I picked up a sire p5 a few weeks ago and I can't get over how awesome and incredible this bass is. The roasted maple rolled neck, the surf green just brings me joy every time I play it, and that's every day.
Just ordered the V3P...in satin red no less. I couldn't not after watching you have such a blast playing it. At nearly 60 years it'll be my first bass...my first instrument period actually. Been wanting to learn the electric bass since first hearing the Barnie Miller theme song in the 70s.
I prefer passive. It gives you a more neutral starting point to shape your sound. Nothing against active, different tools for different applications. These look amazing for the price -- excellent playing.
It would actually be more accurate to say that active electronics give a more neutral starting point, passive electronics lean more towards the low end due to pickup wind requirements and thus are further from neutral than active's more flat freq response. But it's closer to classic tones, and requires far less setup via eq/effects if you're going for a lower end sound so it's understandable what you mean. Any other bass tone though you will struggle to achieve without active.
@@transcendkira not really more neutral, because you’re already activating a separate set of electronics when you switch to active. It’s more flexible, sure, but the best starting point for tone shaping will always be passive.
I recently purchased a V5 vintage white bass and I absolutely love it. The construction and sound quality are both excellent, making it a truly gorgeous instrument.
The "R" is for rosewood fretboard to distinguish the R versions from the maple fretboard versions. Good video of these great value sounding value for money bases - my next bass is a Marcus Miller Sire for definite!
I've always preferred passive basses. Mainly cause I'm lazy and can't be bothered with the battery even though I would only need to change it like once every 6 months.
This exactly, I have an ibanez EHB1005 with the EQ in there but I choose to run it passive because I am too lazy changing the battery every 2 months, I play the damn thing so much
@alastor1052 I have the exact same bass and you're right its just a extra hassel, I use my basses in recording situations only so my need for changing batteries varies but honestly... I can't be bothered.
never changed the battery in like 2 years. and I'm a daily player for several hours. it's just sometimes that I think: yeah, maybe i should change the battery just o be sure. never head an a Active bass gone out of power.
@@M.Holland Not sure how big your active circuit is inside your bass but the Ibanez EHB1005 has a 3 band EQ with a sweepable mid control. The first time my battery ran out I decided to open up the back cavity to take a look at the circuitry and found something resembling a Raspberry Pi computer in there. The circuit is huge, and so is its need for batteries :)
I just go a V5 Fretless 5 string a week ago today, and I'm in love. THE NECK IS THE BEST I'VE EVER PLAYED. If I were to get a fretted Sire, it would be an 8 series or dx, V or P as they look and sound amazing.
I got the old v5 5 strings when one popped up. Beautiful wood, amazing sound. Yes, I would have preferred an active one, but waiting times were insane and… just the looks was amazing. Looking forward to watching this.
13:20 while the wood makes a difference, compared to the v5 line it looks like the v3's bridge pickup is closer to the neck pickup. So in a 60's jazz bass configuration, rather than the 70's jazz bass style of the v5. So it would seem that the v3 is a passive version of the v7 and the v5r a passive version of the sire v8 as far as pickup configuration goes? Never noticed that before, interesting
I have a passive P5. I'm sure the Sire preamps are great, but the sheer playability of a Sire is still stellar. Those roasted necks are just so nice to play too!
@@seancca I edited it for clarity because I realised how you misunderstood me. No insult intended. For the record, it previously said "I'm sure the preamp is great, but [...]".
I've had 4 sires... Killa basses... The V5 (5 sting passive) is good, I still prefer the V7 vintage (4 string active). The fretless is also really high quality with a super slick ebony board.... The finish of all of them is amazing... I've owned heaps of basses over the years, like custom shop fenders that included the 5 string Marcus Miller signature bass, German Warwick's, Spector's, prestige SDGRs, American CIJ and MIM fenders. But My V7 vintage is my favourite bass off all time.. I got a super light one. I will never sell it... I havn't liked the sound of the P versions so much though. But they play great..
the R is for Rosewood. Previous Sire basses had roasted maple fingerboards (and necks). Also, Sire already made passive basses, the P5 and the D5 in the Precision bass range (I have the D5 since April 2022 and it's amazing). You even made a video about the Sire D5 7 months ago...
