Vintage Japanese basses represent the best bang for the buck
Posted: July 21st, 2013, 1:46 pm
...for lefties, that is.
My favorite go-to bass is an old Lotus with one of those peculiar mini-humbuckers also found on Lawsuit era Hondo IIs. Next in line are my Ibanez Roadstars (P and P/J). I also love Aria ThorSound basses, especially the bolt-neck 32" scale single P pup ones. Some of those older Kramers with Japanese ESP necks and double J humbucking pups are killer, too. Those older passive Korean-made ESP LTDs (B-50s and B-104s) are great value as well. Nice fret jobs and solid wood bodies. My B-104 is the only bass I know of with a PASSIVE midrange control. The sleeper of the class? Mahogany-bodied MIK Washburn XB-200s. I have a couple of custom-ordered Carvins but I fall back on my XB-200s most of the time. The Roadstars and the Lotus are for special occasions only. All of the above sound and play better than most of the expensive new gear at GC.
Old is Good. And affordable.
My favorite go-to bass is an old Lotus with one of those peculiar mini-humbuckers also found on Lawsuit era Hondo IIs. Next in line are my Ibanez Roadstars (P and P/J). I also love Aria ThorSound basses, especially the bolt-neck 32" scale single P pup ones. Some of those older Kramers with Japanese ESP necks and double J humbucking pups are killer, too. Those older passive Korean-made ESP LTDs (B-50s and B-104s) are great value as well. Nice fret jobs and solid wood bodies. My B-104 is the only bass I know of with a PASSIVE midrange control. The sleeper of the class? Mahogany-bodied MIK Washburn XB-200s. I have a couple of custom-ordered Carvins but I fall back on my XB-200s most of the time. The Roadstars and the Lotus are for special occasions only. All of the above sound and play better than most of the expensive new gear at GC.
Old is Good. And affordable.