- My Forums
- Tiger Rant
- LSU Recruiting
- SEC Rant
- Saints Talk
- Pelicans Talk
- More Sports Board
- Fantasy Sports
- Golf Board
- Soccer Board
- O-T Lounge
- Tech Board
- Home/Garden Board
- Outdoor Board
- Health/Fitness Board
- Movie/TV Board
- Book Board
- Music Board
- Political Talk
- Money Talk
- Fark Board
- Gaming Board
- Travel Board
- Food/Drink Board
- Ticket Exchange
- TD Help Board
Customize My Forums- View All Forums
- Show Left Links
- Topic Sort Options
- Trending Topics
- Recent Topics
- Active Topics
Started By
Message
P bass vs jazz bass
Posted on 8/23/23 at 4:56 pm
Posted on 8/23/23 at 4:56 pm
I missed out on the deal last year, but fender has a sale going on right now and I am thinking about getting either a 40th anniversary Squier P bass or jazz bass. This will be my first bass guitar and I’ve never really played one before. But I’ve been playing guitar for 15 years.
Give me some information on what bass you prefer. I enjoy all eras of rock, also some yacht rock. I will also need to get a base amp also
Or should I say screw it and get one of the jazzmasters?
Jazz bass
P Bass
Jazzmaster
Give me some information on what bass you prefer. I enjoy all eras of rock, also some yacht rock. I will also need to get a base amp also
Or should I say screw it and get one of the jazzmasters?
Jazz bass
P Bass
Jazzmaster
This post was edited on 8/23/23 at 4:57 pm
Posted on 8/23/23 at 5:17 pm to The Dunder Mifflin
I looked at the 40th anniversary stuff the other day. JMO, but it seems just as good, and a bit nicer than the CV stuff.
I think I would grab that jazzmaster, since you're a guitar player.
I think I would grab that jazzmaster, since you're a guitar player.
Posted on 8/23/23 at 5:21 pm to The Dunder Mifflin
quote:
I’ve never really played one before. But I’ve been playing guitar for 15 years.
I'm like you but I am considering a Bass 6, probably a Squier.
Posted on 8/23/23 at 5:41 pm to The Dunder Mifflin
What kind of music do you plan on playing?
Posted on 8/23/23 at 6:41 pm to The Dunder Mifflin
(no message)
This post was edited on 8/23/23 at 6:53 pm
Posted on 8/23/23 at 8:16 pm to The Dunder Mifflin
I’m on my second Jazz bass and like them. I really don’t notice a difference between the Jazz and the P bass. I personally don’t care for the gold hardware. I play mostly 60-70’s and Motown so the thumping sound is what I use.
Posted on 8/23/23 at 8:51 pm to The Dunder Mifflin
P-basses have a wider nut (1.685”) versus J-basses (1.5”).
I have grown to like the feel of the P-bass.
I have grown to like the feel of the P-bass.
Posted on 8/24/23 at 6:34 am to The Dunder Mifflin
Coming from a bass player of 20 years, the distinction isn’t as massive as we’d like to think.
If you can only have one bass in the arsenal? P-Bass. It’s versatile enough to do everything well and every sound man/engineer on the planet knows how to mix it.
In my personal experience, J-Bass necks feel better but all the ones I’ve played hit like a limp noodle compared to a their more aggressive P-Bass brother. If you’re exclusively playing R&B or modern pop, a J might be right for you.
Play them both and see which you get along with best.
If you can only have one bass in the arsenal? P-Bass. It’s versatile enough to do everything well and every sound man/engineer on the planet knows how to mix it.
In my personal experience, J-Bass necks feel better but all the ones I’ve played hit like a limp noodle compared to a their more aggressive P-Bass brother. If you’re exclusively playing R&B or modern pop, a J might be right for you.
Play them both and see which you get along with best.
Posted on 8/24/23 at 8:07 am to The Dunder Mifflin
I have both a p and a jazz. And for my money the best bass fender makes is the geddy lee jazz.
Posted on 8/24/23 at 8:35 am to ob1pimpbobi
quote:can confirm
And for my money the best bass fender makes is the geddy lee jazz.
a Geddy with a good set of flats is a joy to play, and versatile enough to get practically any sound you want out of it IMHO
Posted on 8/24/23 at 9:49 am to FearlessFreep
Why either/or when you can have ... both ...




