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Rogue LX205B 5-String Series III Electric Bass Guitar
4.0 of 5 stars (123)
from  Product Price  $159.99
Mitchell EZB Super Short-Scale Acoustic-Electric Bass...
4.5 of 5 stars (3)
Product Price  $249.99
Mitchell MB100 Short-Scale Solidbody Electric Bass Guitar
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Product Price  $179.99
Ibanez SR505E 5-String Electric Bass Guitar
4.5 of 5 stars (2)
Product Price  $749.99
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Squier Affinity Series Limited-Edition PJ Bass Guitar
5.0 of 5 stars (6)
Product Price  $299.99
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Ernie Ball Music Man Bongo 5 HH BFR Electric Bass
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Product Price  $2,999.00
Or $62.48/month^ with 48 month
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Squier Limited-Edition Classic Vibe '70s Precision Bass...
4.5 of 5 stars (15)
Product Price  $479.99
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Fender American Professional II Limited-Edition Precision...
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Product Price  $1,849.99
Rogue LX200BF Fretless Series III Electric Bass Guitar
4.0 of 5 stars (102)
Product Price  $179.99
Fender American Ultra II Precision Bass Maple Fingerboard
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Product Price  $2,199.99
Ibanez SR500E Electric Bass
5.0 of 5 stars (1)
Product Price  $699.99
Rogue LX200B Series III Electric Bass Guitar
4.5 of 5 stars (78)
Product Price  $169.99
Rogue LX200BL Left-Handed Series III Electric Bass Guitar
4.0 of 5 stars (30)
Product Price  $179.99
Sterling by Music Man StingRay Ray5HH Limited-Edition...
5.0 of 5 stars (8)
Product Price  $449.99
Sterling by Music Man StingRay Ray4 Electric Bass Guitar
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Product Price  $349.99
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Squier Sonic Bronco Limited-Edition Bass Guitar
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Product Price  $229.99
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Fender Player II Precision Bass Maple Fingerboard
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Product Price  $799.99
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Fender Adam Clayton Jazz Bass Electric Bass Guitar
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Product Price  $2,199.99
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Ernie Ball Music Man StingRay5 Special HH 5-String Electric...
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from  Product Price  $2,699.00
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Fender Limited-Edition Mark Hoppus Jaguar Bass Guitar
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Product Price  $1,399.99
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Fender American Performer Precision Bass Rosewood...
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Product Price  $1,499.99
Ibanez EHB1505MS 5-String Multi-Scale Ergonomic Headless...
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Product Price  $1,799.99
$1,583.99
Ibanez EHB1506MS 6-String Multi-Scale Ergonomic Headless...
5.0 of 5 stars (1)
Product Price  $1,899.99
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Fender Kingman V2 Acoustic-Electric Bass
5.0 of 5 stars (2)
Product Price  $549.99
$599.99
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Ernie Ball Music Man StingRay5 Special H 5-String Electric...
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Ernie Ball Music Man Stingray Special 5 HH Limited-Edition...
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Spector NS-5XL Quilted Maple Top 5-String Electric Bass
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Product Price  $6,999.99
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Fender Player II Jazz Bass Plus Top Limited-Edition Bass...
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Product Price  $829.99
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Fender Custom Shop Vintage Custom 1951 Precision Bass
5.0 of 5 stars (1)
Product Price  $4,950.00
Ibanez SR500EPB Electric Bass Guitar
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Product Price  $749.99
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Fender Custom Shop Limited-Edition Custom Jazz Bass Heavy...
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Product Price  $5,450.00
Mitchell MB200 Modern Rock Bass With Active EQ
4.5 of 5 stars (20)
Product Price  $229.99
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Jackson JS Series Concert Bass Minion JS1X Short-Scale...
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from  Product Price  $199.99
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Fender American Professional II Jazz Bass Rosewood...
5.0 of 5 stars (1)
Product Price  $1,849.99
$1,899.99
$1,479.99
Ibanez GSR205SM 5-String Electric Bass
5.0 of 5 stars (4)
Product Price  $349.99
48-Month Financing*
Gibson Gene Simmons G2 Thunderbird Bass Guitar
5.0 of 5 stars (1)
Product Price  $2,799.00
Or $58.32/month^ with 48 month
financing* Limited Time. Details
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Fender Vintera II '60s Bass VI
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Product Price  $1,399.99
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Fender Geddy Lee Signature Jazz Bass
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Product Price  $1,249.99
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Fender Custom Shop Limited-Edition '58 Precision Bass Relic
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Product Price  $4,750.00
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Fender Limited-Edition American Ultra Precision Bass Guitar
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Product Price  $2,799.99
$1,791.99

About Bass Guitars

Try to imagine the sound of music with no bass instrument. Without the low throb and pulse building a foundation for everything else, it wouldn’t be compelling. For decades, in jazz and pop, the bottom end came from the upright, double bass. Since the early 1950’s, most of that has shifted to the far more portable bass guitar. From the earliest Fender electric bass to the full gamut of builders today, the choices encompass instruments that fit any style of music and any budget. Musician’s Friend offers a huge selection of bass guitars from makers like Ibanez, Gibson, Spector, Ernie Ball Music Man, G&L, Hofner, Squier, Warwick, Epiphone, Mitchell, Guild, Gretsch, Lakland, Fodera and many others. We also offer a selection of double bass instruments for those who choose to swing that way.

