历史上最具“价值”的25种VINTAGE BASS排名
一大早在talkbass网站看到,顺手摘来(from Vintage Guitar Magazine)1. 1960-’62 Fender Jazz Bass
($25,000 to $38,000 in custom-color finish)
The holiest of Fender Bass grails is a “stack knob” custom-color Jazz. The “J-Bass” proved the market could support fancy, pricier bass guitars; a solid duco-finish Jazz was a hot-rod four-string nonpareil. By the mid ’60s, they were ordered comparatively often – not so in 1960! Highly collectible since the ’70s, a custom-color Jazz Bass still tops the list today. Sunburst models from the period fetch $16,000 to $21,000.
也就是传说中的stack knob(最明显的特征是双旋钮),文中提到的custom color我也不得而知。这琴我只见过两个配色,日落和奶黄(flea那把便是奶黄),Jaco也曾是这琴的使用者,曾经拥有过几只,记得TB上有人炫过一把。但一旦重新上漆,价格都要大跌。历史上stack knob只生产了60/61/62三年。日本的二手乐器市场这琴被炒的天价,我看到61年的有标到快300多W日元的,状态还一般。有时候ebay上却能碰到小白菜
2. 1970s Zemaitis “Heart Hole” Bass
($24,000 to $29,000)
England’s Tony Zemaitis hand-made his electric guitars for many years, but built very few basses, mostly for U.K. rock stars like Ronnie Lane and Greg Lake. With only four extant, this model would be the ultimate four-string in the Velvet Goldmine.
这琴排到第二位真是大跌眼镜,说实话听都没听讲过
3. 1963-’65 Gibson Thunderbird IV
($20,000 to $23,000 in custom-color finish)
Arguably Gibson’s greatest bass, the two-pickup, “reverse-body” Thunderbird IV, with its neck-through design, combines style and function like few others. With a production run painfully short at less than two years, it could be ordered in any of 10 flashy colors and is the ultimate Gibson four-string (sunburst models from the same period go for $9,000 to $13,000).
鸟范们,come on
4. 1958-’60 Fender Precision Bass
($18,000 to 23,000, custom color)
Originally offered in any color – as long as it was blond(!) – by the early ’60s, the Fender Precision could be had in a rainbow of finishes. The Precision ruled the ’50s, and a late-’50s (maple neck, anodized pickguard) model will rule many collector’s wallets, especially if not in the then-standard sunburst (which go for $8,000 to $11,000; ’51 to ’60 models sell for as much as $19,000). Any pre-CBS P-Bass will follow – the rarer the color, the higher the dollar!
57P应该是fender复刻最多的一把琴,但不知为何这里标的是58以后。只弹过量产57P,但觉得感觉一点都不逊色于J,反而有种更浑厚的味道(个人一直觉得P bass才更适合jazz乐)
5. 1961-1964 Fender Bass VI
($10,500 to $14,500, custom color)
Leo Fender’s answer to a cheap-but-practical Danelectro was this super-elaborate three-pickup/30″-scale twang machine – with vibrato! The $329 Fender VI was “bass-ically” an overgrown guitar, and was a hit with studio players, though few others could afford one. Jack Bruce started his career on a sunburst model; now, collectors crave flashy custom-color examples while sunburst models fetch $5,500 to $7,000.
有朋友问这是不是贝司,google下吧,相信会有不小的收获
6. 1963-’65 Gibson Thunderbird II “reverse body”
($10,500 to $13,000, custom color)
Gibson’s first long-scale competitor to the Fender Precision, the single-pickup Thunderbird II was built in larger numbers than the IV… but that’s not saying much. Anything other than brown sunburst (which go for $6,000 to $10,500) was a custom order, so few exist – even fewer without the common headstock fracture!
配色少见,物以稀为贵吧
7. 1970-’75 Rickenbacker Model 4005 L “Lightshow”
($11,000 to $12,000)
With only a handful built, this psychedelically-minded hollow Rickenbacker with internal colored lights pulsing to the music qualifies as the company’s ultimate four-string rarity. One went to a girl group in Las Vegas, one went to John Entwistle. Find one, and Rick collectors will find you!
