Wick, the pickups/electronics are deadly accurate. If you'd be familiar with the sound of professional studio monitors vs. very, very good home stereo speakers, I think that would infer the right mindset. And the tone is just different: There are a whole lot of great handbuilt basses out there, 95% of which use the same Bart / EMG / Nordstrand / Aguilar pickup/tone network components, so they can all sound very similar, despite being very different build-wise.
I'd dare say to a man (or woman), all of us who came into an Alembic suddenly found out our technique in spots left a little something to be desired. And we've all become better players because of these instruments.
But of course, it's not all down to the bass, which alone makes no real sound or tone by itself.
Then you find part two of the Alembic experience in that, hey, why does my favorite amp suddenly sound different . . . . An electric bass + the amp is 'your instrument'. Either one without the other, it's a non-starter. And of course a crummy amp will dumb everything down, as always. But an Alembic through a great setup is just like nothing else.
Set-up wise, you can have it any way you like, from very high to ridiculously low. They are very easy (to my mind, the easiest) to set up: Adjustable nut, double truss rods, and a one-piece / radius matched bridge. Once you learn the routine, it's ridiculously easy: No neck screws, no height adjustments on each bridge saddle, no plastic/bone nut to have to replace or file lower, we get to skip all that. Plus with the laminated necks and 1/4 ebony board, they are typically very stable and hold a set when done properly.
I always say these things aren't for everybody. Guys will play Jazz basses thru SVT's till Hell Freezes Over. But . . . . if you 'get' what these instruments are about, there is simply nothing, and I mean nothing else like them, or the family that builds and supports them.
It's like owning a Bosendorfer, a Selmer Paris horn, or an original D'Angelico: It's simply the best. It's not often in this life one can own a legend, but you're about to.
J o e y