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Bass Player For Fleetwood Mac

07.02.2019 

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For most of the 70's John McVie was using Alembic basses with active pickups into a DI (I seem to recall they were 'FatBox DIs). Occasionally they would mic his bass cabs. Fender basses are not the way to go IMHO - maybe a MusicMan Stingray with active pickups or even an actual Alembic (if you can afford/find one). Fleetwood Macs bass secret IMO is the way that McVie and Mick Fleetwood responded to each other + the space each occupies allows for a lot of room for each instrument.

  1. Bass Player For Fleetwood Mac
Mcvie

Well, McVie's first real gig WAS as the bass player for John Mayall, so he couldn't have been to terrible. I think he is a little lost in the 'Bass Player' paentheon of the gods because he spent most of his career in, admittedly a great band, but they really haven't done anything note worthy since the late 70's early 80's. Horizon client 4.9 for mac

And the arrangements are pretty darn clever and cool - and McVie is a super good player. For recording or live playing? If for recording, skip the amp, go DI, maybe a Tech 21 VT Bass pedal (~$150), then find a used MIM Jazz, favor the bridge pickup and get a nice low action. Should get you in the ball park for under $500 bones. For live, maybe an older Peavey 100 watt 1x15 amp, with the same bass.

Will be pushing the affordability, but it is what it is. You could skimp and go Squier, several decent basses there for less money, but I prefer 'buy once, cry once' when it come to instruments. BUT his playing and touch really define his sound.

Prepare to spend some time practicing to get the sounds. Used to cover a couple FM songs, getting his lines down is key to the sound. As was hinted the first question is how loud you want to get. If this is just playing quietly in your bedroom, you can put less money towards the amp and more towards the bass. If you need volume, that ratio will shift. I think the Squier Vintage Vibe basses are great bang for the buck and I would recommend one of them regardless of the ratio. New they're about $300.

Used between $150 & 200. For an amp, check out the Carvin MB series or the Fender Rumble series if you're going new.

If used, then just watch craigslist. For recording or live playing? If for recording, skip the amp, go DI, maybe a Tech 21 VT Bass pedal (~$150), then find a used MIM Jazz, favor the bridge pickup and get a nice low action. Should get you in the ball park for under $500 bones. For live, maybe an older Peavey 100 watt 1x15 amp, with the same bass.

Bass Player For Fleetwood Mac

Produkey. Will be pushing the affordability, but it is what it is. You could skimp and go Squier, several decent basses there for less money, but I prefer 'buy once, cry once' when it come to instruments.

BUT his playing and touch really define his sound. Prepare to spend some time practicing to get the sounds. Used to cover a couple FM songs, getting his lines down is key to the sound.