真没见过这种Rick以前,很有品位的外形
8. 1965-’66 Gibson Thunderbird IV
($8,000 to $12,000, custom color)
The second generation Thunderbird, launched in the summer of ’65, switched to a “non-reverse” body (with more-prominent upper horn) and abandoned the neck-through design. While not as favored by collectors, these T-birds are even less common than the first series – the two-pickup IV especially. Any finish other than sunburst (which sell for $4,000 to $5,000) is seriously rare.
鸟琴就不评论了,无爱
9. 1968-’69 Rickenbacker Model 4005
($8,000 to $10,000 8-string)
In 1965, Rose-Morris inquired whether Rickenbacker might build a hollowbody bass. The company complied, but the awkward four-string 4005 never caught on. Just to drive collectors crazy, Rick also tried 6- and 8-string versions in barely more than prototype numbers. Rarely seen, even more rarely heard, but a major Rickenbacker collectible. The standard 4005 of that era goes for $5,000 to $6,500, while the 6-string version goes for $6,500 to $7,500
10. ’70s Alembic Custom Shop Dragon Doubleneck
($8,000 to $9,000)
Nothing says ’70s badass like a doubleneck bass; being a hand-made Alembic is just icing on the cake! For sheer flash, nothing beats this imposing monster – and nothing could match its hi-fi sound possibilities, either.
作为手工贝斯的始祖,入选不在话下
11. 1965-’66 Gibson Thunderbird II
($6,000 to $9,000, custom color)
The “non-reverse” single-pickup Thunderbird II was produced in larger numbers than the IV, but is still rare (and has never been properly reissued). Add a custom color (sunburst models sell for $2,500 to $3,200) and a never-broken headstock, and you have a Gibson bass that’ll set hearts racing. Ask Glenn Cornick
12. 1958-’59 Rickenbacker Model 4000
($7,200 to $8,900)
Rickenbacker’s first bass, and the earliest long-scale challenger to Fender’s Precision. With a neck-through design and a horseshoe pickup, the 4000 sounded great and the cresting-wave body was stylish and practical. It took Rickenbacker time to crack the bass market (making for low production), but the ubiquitous ’70s Rick 4001/4002/4003 models are this one’s children.
还是觉得4001顺眼些
13. 1962-’64 Gibson EB-6
($7,500 to $8,000)
Gibson’s second attempt at a 6-string bass, it’s essentially an overgrown SG. With six big Kluson tuners and two P.A.F. pickups, this was one roaring monster of twang, but with only 66 shipped faded to obscurity very quickly. Also expensive like Fender’s VI, Gibson somehow omitted the whammy bar!
大爱,JAZZ味道十足
14. 1968 Fender Telecaster Bass
($6,500 to $8,000 Blue Floral and Pink Paisley)
The ’60s hit CBS/Fender in a big way in ’68, with the hippier-than-thou Telecasters with floral and paisley wallpaper applied to the slab bodies under a heavy clearcoat. The basses (especially the blue) are rarer than the guitars and is one of the few CBS-era four-strings with heavy collector appeal. For comparison, a blond version from ’68 brings $3,500 to $4,000.
15. 1960-’61 Gibson EB-6
($6,500 to $7,000)Gibson’s first Danelectro-inspired “baritone guitar” was basically a single-pickup ES-335 fitted with a bass bridge. Much more expensive than Nathan Daniel’s $135 Masonite box, rather less versatile sounding, it died a quick death and thus is yet another very rare Gibson.
16. 1961-’65 Rickenbacker Model 4001
($5,500 to $6,900)A deluxe development of the Model 4000, the flashy two-pickup 4001 would eventually become Rick’s signature bass. In the early ’60s, it was a very expensive obscurity until U.K. players like Paul McCartney, Pete Quaife, Roger Waters, and eventually, Chris Squire, made the export-model 4001S (with dot neck and unbound body) a bass icon, leading to mass acceptance.