Posted on 8/24/23 at 10:00 am to The Dunder Mifflin
I play mainly an Ernie Ball Musicman Stingray. But it has a chunky neck. If I had to pick one I think it would be a jazz bass because of the more narrow neck.
And Fret Shack that REALLY looks like a Sting bass that has an extra pickup installed. I say that because of the horrendous bridge put on it for the old school look but intonation being a bitch to achieve on it. I own one
And Fret Shack that REALLY looks like a Sting bass that has an extra pickup installed. I say that because of the horrendous bridge put on it for the old school look but intonation being a bitch to achieve on it. I own one
This post was edited on 8/24/23 at 10:04 am
Posted on 8/24/23 at 10:43 am to Broke
It's more than an extra pickup on the T-burst ... my Carondelet Single P pickups have almost double the output of original early to mid 50s P pickups. They are THICK and they hit the preamp like a bull on crank. In fact the rods are A5s and oversized diameter specifically to add presence and slice to that meaty signal.
And the second pickup is RWRP and they are wired in series. With both pickups on 10, it hits the amp at about 26.6K DCR. With zero hum. You'd swear it's active the signal is so bold but it's totally passive. No batteries.
And the second pickup is RWRP and they are wired in series. With both pickups on 10, it hits the amp at about 26.6K DCR. With zero hum. You'd swear it's active the signal is so bold but it's totally passive. No batteries.
Posted on 8/24/23 at 11:24 am to Broke
pbass body with a jazz bass neck
Posted on 8/24/23 at 11:53 am to TheFretShack
You wind these pickups yourself? Is this your neck also?
Posted on 8/24/23 at 2:07 pm to Broke
Yes, I wind pickups ... Carondelet Guitar and Bass Pickups
The neck on the T-burst is a LBF Allparts ghost-built by Fujigen, on which I did the fretwork and finishing.
The neck on the T-burst is a LBF Allparts ghost-built by Fujigen, on which I did the fretwork and finishing.
Posted on 8/24/23 at 2:22 pm to TheFretShack
For the bassists who don't like the double brass barrel bridge, here's one a client custom spec'ed with a reissue Badass ...


Posted on 8/24/23 at 2:45 pm to TheFretShack
i'd play that thang
two pups but only master volume/tone pots? tell me more...

two pups but only master volume/tone pots? tell me more...
Posted on 8/24/23 at 4:11 pm to FearlessFreep
Look closely, those are stacked concentric pots, like on a '60-'62 J-Bass. The bottom black rings are the volumes for each pickup, the top knobs are the tones for each pickup. They are laid out that way because the rings are easier to manipulate swiftly.
Each pickup's stack controls an isolated sub-circuit thanks to separate 220K resistors that meet at the output jack.
In player terms, each pickup's controls are theirs and only theirs - you can adjust one tone or volume without affecting the control(s) in the other subcircuit. Want one pickup's tone wide open and the other pickup's tone rolled down halfway? And a simultaneous mix of pickups that's say, 60/40 or 75/25? All doable.

Each pickup's stack controls an isolated sub-circuit thanks to separate 220K resistors that meet at the output jack.
In player terms, each pickup's controls are theirs and only theirs - you can adjust one tone or volume without affecting the control(s) in the other subcircuit. Want one pickup's tone wide open and the other pickup's tone rolled down halfway? And a simultaneous mix of pickups that's say, 60/40 or 75/25? All doable.
This post was edited on 8/24/23 at 4:21 pm
Posted on 8/24/23 at 5:13 pm to TheFretShack
quote:aha, looking at them on my phone I mistook the bottom rings for reflections of the knobs off the metal plate.
Look closely, those are stacked concentric pots
Do you have any examples of single-pickup basses? I’ve often thought about what a nice Jazz-style bass with one versatile pickup might sound like but haven’t come across one anywhere.
Popular
Back to top
