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Electric Upright Basses: How Do I Choose?

We have several electric upright bass options, and which you choose depends largely on your budget. As you can imagine, the most realistic sound often comes from the most expensive instrument. But money's not the only factor -- one of the other options might actually be a better fit for your particular needs!

Here's some food for thought:

 

NS Design makes several Electric Upright Basses. The designs are almost identical to each other, but the more expensive models add features and a fit and finish that justifies their price differences. They feature a highly ergonomic and decidedly more modern design than many other EUBs.

The WAV model basses are their entry-level option; using the same essential design as the more expensive ones, it's still a very well-made and well-appointed instrument, fully capable of being used in most any professional capacity. They look great, play great, and sound great. A free-standing tripod stand is offered with the bass, but other options are provided, including an endpin with a standoff to put the bass in a more "traditional" position and feel. They also make shoulder straps!

The NXTa bass is a more professional-grade instrument, with -- again -- proper scale length, fingerboard profile, bowability...  Also a solid-body, it's beautifully made and highly portable. It also features enhanced electronics -- while it uses the same pickup design as the WAV model, it also includes a built-in rechargeable "preamp" circuit, which (by buffering the impedance) can greatly improve its basic tone when used with a non-specialized bass amplifier. 

The NS Design CR-grade basses jump up in materials, build quality, and feature set. I often draw the comparison between a Fender® Precision Bass®, which is available in several grades; their "Standard" Mexican-made model is a bass used worldwide by professionals with no reservations - but if you pick up an American Standard or Deluxe model, you can feel the difference in the choice woods and the extra attention paid to the finer details. It's kind of like that. Plus, the CR models include upgraded stands and cases, and add electronics upgrades like active preamps and magnetic pickups.

A note on strings for the NS basses (and other EUBs like the Dean Pace Contra, while I'm at it).

In a nutshell, here's my philosophy on the subject: The best any EUB could hope to achieve would be to sound like a double bass with a pickup on it.

Re-read that last sentence - it's important to have realistic expectations. Since the NS basses are tightly constructed and are solid-body instruments, their habits lean towards a more electric sounding bass (more sustain, more string detail, that sort of thing.) Since Ned Steinberger never really intended for the bass to necessarily be a substitute for the "real" upright (but rather a "new class" of hybrid instrument between upright and electric), the stock strings (NS Electric "Contemporary") don't help; by design, they're fairly un-upright-like, in my opinion.

In my experience, using strings which pull it towards a more URB-oriented sound (less sustain, a more blunt attack to notes, almost a gut-string-like vibe) will effectively counter-balance the electric nature of the bass.

Two strings which I have personally tried and found success with are the Pirastro Obligatos and the D'Addario Helicore Orchestra strings. Both have a darker, less defined tone which sounds great on my own WAV4; and both strings fit the bass-guitar-sized tuning machines on the bass. I have the Helicore Orchestral strings on my personal bass and like them quite a bit; I've also strung up several customer's basses with the Obligatos.

On the Dean, they just mount normally onto the bass, which is designed to accommodate most "normal" 3/4-sized strings without modification.

Specific to the NS Basses, regular 3/4-sized upright strings will fit the bass, but the extra "afterlength" section of the string is passed through the mounting holes, and up the back of the bass, where the ball ends are mounted into the "keyhole" slots provided on the back panel. If you like the idea of the Helicores mentioned above, the NS Electric "Traditional" strings are literally Helicore Orchestra strings that are sized to fit the NS basses (very short afterlength silks, shorter overall), so those are a better option for the NS basses, especially if you don't want to wrap the strings around the bottom of the bass.

Eminence EUBFinally, the Eminence Bass is the closest relative to a true upright bass to our hands and ears. Going back many years, it was the first EUB that really caught Bob's attention, that he wanted to continue to play and enjoy -- it has the vibe, both literally and figuratively-- the vibrations of a truly acoustic instrument against the body, and the feel of a true double bass neck.

It has a decidedly traditional look, and all of the dimensions are appropriate and familiar. It's available in a fixed neck model, as well as a removable necked version that allows for breaking down the bass into an optional hard case for serious travel.

It is constructed like a full size double bass, with a legit, functioning bass bar and sound post. In fact, it's made in the same facility as some very well-known full-bodied basses. It has a nicely crafted removable wooden bout to put the bass in the perfect playing position, and comes with its own deluxe gig bag.

And while the acoustic sound is not loud enough, unamplified, to perform with, it can be practiced without an amp, as the acoustic sound is quite pleasing but won't be transmitted throughout the house. When amplified, it uses a customized version of the popular David Gage Realist pickup, which gives it a rich, realistic tone.

So, each electric upright bass has its strengths, and perhaps your best option is not necessarily the most expensive, depending on what your needs are.

If you have any questions not answered here, feel free to contact us with your specific questions.