Sounds boss as fu%k to me. I'm not a real bass player, but I've played bass in a couple of bands, and certainly wish I had something approaching the quality of this instrument when I was fighting with the cheapie one I played back in the 90s. The Sire basses that I have played at my local dealer are incredible instruments, great sounding and playing basses.
Exactly my thoughts! I just ordered a passive V5 which I’ll be running into the DI of my Heritage 1073EQ followed by a touch of compression from an 1176 Bluey. 🤩
Honestly thinking about buying one just for that purpose. I have a Lakland skyline thats horribly but intentionally set up with a mean rasp for live playing. Plus its 3 band. I need a straight ahead passive, quiet jazz for recording. This might be it.
I've just got the v3 3P in red and it s inredible for the price..I already own V3 5strings 2ND gen and it's as good as my fender mexico if not more...even the V3P Ifind it as good as a fender player serie..some features are incredibles for the price, the finish is very clean, the sound is top!! and it came already set up and surprisingly already almost in exact tune justone semi tone below standard tunning..amazing..I own several expensive sbasses but those can rivalise easily...best ratio price/quality ever!!great...and even thou I love my Sire active bass, I always preferred passive ones and the V3 5 is my only active but the preamp is very good!! but nonetheless, I think I prefer the V3 P now!!
Sire basses can not say enough good things about the company and the people who work for them. the quality and craftsmanship are top notch. their price point they are really given Ibanez as a run for its money.
Honestly, all my basses are either active or have higher output humbuckers. While I like the simplicity (and not having to worry about a battery lives) which you get with passive basses, I tend to find that there is something missing from the sound. I think it may be down to the output levels (driving the pre-amp section of my amplifier) as even keeping the tone in it's neutral position makes a difference for me. As is, the only passive bass I have (that hasn't been modified with an active pre-amp) is my old Epiphone Thunderbird bass.
tengo un bajo Marcus Miller Sire P5 y por el precio que tiene es increíble, esta muy por encima de squier que seria la gama similar de precio a la altura perfectamente de fender mex
I don't have the chance to A/B them but how would you compare the passive only V3s to the normal V3s but in Passive mode? Are the only passive ones better sounding compared to the V3s in passive mode or about the same minus the pre amp?
I most of the times don't using preamp anyway... the sound is so good for my purpose (funky - finger) so I don't need preamp. I think preamp is good to get that MM slap sound with lots of nice hi mids
Really nice video quality in this video. Anybody from the andertons crew mind answering which camera gear they are using for this video please! Thanks! *Specifically the camera on the close up clips*
i dont know if i should Sell my fender player/MiM jazzbass and get one of these instead, love that they have rosewood and roasted neck + the rolled fretboard edges, block inlays, binding etc mods id do tho are probably pickups and pickguard but its alot cheaper aswell so it might be worth it??? idk bit sad that i bought the fender last year and now recently been more interested in this
How are the tuners? That is the only complaint I’ve read online. And do they seem different from the v3 to the v5? I’m shopping and that is my only concern as there don’t appear to be any after market tuners that are direct replacements.
I had the V3p in Black for Chritsmas, it's absolutly awesome, I had a Ibanez SR300e before and for just a bit more money the difference is huge, I feel like playing on a premium instrument ( except maybe for the pickup but they're still good, not hard to change is I need too one day ). I've heard good thing from G&L too but the Sire V3p is a monster !
Would anyone happen to know what tone capacitor is in the P5R? .022 or .047? It’s kinda confusing because the standard P5 is a .022, but the V5 standard is .047. Thanks.
