
https://reverb.com/item/488099-fender-m ... lefty-rare
Everything is in the title. If you have any question, feel free to contact me

Gilmourisgod wrote:I never really "got" what a Rick is capable of until I ran it stereo a few times in my college band. We used to call it the "Piano of Doom". You get all the bottom and all the top in total a**kicking mode.
I guess so, that's the only explanation I have for this. That's also what the previous owner told me. It actually makes sense.superheavydeathmetal wrote:The damage in the paint is from chemicals in the strap?
I almost bought the one you won but now my plan changed I have a rare esquire to buyrdavidson wrote:Two on the market in less than 6 weeks. When it rains, it pours! (Hey, for lefties, sometimes two of anything qualifies as 'rain!')
Thanks!rdavidson wrote:Good luck with the sale! I can't afford two.
Hope i wont feel the same. I know i will regret It someday but i am selling to buy one of my dream guitar...Matt R. wrote:Very cool. And this makes me wanna throw myself in front of a gas truck for selling my Musicmaster a while back.
The last lefty went for 2600 something. It came with no ohsc and It appears that It was far from being ALL original which this one isYolly111 wrote:Guys, excuse my ignorance but how can there be such a difference between a righty and a lefty in terms of price.
See this one $1000 or make offer for a 1971 righty:
https://reverb.com/item/466317-vintage- ... r-sunburst
Thx
I just sold my 72 p bass for 2300. P bass and j bass are really common while mustang bass are not. As I said earlier it took years to many to find one. On top of that we're talking about my mustang therefore I can list for the price I want isn't it? It already had a lot of interest and I am sure it won't stay here for a whileJNasty wrote:But is the lefty premium here worth more than 2X the righty price?
Genrally, with vintage J and P basses, much higher-end, the lefty premium is like 25% max, no?
So, why pay '73 J prices for a Mustang?
A righty would pay 2X for a '73 Jazz vs. a '73 Mustang.
Seems like an odd distortion.
The only lefty premium I have ever seen this big was for a 60s T-bird (which is really a unicorn), that sat at $12K for more than a year (with a celebrity owner).
Am I nuts in this line of thinking?
-JA
Well, lh precision bass and jlh azz bass pop up all the time on ebay, reverb etc while mustang bass are extremely rare. I have been looking for one since 2007. Apart from the one that recently sold for about 2650, it is the only one i've seen for sale in 8 years. Daytonnas and daydates are common, porsche 914 and 911 too, left handed mustang bass are not. I guess your analogy does not work in this caseJNasty wrote:I'm not critiquing the bass, or the model.
As noted, I collect a lot of things and watch a lot of markets.
And it's very rare when the "entry level" of something ends up selling for more than the premium version 40 years later.
I mean, it happens, but this is sort of like - to make a somewhat fair analogy - if a 73 Porsche 914 sold for more (or the same) to a '73 911, or a 73 Rolex Datejust sold for more (or the same) than a 73 Daytona, etc. In both those cases, the premium model sells for like 10X the entry level model.
Now, sure, if there were like 100 lefty '73 Jazz basses for every lefty Mustangs, that would justify it. And that just might be the case.
But, I also know markets are exactly that, and are made by what people are willing to pay