Types of Basses

Electric Basses

Electric basses are available in several different types. While most are solid-body instruments, there are chambered, semi-hollow and full hollowbody versions, both fretted and fretless. Another variation is scale length. Long-scale basses (usually the 34” standard set by Leo Fender with the Precision Bass) have a more piano-like attack and articulation. This is due in large part to the higher string tension. Short-scale basses, like the Fender Mustang and the Hofner violin bass, are more “finger-friendly” with a warmer, somewhat rounder tone. Short-scale instruments are also great for younger players and players with smaller hands.

Extended Range and Multi-scale Basses

These 5, 6, 7 and. 8-string instruments offer several advantages. The additional strings, both low and high, enable a wider range of available notes in a single hand position. They also enable more flexibility in soloing and deliver the thunderous low-frequency sound in demand for modern metal. A recent development has been the multi-scale bass, in which the bridge and nut are slanted such that each string has a different scale length. This has several ergonomic advantages for players, as well as improving intonation.

Acoustic Basses

For centuries, this was the territory of the symphonic double bass. In the early 1970s, perhaps inspired by the Guitarron Mexicano (literally “big Mexican guitar), manufacturers began to make acoustic versions of the 4-string bass guitar. These became increasingly popular thanks to MTV’s Unplugged series, where they were heavily used.

The History of the Bass

The genesis of the bass stringed instrument lies in the mid-16th century in northern Italy where the first versions of what was to become the double bass were crafted. Also known as the contrabass, bass viol, bull fiddle and, in more modern times, doghouse bass, early versions appear to be derived from the 6-string viola da gamba, rather than the violin. While long a staple of the symphony orchestra, in the early 20th century, it began to be used in popular music, most notably replacing the tuba in the new musical style of jazz.

Although the first electric bass guitar was invented in 1936, by Paul Tulmarc, and marketed under the Audiovox brand, it wasn’t widely adopted. We had to wait until 1951 for it to become an integral part of the musical world. That was the year that Leo Fender introduced the world to the Precision Bass. Legend has it that Fender built it to enable guitar players to have an instrument they could double on, as big bands gave way to smaller combos. By the end of the 1950s, the electric bass guitar was surpassing the double bass in numbers, thanks to the explosive popularity of rock and roll. Even jazz players, like Wes Montgomery’s brother Monk, were swapping in their double basses for the convenience and versatility of the bass guitar. By this time, many other manufacturer’s were beginning to add bass guitars to their product lines. This burst of innovation had given us, by the end of the ‘50s, many of the features that carry over too today’s basses. The first thru-neck bass was produced in 1957, for example, and manufacturers like Danelectro, Kay, Burns, Hofner and Gibson offered a variety of scale lengths, pickup configurations and body styles, many of which are still in use today.

Throughout the 1960s and ‘70s, the instrument matured, from the introduction of the Fender Jazz Bass in 1960, Gibson’s short-scale EB-3 and long-scale Thunderbird a couple of years later. By the early ’70s, the boutique bass market was beginning to appear, starting with the startlingly advanced based Alembic began building with active electronics and new materials, like carbon graphite prominently features. Music Man, founded by Forrest White, Tom Walker and Leo Fender introduced the Stingray bass in 1973, one of the first regular production basses to feature active electronics. A year previously, George Fullerton, another Fender alumnus had worked with Ernie Ball to develop the Earthwood bass, the first successful acoustic bass guitar, and the connection between former Fender designers and Ernie Ball led the way to today’s Ernie Ball Music Man line, where the Stingray is still available. By the mid-‘70s, we started to see the first 5- and 6-string basses from Alembic, Tobias and other boutique builders and by the end of the decade, this extended range basses were beginning to spill into regular production instruments.

The 1980’s saw Ned Steinberger develop the headless bass and pioneer further use of modern high-tech materials in guitar construction. It was also the birth of new brands like Warwick, Spector, Fodera and many others who pushed forward the evolution of the bass guitar, expanding the choices in body styles, pickups and electronics. The innovation has never stopped since and bass design keeps pushing toward a future and it’s all about that bass. The bass guitar is still a showpiece of how new technologies find their way into instrument design. Every year, there’s some new idea, some clever twist on a previous concept that finds its way into the world of basses, and you’ll always find it here, at Musician’s Friend.