The problem with most preamps is that most of them set their eqs at specific values, some are sweepable but most are not. So an engineer somewhere has decided that I should have (for example) a low-mid control at 600hz, but they don't know what strings/amp/cabinet I'm using, they don't know what style I'm playing, or what sound I'm trying to get. Probably in some cases they don't even know what specific bass their little preamp is going into. So, with all those variables, any given preamp being suitable for any given player's needs is a total shot in the dark, and I've given up. Nobody needs a preamp that doesn't suit them and I've decided that preamps don't suit me.
The bass and treble bands on your amp also probably aren't sweepable. Most amps I've seen only have a sweepable midrange. Or maybe you have a 10-band graphic EQ, but those also aren't sweepable. So can you explain to me how having fewer fixed bands is somehow preferable? Your argument is that because the EQ bands can't be adjusted exactly how you want them, you'd rather not have them. But you're using exactly the same tool on your amp. You're just making it so you have fewer frequency ranges to choose from. No one is saying you have to use every available EQ band. It's just more options at your disposal.
I own two active and two passive basses. I'm not advocating for one over the other. I'm just saying that your argument makes no sense. You're essentially arguing that because a built-in EQ is imprecise, you'd rather not have it. But then you presumably go on to use the same imprecise tools on your amp. So your argument is essentially that having fewer choices is somehow better. By the way, even if you have fully sweepable EQs on your amp, my argument stands. Taking away three options isn't somehow getting you closer to the tone you need.
The spammer and scammers are flooding every post in the comments. Heads up I got 1,000 messages on youtube and isntagram going back 5 years for post on Anderton videos.
If you want a Pbass tone, where the only tonal variety is through the use of a rather narrow band tone knob, then go for it. It sounds just like a real Pbass. I have a Pbass and can get those tones. I'm so glad I got a Stingray for the greater variety and more modern sound. Pbasses have had their day, they were the kings of many genres of music for many decades. I don't get the attraction anymore, we have high quality mics and amps these days and everything is recorded digitally, idk why you would ever take one into a studio unless you wanted that specific, middly, unbassy sound.
because active basses sound SHITE, always , Dynamics are poor , top end always sounds nasty as fuck, Passive wins hands down every single time. to much output on an active bass and impedance is all off for most amps, just get a really good Di and you can't go wrong with a passives bass, plus every active bass I've ever had including a Fodera was to noisy . P Bass Wins hands down every time , occasionally a jazz but P is the Daddy
This is basically a commercial for both Sire and Anderton’s, so while I appreciate the content, I don’t appreciate having to watch two advertisements before the video will start, and then getting hit with two more advertisements before I even hit the three minute mark of the video… Which of course is also an advertisement lol! No better way to remind me that I don’t need another bass and that I should get off the Internet and practice, so I guess thanks for that.
just bought my first musical instrument ever. A Sire V5 Alder natural 4 string. Super excited to dive in and learn.
I'm so happy for you! Hey I'm somewhere around 1,000 year's old and been playing Bass for about 900 years. LoL. You make an awesome choice!
You made a good choice for first bass! It's solid performance and I really want to get the P5 cause I'm after more of an old timey kinda tone
I picked up a sire p5 a few weeks ago and I can't get over how awesome and incredible this bass is. The roasted maple rolled neck, the surf green just brings me joy every time I play it, and that's every day.
I used to tell everyone how great of a bass it is for the money. Now I just say it's a great bass regardless of price. Truly an amazing bass
Just ordered the V3P...in satin red no less. I couldn't not after watching you have such a blast playing it. At nearly 60 years it'll be my first bass...my first instrument period actually. Been wanting to learn the electric bass since first hearing the Barnie Miller theme song in the 70s.
I'm 59, and I remember the Barney Miller theme song well! Mega cool. I'm a bass player. Are you sticking with learning how to play your bass?
I think the R refers to the rosewood fretboard. Most sires have roasted maple fretboards but these ones don't.
Yes
how does rosewood compare to maple on a bass?
