An instrument can be made of virtually any material. My question was, other than weight, what is this specific materials function? Perhaps it's strength and durability. It's a beautiful instrument, regardless.
Other than making the instrument lighter, what "logic" does the "space age, formula 1 racing, windmill material, Marleux Logic" material add to the sound, resonance, sustain, performance...?
It has a very punchy sound, very powerful so to speak, it's as hard as steel but much lighter. Again, it's a new thing and best to try one if you can in person. I do can tell you that many great bass players played it during the NAMM show and we got nothing but positive feedback...
what logic is there in using wood on an electric bass? how does it affect tone, sustain, performance? Why is it used - because it's cheap and readily available, simple. Please tell me you don't believe in tone woods on an electric bass?
The worst impractical Guitar knob location. Seriously, that's just dumb. You're gonna really weird onstage, the audience is gonna wonder which knobs are you playing with back there?
Hi, it's actually very practical. Within a few minutes you know the knobs blindly. All you have to do is reach in the bass and change the sound to your liking, so easy, it's new but you adjust to it quickly.
@@ChrisFab2012 From an audience point of view it looks like you're playing with yourself instead of the guitar! Nothing should located near your nutsack. Hiding your hands onstage for any stage act is not good. They should always be visible.