Fender Jazz Bass
Encyclopedia : F : FE : FEN : Fender Jazz Bass
| Jazz Bass | |
| |
| Manufacturer | Fender |
| Period | 1960 — present |
| Construction | |
| Body type | Solid |
| Neck joint | Bolt-on |
| Woods | |
| Body | Alder - Ash is an Option |
| Neck | Maple |
| Fretboard | Rosewood or Maple |
| Hardware | |
| Bridge | Fixed |
| Pickup(s) | Two eight-pole pickups (2 magnets per string) connected in humbucking mode. |
| Colors available | |
| (Standard Series, as of 2005) Sunburst, Sage Green, Black, Blue Agave, Midnight Wine, Arctic White. (Deluxe Series): Montego black, Sunburst, Amber and Candy Tangerine | |
Background
First introduced in 1960 as the "Deluxe Model", it was renamed the Jazz Bass as Fender felt that its redesigned neck - narrower and more rounded than that of the Precision Bass - would appeal more to jazz musicians. The Jazz Bass has two bipolar "Jazz" pickups. As well as having a slightly different, less symmetrical and more contoured body shape (known in Fender advertising as the "offset waist contour" body), the Jazz Bass neck is noticeably narrower towards the nut than that of the more common Fender Precision Bass. Note that while the Precision Bass was styled similarly to the Stratocaster guitar, the Jazz Bass's styling was inspired more by another then-recently introduced series of Fender guitars, the Jazzmaster and Jaguar, with which the Jazz shared its offset body theme and other styling cues.
The original intention was to make it easier for upright-bass players to make the switch to electric bass. The original jazz bass had two stacked knob pots with volume and tone control for each pickup. Today it has three control knobs (instead of the two of the Fender Precision Bass), two of them controlling the volume of the two pickups and one for the overall tone. A fourth, push button control is available on some models of Jazz Bass produced after mid-2003. Known as the "S-1 Switch" this feature allows the pickups to operate in standard, parallel wiring, or alternatively in series wiring when the switch is depressed. While in series, both pickups function as a single unit with one volume control, giving the Jazz Bass a sound similar to the Precision Bass.
Design Features
Some "Deluxe" Jazz Bass models have been produced which feature active pickups rather than the traditional passive ones. In place of the usual single passive tone-rolloff control, these models have three separate equaliser controls: bass and treble response are controlled by the base and top, respectively, of a stacked double panpot, while midrange is controlled by a second panpot.
The Jazz Bass has a warm, fat, funky sound, with more high end than the Precision. This makes it ideal for pick playing as well as finger-style players (bassists who pluck the strings with their fingers rather than using a pick), and the sound of the fretless Jazz Bass became a classic of jazz fusion music thanks to famous bassist Jaco Pastorius. It also became a classic in the hands of bassists such as John Paul Jones of Led Zeppelin, Noel Redding, John Entwistle (in the 1960s) and Geddy Lee of Rush, Flea of the Red Hot Chili Peppers and Matt Freeman of punk band Rancid, to name but a few. Vintage examples from the 1960s and 1970s are now highly coveted and fetch four and five-figure sums - when they can be located - and the new models remain a popular choice today of Rock, Jazz, and Fusion musicians.
Other available styles
1. Classical vintage 1964 3-color sunburst with full dress pickup covers, thumb rest, and tortoise shell pickguard.
2. Candy Apple Red 5-string with standard tortoise shell pickguard.
3. Black 5-string version with white pearloid pickguard.
4. Custom tiger wood with tobacco sunburst and blond fingerboard.
5. Custom tigerwood 5-string version with aged cherry sunburst.
External links
- [BassPlaza.com] - Bass resource website.
- [Virtual Jazz Bass]
- [Fender]
- [BajoElectrico.com] - El Club del Bajista.
References
From Wikipedia, the Free Encyclopedia. Original article here. Support Wikipedia by contributing or donating.
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