@@jammyd33 honestly i'm not sure i think the darker woods tend to be warmer in tone but idk don't quote me on that
Exactly
I prefer passive. It gives you a more neutral starting point to shape your sound. Nothing against active, different tools for different applications. These look amazing for the price -- excellent playing.
💯
But you can switch the active ones to passive as well.
@@emiki6yeeeeaaaaahhhh but who wants to do that
It would actually be more accurate to say that active electronics give a more neutral starting point, passive electronics lean more towards the low end due to pickup wind requirements and thus are further from neutral than active's more flat freq response.
But it's closer to classic tones, and requires far less setup via eq/effects if you're going for a lower end sound so it's understandable what you mean. Any other bass tone though you will struggle to achieve without active.
@@transcendkira not really more neutral, because you’re already activating a separate set of electronics when you switch to active. It’s more flexible, sure, but the best starting point for tone shaping will always be passive.
I recently purchased a V5 vintage white bass and I absolutely love it. The construction and sound quality are both excellent, making it a truly gorgeous instrument.
Great musical playing from Lee, as always 👍
The "R" is for rosewood fretboard to distinguish the R versions from the maple fretboard versions. Good video of these great value sounding value for money bases - my next bass is a Marcus Miller Sire for definite!
I've always preferred passive basses. Mainly cause I'm lazy and can't be bothered with the battery even though I would only need to change it like once every 6 months.
This exactly, I have an ibanez EHB1005 with the EQ in there but I choose to run it passive because I am too lazy changing the battery every 2 months, I play the damn thing so much
@alastor1052 I have the exact same bass and you're right its just a extra hassel, I use my basses in recording situations only so my need for changing batteries varies but honestly... I can't be bothered.
@@The404Erorr nah you're absolutely right. It does sound pretty killer in passive mode still so I don't need the active EQ
never changed the battery in like 2 years. and I'm a daily player for several hours. it's just sometimes that I think: yeah, maybe i should change the battery just o be sure. never head an a Active bass gone out of power.
@@M.Holland Not sure how big your active circuit is inside your bass but the Ibanez EHB1005 has a 3 band EQ with a sweepable mid control. The first time my battery ran out I decided to open up the back cavity to take a look at the circuitry and found something resembling a Raspberry Pi computer in there. The circuit is huge, and so is its need for batteries :)
The R stands for rosewood. And that V3 sounds fantastic
I just go a V5 Fretless 5 string a week ago today, and I'm in love. THE NECK IS THE BEST I'VE EVER PLAYED. If I were to get a fretted Sire, it would be an 8 series or dx, V or P as they look and sound amazing.
Crazy how good these sound for the money. That P5 sounds fantastic
He seems so nervous on his own lol. Reminds me of Spud's interview scene on Trainspotting.
I got the old v5 5 strings when one popped up. Beautiful wood, amazing sound. Yes, I would have preferred an active one, but waiting times were insane and… just the looks was amazing. Looking forward to watching this.
13:20 while the wood makes a difference, compared to the v5 line it looks like the v3's bridge pickup is closer to the neck pickup. So in a 60's jazz bass configuration, rather than the 70's jazz bass style of the v5. So it would seem that the v3 is a passive version of the v7 and the v5r a passive version of the sire v8 as far as pickup configuration goes? Never noticed that before, interesting
Got a P8 5 Strings and absolutely love it.
I have a passive P5. I'm sure the Sire preamps are great, but the sheer playability of a Sire is still stellar. Those roasted necks are just so nice to play too!
if yo have a P5 you have no preamp.
@@seancca I know. That's what passive means
@@eskilseter you edited your comment to now make it seem like I can’t read. Real nice.
@@seancca I edited it for clarity because I realised how you misunderstood me. No insult intended. For the record, it previously said "I'm sure the preamp is great, but [...]".
Dare I say that my Sire P5R is the most comfortable, and my favorite bass that I’ve ever owned?
Great bass.
@@donke1165 -I’m afraid that I don’t know.
