Squire P-Bass has a Thinner Narrower Neck. I'm guessing for the Smaller hands of the Students. Lovin' the Maple Fretboard and That New J-Pax style is Wild. Very Cool.
I've decided to start my own guitar company to rival Fender, Gibson, Ibanez and the rest. It's going to be called Lab Skeleton Guitars. My designs will be revolutionary. I'm working on the first design now. I'll post pictures here on youtube shortly.
I like the design of that bass.maybe a different scratch plate. I have a 2014 Squier VM P bass. Plays great, sounds great and best of all it probably the lightest bass I have, neck is very thin. Maybe I will put better pups in it but the pups really are fine. My 2004 Squier P plays good but pups could be better. The Squier Affinitys are OK for a beginner or a back up. Just my opinion.
What do you think of the Sire P & J bases, passive, or their active versions as starter basses for somebody with a bit more of a budget? They have some nice looking vintage ones with the block inlays.
ive not played one to be fair, i dont like paying for binding and block inlays though , id try out a few and pick the best playing,feeling and sounding one.the fender/squier will ALWAYS be fashionable/in demand
@@MADMALKO I should have just picked up a Squire back in the 90s. Instead, I ended up with a marlin sidewinder. It's one saving grace was it was loud for a passive bass. Everything else about it was pretty naff. So I have no real beef with Squire basses. I'm thinking more somebody looking at a Mexican Fender bass or the Markus Miller Sire line of jazz/P basses. Sire Marcus Miller V5 2nd Generation in sunburst with block inlays is only £399 new. That's not crazy for a nice-looking bass that'll pretty much do whatever you need for most stuff, and it's not the £750ish you'd pay for a Fender Player II precision bass, say. If you're young, skint, and want a decent starter bass, Squire is the job. You'd prob get a decent starter bass deal at a lot of places for about £300ish.
@@theressomelovelyfilthdownh4329 yes i was gonna mention marlin...the harley benton of the 80s..ive only got 1 bass that cost over 300, id start on a used squier , learn how to set it up and play it then spend a while hunting for a higher end bass in the used ads
sorry theres no live stream tonight, will make up for it next week
Squire P-Bass has a Thinner Narrower Neck. I'm guessing for the Smaller hands of the Students. Lovin' the Maple Fretboard and That New J-Pax style is Wild. Very Cool.
Cool 🤘
That bass looks really good 🤘🍺
I've decided to start my own guitar company to rival Fender, Gibson, Ibanez and the rest. It's going to be called Lab Skeleton Guitars. My designs will be revolutionary. I'm working on the first design now. I'll post pictures here on youtube shortly.
I like the design of that bass.maybe a different scratch plate. I have a 2014 Squier VM P bass. Plays great, sounds great and best of all it probably the lightest bass I have, neck is very thin. Maybe I will put better pups in it but the pups really are fine. My 2004 Squier P plays good but pups could be better. The Squier Affinitys are OK for a beginner or a back up. Just my opinion.
Nice video,where and how did you get al these guitars?But nice stream
wheeling and dealing for 20 yrs and fixing broken ones, i could have one new les paul standard instead of all you see here, i dont regret that choice
What do you think of the Sire P & J bases, passive, or their active versions as starter basses for somebody with a bit more of a budget? They have some nice looking vintage ones with the block inlays.
ive not played one to be fair, i dont like paying for binding and block inlays though , id try out a few and pick the best playing,feeling and sounding one.the fender/squier will ALWAYS be fashionable/in demand
@@MADMALKO
I should have just picked up a Squire back in the 90s. Instead, I ended up with a marlin sidewinder. It's one saving grace was it was loud for a passive bass. Everything else about it was pretty naff. So I have no real beef with Squire basses.
I'm thinking more somebody looking at a Mexican Fender bass or the Markus Miller Sire line of jazz/P basses. Sire Marcus Miller V5 2nd Generation in sunburst with block inlays is only £399 new. That's not crazy for a nice-looking bass that'll pretty much do whatever you need for most stuff, and it's not the £750ish you'd pay for a Fender Player II precision bass, say.
If you're young, skint, and want a decent starter bass, Squire is the job. You'd prob get a decent starter bass deal at a lot of places for about £300ish.
@@theressomelovelyfilthdownh4329 yes i was gonna mention marlin...the harley benton of the 80s..ive only got 1 bass that cost over 300, id start on a used squier , learn how to set it up and play it then spend a while hunting for a higher end bass in the used ads
I was going to ask why it's called a p bass but I Google d it . Cool. Phil lynott used one I believe
yes the "p" stands for phil lynott!