a vintage 4003S? That was my first Rickenbacker bass and I really wish I had not sold it.
I've kind of enjoyed seeing RIC do short runs and one-offs of exotic instruments instead of a revivification of the RM1999 year after year.
- deaconblues
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Re: Dear John hall part 2
Rickenbacker has a huge back catalog of beautiful instruments. Customers would like to be able to get their hands on them without paying through the nose for a vintage instrument.cassius987 wrote:I'm not sure why people want another vintage reissue. Is it the desire to buy new with the combination of getting something that appears old and collectible?
The current line of Rickenbackers is very nice, but as a guitarist I find the non-reissue instruments to be lacking a certain aesthetic. I'm sure many bassists feel the same way.
I understand that management does what it wants when it wants, but there's no arguing that the market for vintage-styled Rickenbackers is very strong.
- cassius987
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Re: Dear John hall part 2
To me, the RM1999 reissues amount to a 4003S with a few different bits swapped out--and some bits forever altered like the materials used to make the machinery and how the truss rods work. I guess I just don't see the big wow factor in that. I don't claim to know anything about Ric guitars--I've never touched one, the extent of my knowledge is "330s look neato." As for price, the reissues are already quite a lot more than a regular model, and then people post complaints about how they aren't faithful enough (happens with the basses anyway) so why not just go get the real thing? Full disclosure, I have a selfish interest in seeing RIC go forward with its product line, not look back.deaconblues wrote:Rickenbacker has a huge back catalog of beautiful instruments. Customers would like to be able to get their hands on them without paying through the nose for a vintage instrument.cassius987 wrote:I'm not sure why people want another vintage reissue. Is it the desire to buy new with the combination of getting something that appears old and collectible?
The current line of Rickenbackers is very nice, but as a guitarist I find the non-reissue instruments to be lacking a certain aesthetic. I'm sure many bassists feel the same way.
As for the vintage basses that were a true departure (in bass-ville that's stuff like the 4005, 4002, 3000 series, 2000 series), I think the possibility of them coming back has been repeatedly played down for lack of demand relative to cost to re-engineer... or something like that. I don't claim to know what's really going to happen.
- deaconblues
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Re: Dear John hall part 2
Well, at this point the vintage models are beginning to encroach on reissue price territory, so it's a tougher call. But it's not like I could buy a real solid-top '58 325 unless I sold a kidney -- and found one to buy in the first place. And even then, who'd want to gig it?
Frankly I don't see the current lineup as being all that modern, 650/4004 aside. Players gripe about tiny frets, rattling bridges, thick varnish on fretboards...those problems have existed since Rickenbacker guitars were introduced way back in the day and have gone largely unaddressed.
Frankly I don't see the current lineup as being all that modern, 650/4004 aside. Players gripe about tiny frets, rattling bridges, thick varnish on fretboards...those problems have existed since Rickenbacker guitars were introduced way back in the day and have gone largely unaddressed.