That P looks super nice!
I've had 4 sires... Killa basses... The V5 (5 sting passive) is good, I still prefer the V7 vintage (4 string active). The fretless is also really high quality with a super slick ebony board.... The finish of all of them is amazing... I've owned heaps of basses over the years, like custom shop fenders that included the 5 string Marcus Miller signature bass, German Warwick's, Spector's, prestige SDGRs, American CIJ and MIM fenders. But My V7 vintage is my favourite bass off all time.. I got a super light one. I will never sell it... I havn't liked the sound of the P versions so much though. But they play great..
Gorgeous playing as always!
R4rosewood !! Just received my V5R5 and maaaan forget about your Fender and any offer fancy brands...it's now sire all way long !! Fekin love it 🤘❤️
Sire should also launch M8, with roasted neck
Love Lee, great player and personality, but is anyone else missing his banter with Nathan???
14:00 we need bobblehead Lee as an available option when purchasing a bass from Anderton's 😁
The “R” is for Rawk! 🤘🏻
the R is for Rosewood. Previous Sire basses had roasted maple fingerboards (and necks). Also, Sire already made passive basses, the P5 and the D5 in the Precision bass range (I have the D5 since April 2022 and it's amazing). You even made a video about the Sire D5 7 months ago...
I just got the EastCoast MB4, love it so far. Just learnt a Rammstein song. Still trying to learn what EQ controls are best for what I need.
Quite a number of name players use passive instruments.
Billy Sheehan
Tony Franklin
I prefer passive basses. No worries about batteries.
Geddy Lee
Steve Harris
Isn’t the r related to the rosewood board instead of the existing P5 which had a roasted maple board ( and is also passive) ?
I think you are right…R for Rare Rosewood😊
I hope there's going to be left handed options, the P5r looks amazing
I think the R is for rosewood fingerboard? Nice comparison!
Would really appreciate a direct comparison between the P5 / P5R to hear any difference between the roasted maple / Rosewood fingerboards😊
Sounds boss as fu%k to me. I'm not a real bass player, but I've played bass in a couple of bands, and certainly wish I had something approaching the quality of this instrument when I was fighting with the cheapie one I played back in the 90s. The Sire basses that I have played at my local dealer are incredible instruments, great sounding and playing basses.
I beg to differ, but if you've played in bands then HELL YEAH you're a bass player! :)
Hey Lee, the R, it stands for “rosewood”. I just want to make sure you know that.
These are amazing.
I don't care about how it sounds. You can change that. It's all about playability. And theyre basses are amazing to plau
For studio recording purposes would be great a passive bass if you have a class A preamp. V5 seems a good option.
Exactly my thoughts! I just ordered a passive V5 which I’ll be running into the DI of my Heritage 1073EQ followed by a touch of compression from an 1176 Bluey. 🤩
Honestly thinking about buying one just for that purpose. I have a Lakland skyline thats horribly but intentionally set up with a mean rasp for live playing. Plus its 3 band. I need a straight ahead passive, quiet jazz for recording. This might be it.
the rosewood really make a DIFFERECE JEEZ!!
I prefer passive basses, I like to shape the tone after with pedals/amp...
Of course they can. The bones of the MM bases are just fine the rest is just the electronics which are fine in the passive guitars.
I've just got the v3 3P in red and it s inredible for the price..I already own V3 5strings 2ND gen and it's as good as my fender mexico if not more...even the V3P Ifind it as good as a fender player serie..some features are incredibles for the price, the finish is very clean, the sound is top!! and it came already set up and surprisingly already almost in exact tune justone semi tone below standard tunning..amazing..I own several expensive sbasses but those can rivalise easily...best ratio price/quality ever!!great...and even thou I love my Sire active bass, I always preferred passive ones and the V3 5 is my only active but the preamp is very good!! but nonetheless, I think I prefer the V3 P now!!
v3p why ?
