Thursday, November 21, 2024

17 thoughts on “Fender Fullerton Precision Bass Ukele (Super quick REVIEW!)

  • GREAT VIDEO…AND OF COURSE, FENDER DOES NOT MAKE THIS IN A LEFTY…BOO ????…STILL LOVE MY THREE LEFTY P-BASSES ????

    Reply
  • I have had a few Uke Bass. $150-$400. They are great for certain styles that you would normally play with a upright. I have Fenders, Hofners and Gibsons Bass that cost many times more and you can get a lot of different sounds and styles out of them. The Uke Bass I have found are perfect for Bluegrass, Jazz or Blues. They are not thumb slapping made for rock Bass. You want a upright sound without lugging a upright around a Uke Bass is perfect. Never had the Fender Uke Bass but right now have. Kala and a Goldtone Micro Bass and they walk the dog.

    Reply
  • Thanks for showing a real demo! They're hard to find on this little instrument. That being said I thought your playing was a little late until I looked at the video and realize that that short of a scale makes the note only ring out AFTER the initial attack. So it wasn't your playing at all, it just takes time for those little strings to build up an audible note. That is a sad characteristic to have on a 'bass' which is supposed to be a rhythm instrument. It should be tight and punchy where this uke sounds floppy and late to the show. $300 could get you a good used MIM Pbass. I'd rather put my money there. Thanks for the demo!!!! Great playing

    Reply
  • Damn that little thing is cool! Points for rocking it while simultaneously selling gear!

    Reply
  • Cool. Looks expensive and unnecessary, but less so than those bass ukes with the rubber noodle strings that sound horrible and suck to play.

    Reply
  • Thank you for showing this plugged in, your video is the only one I have found where it is actually plugged in the rest just show it being played acoustically

    Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *