home | guitar classifieds | vintage guitar forum | sitemap 

Trying to find a guitar valuation?
Do you want to buy/sell a guitar?

more guitars here more basses here more effects here more amplifiers here resources

1965 Vox Bassmaster
British-built Vox bass guitar


Vox Guitar Parts
Used, new and NOS
www.guitarandbassparts.com
Vintage Vox Guitars
guitars and parts for auction
www.ebay.com

1965 Vox Bassmaster bass guitar

1965 Vox Bassmaster bass

Summary

Year / Model 1965 Vox Bassmaster
Serial number 43447
Body 17 5/8" x 12 1/4" x 1 1/4". Laminate construction
Neck One-piece sycamore with non adjustable truss-rod. Rosewood fingerboard with mother-of-pearl dot inlays
Scale 30"
Width at nut 1 5/16"
Width at 12th fret 1 11/16"
Weight 3.20kg
Hardware Two British Vox single-coil pickups, pressed aluminium bridge and open gear tuning keys
Latest Vox posts on the VintageGuitar forum
forum index | post message

Great Buy
0 replies
last message by VOXguy
03/09/2010 11:25

Vox symphonic bass-valuation.
3 replies
last message by VOXguy
03/09/2010 11:18



Bass strings suitable for the Vox Bassmaster

D'Addario EXL220S Electric Bass Strings XL Nickel Super Light Short Scale (D'Addario EXL220S Nickel Super Light Short Scale)

1965 Vox Bassmaster bass - body detail
The Vox Bassmaster was an early-mid 1960s bass, competitively priced, and as Vox basses go, made in relatively large numbers. It was a short scale (30") instrument, with a very thin neck, thinner than the other basses available. It is not a bad sounding bass (have a listen to the soundclips) although a bit tricky to play for people with larger hands.

The neck is incredibly thin, in fact. It is bolt-on of course, and was made by a British firm, G-plan in Hemel Hempstead. Note that there is no truss rod adjustment nut: although a rod is fitted, it is not adjustable.

This one, from late 1965, has a solid mahogany body, sycamore neck and rosewood fretboard with dot inlays. This is an unusual finish, red was by far the most widely used. Some are available in different body woods, both one-piece and laminate (the oldest ones?) - see a 1963 Bassmaster, with laminate body here.

1965 Vox Bassmaster bass - Vox headstock without logoOne usually expects to see some decals on a Vox headstock: either denoting the model and or JMI as the manufacturer. Catalogue images regularly have plain headstocks, and it would seem that this bass was shipped with neither. It is possible of course that they were removed, but the is no evidence of this, and the otherwise original condition of the bass also suggests otherwise.

1965 Vox Bassmaster bass - pickup detailThe Bassmaster had two Vox chrome single coil pickups. These Vox pickup casings often had this Vox logo, though not always. Guitars with none, one or two pickup logos are all common. The pickups themselves are basic single-coils - follow the link above for more details.

1965 Vox Bassmaster bass - body route detailThis example is still fitted with the original coaxial input. It seems odd that Vox were still selling these as late as 1966, but they were. Have a look at the Vox Bassmaster circuit information, which has a close up of the input itself.

1965 Vox Bassmaster bass neck pocketIn order to transmit vibrations between neck and body, neck pockets are typically left unfinished, which is helpful when it comes to examining the materials used. The rich orange/brown colour of the unfinished mahogany is clearly evident(compare this with the neck pocket of a laminate bassmaster). Note also the code 6145 in ink.

1965 Vox Bassmaster bass reverse headstock detailThe serial number of early British Vox guitars was stamped into the wood on the back of the headstock - usually near the E tuning key; it is difficult to see in this image, but it is there. Note also the open-gear tuners fitted to Vox Bassmaster, Symphonic and Clubman basses at this time. The neck is one-piece sycamore, with a width at the nut of just 1 5/16". Very thin indeed.

1965 Vox Bassmaster bass - reverse body detailThis two-tone brown-black burst of this bass is an unusual feature; the vast majority were red, although white is also listed in Vox literature. See also a 1963 Bassmaster with three-tone burst finish.