Sire basses can not say enough good things about the company and the people who work for them. the quality and craftsmanship are top notch. their price point they are really given Ibanez as a run for its money.
Sounds good, I'm interested in the 5 string version, I'd like to try one out!
I'm pretty sure the Red one has the 60s pickup placement and that's why it sounds so different
I stuck a John East J-tone01 preamp in my V5. Happy days.
I thought rosewood time was over… available in US ? Or just Europe ?
Honestly, all my basses are either active or have higher output humbuckers. While I like the simplicity (and not having to worry about a battery lives) which you get with passive basses, I tend to find that there is something missing from the sound. I think it may be down to the output levels (driving the pre-amp section of my amplifier) as even keeping the tone in it's neutral position makes a difference for me. As is, the only passive bass I have (that hasn't been modified with an active pre-amp) is my old Epiphone Thunderbird bass.
I'm considering getting a good bass pre-amp pedal, I think that gives you the best of both worlds and you can DI straight to the desk
I think the "R" stands for "rosewood", since the first "5" models had maple fretboards
Hey MAn !!
P5R..... R means...; rosewood !!?? isn't it ? ;) as usual great demo thnx
tengo un bajo Marcus Miller Sire P5 y por el precio que tiene es increíble, esta muy por encima de squier que seria la gama similar de precio a la altura perfectamente de fender mex
Can't wait unti the 5 string V5 in natural finish is back in stock
I don't have the chance to A/B them but how would you compare the passive only V3s to the normal V3s but in Passive mode? Are the only passive ones better sounding compared to the V3s in passive mode or about the same minus the pre amp?
I most of the times don't using preamp anyway... the sound is so good for my purpose (funky - finger) so I don't need preamp. I think preamp is good to get that MM slap sound with lots of nice hi mids
I think a P5R with flats and a P8 with rounds will be what I’ll end up getting
Really nice video quality in this video. Anybody from the andertons crew mind answering which camera gear they are using for this video please! Thanks!
*Specifically the camera on the close up clips*
i dont know if i should Sell my fender player/MiM jazzbass and get one of these instead, love that they have rosewood and roasted neck + the rolled fretboard edges, block inlays, binding etc
mods id do tho are probably pickups and pickguard but its alot cheaper aswell so it might be worth it??? idk bit sad that i bought the fender last year and now recently been more interested in this
How are the tuners? That is the only complaint I’ve read online. And do they seem different from the v3 to the v5? I’m shopping and that is my only concern as there don’t appear to be any after market tuners that are direct replacements.
They're different tuners on the v5 they're much better!
If Sire would be kind enough to make me a “Franken-bass”, it’d be the v5r in green, active preamp, but with a P pickup in the neck
I'm hoping for new colours in 2025 ? Just an all black P5R, that's all I want :)
doesn't the r stand for rosewood - i.e. on the neck?
It does
would you go for the V3P or the V5?
Is the v5r heavy?
Look beautiful, but not sure if the fretboard is real rosewood
I'd like to see the new blackstar travel bass
where's nathan??by the way.
on tour with Level 42 and Frost* I believe
What amp are you using?
I thought 'R' was for the rosewood fretboard.
R stands for rosewood
I think you guys need pull out the plug cable, how you kill the battery in 2-6 months. ;))
@Messag__me__AndertonsMusic_Co thanks . But I'm OK;)
R is for rosewood fingerboard.
Where are the 5 string versions?
The naming/numbering is difficult to figure out... Lol
Sire v3p or g&l tribute jb2?
I had the V3p in Black for Chritsmas, it's absolutly awesome, I had a Ibanez SR300e before and for just a bit more money the difference is huge, I feel like playing on a premium instrument ( except maybe for the pickup but they're still good, not hard to change is I need too one day ). I've heard good thing from G&L too but the Sire V3p is a monster !
Importen for the V5 is, that the Brige pu is neaer the brige. The only Sire how heave this 70th spacing.
"R" its from rosewood fret board
@@_Messag__me_mary_spende 🥳👍
I like the sound of the vp3 much better.
