This thread has taken a couple of twists, hasn't it?
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Paul,
Your Series II and Excel are going to sound so different from eachother. There will be similarities too, but since the construction, woods and electronics are all different, so will the sounds.
As for growl, this is something that I hear most closely associated with controlled mechanical contact between the strings and the frets (or fingerboard on a fretless). This is a matter of setup and playing technique. Try this: does the bass have the growl unamplified? If so, then it's mechanical, and should be able to reproduced on another bass' setup.
There will be instances where the motion of the string is influenced more by the construction and the actual materials used, but the largest component is the player and their technique. I suspect you will play these two basses with at least slightly different techniques, to get the most of out each.
About Coco Bolo in the neck, I'm not too excited to try it. It is quite oily, and I don't like giving that structural joint an extra hard time of working well. Maybe I'll test it someday if there's some Coco Bolo around that's about the right size for neck lams and nothing else as an experiment. If we ever do, I'll let you know!
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Joe,
I will say I was confused, because what you initially told me was that you had already found the perfect sound from your bass. I listened to what you were seeking, and suggested Alembic basses might not be right for you, that you would be fighting the nature of the instrument. Since the sound you prefer isn't something that I think can come easily from an Alembic, I agree with your wife (she sounds practical!).
Sorry I gave you some impression of annoyance. I talk to people on the phone, in person and through email every day that will probably never be Alembic customers, and it's not something I even consider when conversing. I give out the information that is requested of me. I was surprised you only tried out two basses.
It sounds like you'll be taking my other advice to bring the rest of your equipment when you are testing a new component. I don't think it's really possible to make a good decision about adding to your sound without the rest of your components. You might get lucky, but it's so much better to be certain.
And of course, if you come the 25 minutes north again, you're welcome to bring your Ampeg (or whatever you wind up getting new) with you, so you can test out instruments with amplification you are familiar with.
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Barry,
I agree with Rami on the sound from his basses. The wood combinations are getting the strings to behave differently. What's great is Rami can confirm this because it's behaving the same with two different sets of electronics, but identical woods.
I'll expand and say I think the sound is one of the effects of so much Ebony in the necks. Rami's 6-strings have a lot of Ebony in them.
The Series I is a subset of Series II, so the sounds are very similar. The only sonic difference is the way you interact with the Q controls, and that the Series II has a higher available Q setting. The only extra space needed is for the master volume (which you can delete if you need the room).
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Aadrian and others,
Regarding talking about music, about a month ago, I had a customer that wanted a punchier sound than the Elan bass he used to own, so I suggested an Orion. He tried it, and said it had too much midrange. He meant more bass response when he said punchier, where I've had many other people describe punchy as more mid range (another loose term!).
So my dad and I were discussing the frustration of using terms like bass, midrange, treble, growl, etc. since these are subjective and based on the listener's experiences. We decided we should do some recordings, and take a poll to see what the perceptions of these recording were. You listen, then you answer if you think it's bassy, punchy, or a new word to describe the sound.
It's not like it would be scientfic, but it might be interesting, and at least get some sonic reference to these indistinct decriptions.
Of course, you can always communicate in frequencies to eliminate confusion.