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jlpicard
Member Username: jlpicard
Post Number: 67 Registered: 7-2002
| Posted on Wednesday, November 26, 2003 - 12:28 pm: | |
Has anyone had the opportunity to compare a MK deluxe w/series I/II electronics, to a Standard SeriesI/II? I'm curious about the influence of the hollow vs. solid core construction.( all else being equal,ie. woods, scale length etc.) Also has anyone had experience with a vermilion core vs. mahogany? I'm reading stuff lately about Vermillion giving a little more warmth to the low end? thanks, Mike
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malthumb
Intermediate Member Username: malthumb
Post Number: 123 Registered: 5-2002
| Posted on Wednesday, November 26, 2003 - 1:08 pm: | |
Bass balanced on my foot: Series I semi-hollow, walnut top and back, mahogany core. Bass strapped up: Mark King Deluxe solid body w/ Series II electronics, cocobolo top / back, maple accent laminates, mahogany core. The Series I has a very piano like tone. That's the unsolicited comment I get from almost everyone who's laid a hand on it. The Mark King / Series II is a tone monster. Very low and smooth lows, tight crisp highs. Sounds like you're playing through a chorus effect all the time. Personally I think this is more a function of the cocobolo than the solid body construction. The Series I always has a fairly crisp tone to it, no matter how I set the controls. There is just this underlying precision to the tone. The MK/SII can be as aggressive or as mellow as I want it to be. Don't know if I've helped.
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jlpicard
Member Username: jlpicard
Post Number: 68 Registered: 7-2002
| Posted on Thursday, November 27, 2003 - 8:53 pm: | |
Thanks for the insight.Is the Mark King a 32" scale?the reason ffor asking is that I happen to own a walnut Europa and a cocobolo Distillate.Same basic electronics package.They are very different tone wise.The Europa has a very tight, clear and distinct low end with an easily attainable slap tone,While the Distillate has a warm round bottom but is harder to dial in a good slap tone.Mica tells me it is a function of the scale length but Mark King has no problems with a medium scale(series electonics aside),I wonder if the cocobolo has something to do with it(or just my idea of a good slap tone)?! |
malthumb
Intermediate Member Username: malthumb
Post Number: 124 Registered: 5-2002
| Posted on Friday, November 28, 2003 - 7:15 am: | |
Capt. P., Both basses are 34" scale. It is easier to dial in a slap tone on the 4 string walnut Series I, but I can certainly get a really nice slap tone on the 5 string cocobolo Series II. If I want it to sound close to Marcus Miller (as if!!) then I use the 4 string. The slap tone on the 5 string is excellent, but remember what I refer to as "the chorus effect". I think Mica has described cocobolo as having a complex sound. IME, it sorta sounds like you're hearing 2 or more fundamentals. It's tough to get the "tight, clear..." sound on the high end string snaps when I'm thumpin' on it. Again, not impossible, just tougher than on the Series I because I have to suppress some of the "chorusing" to get glass shattering highs without some lows mixing in. Peace, James |
dfung60
Junior Username: dfung60
Post Number: 22 Registered: 5-2002
| Posted on Sunday, November 30, 2003 - 10:53 pm: | |
Can't beat malthumb's answer since he owns exactly the kind of basses you're asking about, but it is a kind of funny question. A regular MK Deluxe will sound quite different than a Series bass because the signature basses don't have Series electronics. That means humbuckers instead of the two single coil Series pickups with canceller. Mark King was playing a Series bass, not a MK. The Series semi-hollow construction makes the basses sound really different when not plugged in but I don't know that they would be that different amplified. The sound is dominated by the thru-body neck structure anyway. I seem to remember Alembic saying that pretty explicitly when I had my first Series built and went to the factory to pick woods - the neck woods matter a lot (not in my case, as this was a graphite neck bass), but the body woods were sort of "paint". I don't think that was meant to say there was no effect, but that it was subtle compared to the neck structure. The Series body still has a very thick top and back plate (must be 3/8"), so the acoustic effect is pretty minimal. Both the cut out areas are pretty filled with electronics as well. I don't know about malthumb's custom, but by the time you route for the second circuit board, even a solid body instrument is getting pretty hollow. Of course, that wouldn't be the case with the humbuckers. |
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