Waiting for 32 inch models…
Would anyone happen to know what tone capacitor is in the P5R? .022 or .047? It’s kinda confusing because the standard P5 is a .022, but the V5 standard is .047. Thanks.
R for rosewood.
thought R was for rosewood
R=Rosewood
Does the R not stand for roasted?
Where’s Nathan these days?
The problem with most preamps is that most of them set their eqs at specific values, some are sweepable but most are not. So an engineer somewhere has decided that I should have (for example) a low-mid control at 600hz, but they don't know what strings/amp/cabinet I'm using, they don't know what style I'm playing, or what sound I'm trying to get. Probably in some cases they don't even know what specific bass their little preamp is going into.
So, with all those variables, any given preamp being suitable for any given player's needs is a total shot in the dark, and I've given up. Nobody needs a preamp that doesn't suit them and I've decided that preamps don't suit me.
The bass and treble bands on your amp also probably aren't sweepable. Most amps I've seen only have a sweepable midrange. Or maybe you have a 10-band graphic EQ, but those also aren't sweepable.
So can you explain to me how having fewer fixed bands is somehow preferable? Your argument is that because the EQ bands can't be adjusted exactly how you want them, you'd rather not have them. But you're using exactly the same tool on your amp. You're just making it so you have fewer frequency ranges to choose from.
No one is saying you have to use every available EQ band. It's just more options at your disposal.
I own two active and two passive basses. I'm not advocating for one over the other. I'm just saying that your argument makes no sense. You're essentially arguing that because a built-in EQ is imprecise, you'd rather not have it. But then you presumably go on to use the same imprecise tools on your amp. So your argument is essentially that having fewer choices is somehow better.
By the way, even if you have fully sweepable EQs on your amp, my argument stands. Taking away three options isn't somehow getting you closer to the tone you need.
I wish the headstocks weren't so ugly! And the terrible logos! But they sound good! lol.
Bassy McLoopface!
The spammer and scammers are flooding every post in the comments. Heads up I got 1,000 messages on youtube and isntagram going back 5 years for post on Anderton videos.
I only own passive basses and guitars. Too much output and noise
Nice commercial.
The bassist is very good so, sadly, he’ll made anything sound great.
💙👊😎
Do you think they would do a little research before reviewing them?
Hey virgins!!! Guitarist here just checking in ! Cool video . Cool bass guitars 🙌
If you want a Pbass tone, where the only tonal variety is through the use of a rather narrow band tone knob, then go for it. It sounds just like a real Pbass. I have a Pbass and can get those tones. I'm so glad I got a Stingray for the greater variety and more modern sound. Pbasses have had their day, they were the kings of many genres of music for many decades. I don't get the attraction anymore, we have high quality mics and amps these days and everything is recorded digitally, idk why you would ever take one into a studio unless you wanted that specific, middly, unbassy sound.
because you can get a solid and quick recorded tone that any mix engineer can make to fit the track.
because active basses sound SHITE, always , Dynamics are poor , top end always sounds nasty as fuck, Passive wins hands down every single time. to much output on an active bass and impedance is all off for most amps, just get a really good Di and you can't go wrong with a passives bass, plus every active bass I've ever had including a Fodera was to noisy . P Bass Wins hands down every time , occasionally a jazz but P is the Daddy
only thing I don't like about these sires is the headstock it is so ugly lol
Why would anyone buy a fender copy, just by a squire of you can’t afford a high end fender bass
Because they think other brands make better fender instruments than fender does atm. I for one, agree with that sentiment 🤷🏻♂️
This is basically a commercial for both Sire and Anderton’s, so while I appreciate the content, I don’t appreciate having to watch two advertisements before the video will start, and then getting hit with two more advertisements before I even hit the three minute mark of the video… Which of course is also an advertisement lol! No better way to remind me that I don’t need another bass and that I should get off the Internet and practice, so I guess thanks for that.