梦想中的Rick
17. 1953-’58 Gibson Electric Bass (EB-1)
($5,300 to $6,400)
With Gibson’s first electric bass, Ted McCarty’s disdain for Fender manifested itself in a wildly different design. With a solid mahogany violin-shaped body, big, boomy pickup, and even a stand-up end pin, these were intended to create the big, warm upright thump, but louder. In ’58, the model was renamed EB-1, and collectors often refer to the entire run by that name.
不评论了,口水一地
18. 1965 Fender Bass V
($4,500 to $6,300, custom color)
With a short neck, only 15 frets, a long body, and a pickup in a harmonically awkward spot, the Bass V was not Fender’s masterpiece. Five-string basses eventually prospered, but not in this form. Still, the magic of Fender’s custom colors and limited production make for another Fullerton collectible; sunburst versions from ’65 go for $2,900 to $3,500.
19. 1971-’99 Alembic Series II
($5,000 to $6,000)
In the early ’70s, San Francisco’s Alembic reinvented the electric bass, using low-impedance pickups, onboard preamps, and multi-laminate construction, they were like nothing before. The Series II, with the “omega” body cutout, typifies the company’s high-end approach.
看看现在Alembic新琴的定价吧,千万不要晕倒
20. 1990-2000 Alembic Stanley Clarke Signature
($4,500 to $5,500)
Many ’70s rock-star bassists embraced the Alembic, but it was jazz/fusion phenom Stanley Clarke who became most indelibly associated with them. Clarke’s personal basses included short-scale/vibrato-equipped models – even a “tenor bass” tuned up to guitar range!
21. 1971-’79 Alembic Series I
($4,400 to $5,500)
The original Alembic bass, with the “omega” pointed lower body designed to force the player to use a proper stand! Offered in three scale lengths and different wood combinations, this is still the classic ’70s Alembic of many player’s dreams.
22. 1961-’63 Gibson EB-3
($4,600 to $5,300)
Jack Bruce, come home! In 1961, the solidbody EB-3 replaced the semihollow EB-2; with two pickups and a rotary Tone selector it was Gibson’s most deluxe four-string. Later models are fairly common, but early-’60s EB-3s were produced in smaller numbers and today are hard to find.
23. 1958 Gibson EB-2
($4,000 to $5,000)
Gibson’s second bass, this mate to the ES-335 was initially judged a failure. Retired in ’61, an unexpected wave of popularity in the U.K. caused a revival by ’64 alongside its Epiphone cousin, the Rivoli. Still, the original banjo-tuner/black-pickup version is the collector’s choice – especially in the scarce blond finish.
24. 1959-’60 Gibson EB-0
($4,000 to $5,000)
Often referred to as the “Les Paul Junior Bass” (although it doesn’t carry Paul’s signature), the earliest EB-0s share the guitar’s Cherry-finish slab body. Gibson’s first entry-level bass, the EB-0 sold better than previous models, but by later standards is still a rare instrument.
25. 1956-’63 Höfner 500/1
($3,300 to $4,800)
Remembered now for its connection to the Beatles, the early violin-body Höfner 500/1 is also significant as the first European electric bass, original in its own right. Light and airy in feel and sound (unlike Gibson’s slab-o-mahogany EB) the Höfner is the progenitor of generations of 30″-scale hollowbody four-strings from all over the world. Lefty versions fetch top dollar.
原来国外这么早的Hofner原琴价格比较亲民,有机会真考虑收把
[ 本帖最后由 ono69 于 2012-2-23 15:33 编辑 ] 第12的rickenbacker真特么好看!!! 好看 大清早养眼了 13. 1962-’64 Gibson EB-6,喜欢啊 第5把是贝司???? 一进来就被第一把亮瞎了~了 排名靠前的有一些其实很便宜,也没啥升值潜力
这里面写的价格都虚高
回复 7# kyo21000 的帖子
是贝斯 知识贴 受益匪浅 突然发现自己是个很不问忒之的人 Alembic为什么这么多上榜
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