I got one in the early '80s. It is my first bass. Later on I bought and sold several others, but I never sold this one. Out of nostalgia. I am so glad I still got it. It's such a fine instrument. The way it plays and sounds is just great!
Funky little bass you have there, cottonwood is a member of the hibiscus family and can grow to 10 to 12 metres tall and is mainly an ornamental garden tree and is free growing on the west coast of USA.
The timber is probably what makes a difference in the tone . Early ones are cottonwood (aka poplar) and late ones are made of ash, but they are all unique, you just gotta find the one that “speaks” to you, in my opinion 😊
I got one in the early '80s. It is my first bass. Later on I bought and sold several others, but I never sold this one. Out of nostalgia. I am so glad I still got it. It's such a fine instrument. The way it plays and sounds is just great!
Great Demo Andy very nice sounding Bass Cheers mate ,Pete
Love the colour of this bass!
Funky little bass you have there, cottonwood is a member of the hibiscus family and can grow to 10 to 12 metres tall and is mainly an ornamental garden tree and is free growing on the west coast of USA.
Sensacional 💥 👏🏻 💥 👏🏻
Amazing! Do you find any audible differences between the early 70's model and the late 70's model?
The timber is probably what makes a difference in the tone . Early ones are cottonwood (aka poplar) and late ones are made of ash, but they are all unique, you just gotta find the one that “speaks” to you, in my opinion 😊