9/17/2023 0 Comments Mehbob mere pksong fiza movi![]() Originally released in 1960 as the “Deluxe Model,” it was renamed the Jazz Bass as Fender felt that the narrow, more rounded neck would appeal to jazz musicians. With two single coil pickups, the original control plate had stacked volume/tone control knobs, one for each pickup. So why try out this option, when it only lasted in production for about two years? In 1961, the current control setup of volume-volume-tone was introduced, and in 1962 the stacked volume-tone configuration was taken out of production. I was curious myself, and after having some “discretionary income” come in, decided to buy all the parts to wire up one and drop it into my Jazz Bass (one of the many things I love about the Jazz is the ability to easily swap out parts. With $80 in parts and a PDF of the wiring diagram, I quickly soldered it together, and dropped it into the Jazz. ![]() I also figured that since I was going “old school” with this, what better pickups to drop in than the Antiquity for Jazz Bass set. Unlike the current control configuration where the tone control is the master for both pickups, the stacked volume-tone setup allows you more tonal variety for each individual pickup. You can fine tune each pickups’ individual sound before blending them together. ![]() ![]() I found that I would tend to make the bridge pickup brighter than normal, which provided more focus to the darkness of the neck pickup. ![]()
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