1965 Vox Bassmaster bass - compensating bridge detailThe compensating bridge is similar to that of a Fender Precision: basically a stamped metal plate. Note the 'Patent applied for' notification, presumably referring to the fact that the bridge cover simply clips onto the bridge?

1965 Vox Bassmaster bass - compensating bridge detailElectronically, the Voox bassmaster is very simple: two pickups, with just one volume and one tone control. The Vox bassmaster does not allow the selection of individual pickups, which is somewhat unusual in a two-pickup guitar.

Sound Clips

Ampeg B15N

Through a 1964 Ampeg B15N (volume 5/10, tone 5/10). The narrow string spacing makes the bassmaster a little tricky to play at first, but you soon get used to it. The lack of pickup selector is annoying, as this limits tonal flexibility - but the sounds that are there are great; it really snarls when you dig in with a pick. There is some background noise in these clips; a product of the primitive electronics fitted to this guitar (primarily the input jack).

 
Both pickups, volume 10, tone 10 First fingerstyle, then with a pick
 
Both pickups, volume 10, tone 0. First fingerstyle, then with a pick

Back to the VOX INDEX



© 2004-2010 vintageguitars.org.uk | Contact Us | Terms and Conditions | Links


Gibson bass guitars | Guitar reviews | Vintage vinyl for sale | PRS guitars

Trying to find the value of your guitar?

Epiphone Thunderbird IV
Epiphone Thunderbird IV Reverse Bass Vintage Sunburst

This streamlined design is based on Gibson's original shape, with tuning keys reversed for greater functionality. 2 humbucking pickups, volume and tone controls. Alder and maple body, mahogany neck, rosewood fingerboard. Limited lifetime warranty.

Gibson Custom Shop Les Paul SG Custom Historic Electric Guitar
Gibson Custom Shop Les Paul SG Custom Historic Electric Guitar with Maestro Classic White

A meticulous re-creation of a legendary guitar, the Les Paul SG Standard is back with historically accurate appointments including heel shape, holly peg veneer, tapered peghead, and vintage body shape and scarfing

Gibson SG Faded Bass
Gibson SG Faded Limited Edition Bass

This limited edition Gibson SG bass guitar is a special run. It has a faded finish that gives it the look of a gently aged vintage bass. Mahogany neck and body with a rosewood fingerboard and chrome hardware. Features a vintage-style TB Plus bass humbucker at the neck and a bass mini-humbucker on the bridge. 2 volumes and 1 tone control.

Epiphone EB-0
Epiphone EB-0 Electric Bass Cherry

Authorized by Gibson, with the EB-0 Electric Bass, Epiphone has brought back a classic bass guitar of the early '60s. Based on the SG, this guitar-sized (30-1/2" scale) electric bass is a great axe for anyone not quite large enough for a full-size bass. Though small and light, the Epiphone EB-0 Bass has huge sound, and full-size people can play it too

Epiphone G-400 SG Electric Guitar
Epiphone G-400 SG Electric Guitar

The Epiphone G-400 Electric Guitar is a Gibson-authorized version of their great '62 SG with solid mahogany body and slim-tapered set mahogany neck. Separate volume and tone controls for each of the high-output Alnico V humbuckers give you complete control of your sound. The deep double-cutaway lets you reach all 22 frets with ease. The LockTone Tune-O-Matic bridge/stopbar tailpiece adds more sustain and makes string changing a breeze.

Gretsch G6136BK Black Falcon
Gretsch G6136TBK Black Falcon

Dual High Sensitive FilterTron pickups on unique hollowbody construction with small tone bars deliver jangle, bite, or solid round tones with equal felicity. Laminated maple top, back, and sides with 3-piece maple neck are adorned with an ebony fretboard; gold-plated hardware; gold-sparkle headstock inlays; unique gold pickguard with acrylic top and falcon monogram; full gold-sparkle body, neck, and headstock binding; and finely crafted hump block mother-of-pearl fretboard inlays with feather engraving. The Space-Control roller bridge with ebony base keeps the massive gold-plated Bigsby from putting it out of tune.