Tuesday, January 7, 2025
BassBass Guitar

Fretless Bass for $100? Glarry Fretless GP Bass Review.


This bass can be found at:
Glarry Fretless Electric Bass Guitar: https://bit.ly/3NlPgK7

Bassist: Adam Small

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Originally posted by UCFx3gJJIqnWLbzvSq9_lAyQ at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d5L3CeaxzQk

34 thoughts on “Fretless Bass for $100? Glarry Fretless GP Bass Review.

  • Honest review. Can't beat that. Based on your review, I would still buy it but I would expect to do some work. I think that many of the major, long-standing brands expect a physical music store to get the instrument into proper playing condition.

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  • How much gap between the bottom of the strings and the fingerboard would you give it at the "1st fret" position?

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  • I bought one to practice until my Jaco is back in stock.
    So I replaced the bridge with a Badass, put on Flats, put in Steve Harris pups, it plays better now. ????

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  • A cheap fretless for beginners SHOULD have the fret marks on the fretboard, it's silly.

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  • Wow, pretty hard on a $100 fretless. Intonation-intosmation, unless it is waaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaay off, it'll be fine.
    It's a BASS. Plunky-thunky deep noises. Not that critcal.
    Also, millions of kids started playing on fretless instruments – violins, cellos, uprights — frets are overrated.

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  • I would think the Glary uses the same template for the side dots on fretted basses as fretless bass.
    They should use different templates.
    On my acoustic upright, ( CHUBBY JACKSON FIVE STRING KAY),
    I marked the side of the neck with lines referencing individual frets, five, 9 and 12 and higher with stickers and markers and up higher with sticker between A and D string.
    They wore off eventually as I learned but I only used them as reference points.
    Now I have only 5 and 9 as reference.
    When I first play during the day I just shoot for the octave at the unmarked 12 and might be off by a full step but my brain reconfigures.

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  • If you adjust the saddles – length-wise, the fingerboard-dot-placement will probably prove to be correct. Adjust to get 12'th "fret" harmonics equal to the octaves, fingered at the 12'th "fret"

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  • I really like Adam's reviews, and they have helped me make good decisions on purchases on other Glarry basses. I just wanted to add and weigh in with my experience of the fretless P bass. I'm a beginner and certainly don't have the experience and knowledge that Adam does, so with that qualification, my own experience has been very favorable.

    I'd watched this video, and so generated and printed a fret template from an online website, and used a thin line white posca (acrylic paint) pen to make lines at the fretting locations along the top of the fretboard for all of the fret positions. I did notice a variance from the standard side dot positions, particularly higher on the neck. They still function as 3,5,7,9 etc. markers well enough, but the dots aren't centered in the areas further up the neck. They look a little wonky, but this is far made up for by what I found to be the overall quality of the build and performance.
    As an alternative to making permanent marks along the top, you can use stickers or tape, as Adam mentions in a response to a comment below. Very thin auto pinstriping tapes works pretty well. I started with this, but then decided I really liked having those markers and so replaced with the posca pen lines.

    I did make some set-up adjustments, lowered the action by cutting all of the nut slots significantly deeper, and spent a fair amount of time making admittedly OCD adjustments to the truss rod and bridge saddles. But…at the end, the action was low, and uniform across the length of the neck. I swapped the strings for LaBella low-tension flats. It plays very well, and it was pretty easy to adjust to the fretting pressure change difference (for me a little different without frets). I'd bought an alnico p-bass pickup, but found that the stock pickup actually sounds really good. I might swap it out later, just to experiment with a different tone, but I'm going to stick with the original (ceramic?) pickup for a while.
    (My other two basses are the Glarry Jazz and short scale Bronco-style bass. I swapped out pickups in both for Bootstrap alnicos, and I found it to be an improvement in the case of the short scale, following Adam's advice in a video that he did on that. With the Jazz, it might come down to a matter of personal preference. Again, the overall build quality and playability are great on those.)

    So overall, I've been very happy and impressed with the fretless bass. Been playing it exclusively for several months now. The tuners and neck are stable once adjusted, the neck is very straight, and action very smooth. In some senses, it actually seems easier than with with frets, because of the smoothness, once you get used to the amount of focus required to really nail the intonation fingering. Having the little posca lines on the top helps a lot. The fingerboard board itself was left as is, without line markings. Nice rosewood appearance.

    I find that the light weight on all of the Glarry basses to be pretty comfortable. From what I read, I think that it is Paulownia. Used for musical instruments in China for hundreds of years. Really nice resonant quality with electric instruments, rich with full expression of complex overtones, and kind of open-sounding to my ear. I look like a kook, attached (by tying) the strap to the neck at the nut side of headstock where it narrows, but It takes care of the neckdive of such a light body.

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  • Good video. I really appreicate the 'no BS' approach, and not having to listen to a minute or two of some wanking on the instrument. Thanks. Good information.

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  • So, this is a great axe, IF you want to learn how to set the action yourself? As long as the buyer knows and accepts that, great. But for the typical beginner? Oh, well…

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  • I could barely call this a review. It's like "my music master class" on fretless bass. Subscribed. After 40 yrs of bass me thinks I want to get a fretless. Grateful I watched this before having done so.

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  • Very nice video, Sir ! I love modifying my instruments_ This may be a good one to get_ I have a $100 Rogue Fretless bass that i really like_ did a few mods to it, but nothing major, and its sounds & feels like a Champ

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  • It makes so much sense the frets is the hardest part in making an instrument so a cheap fretless one would be the best kind of cheap instrument

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  • Are the dots where the frets would be? Or are they the same as a fretted bass?

    Edit…. question answered.

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  • Thank's, Review (and lesson). I actually have a Peavey fretless, it has lines where the frets were suppose to be. Gonna go see if the Dots line-up

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  • FIRST THING: Thank you for this awesome video! So informative, even-handed, and honest. I love it. No cost-shaming like every time you ask a question on Reddit. I'll be a subscriber for kids!

    Second: Get a $100 bass. Learn to set it up as part of your growth as a musician or hobbyist. Or pay $70 (in my area) to get it set up (although if you live in my area EVERYONE at the Ogden, UT Guitar Center is A COMPLETE tool and they will probably be nasty about it). Either way this seems like a good buy for someone who wants to play the bass and already has a regular fretted instrument. Maybe not the greatest idea for a first instrument, as you said.

    Anyway, awesome vid. I appreciate it!

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  • Took me 15 min. to set up my $75 Glarry, flatwounds and gig worthy. Leaving the P & J at home. Love my fretless Rogue!!

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  • Yep almost every chinese guitar i ever bought needed a full setup adjustment. Thats true they dont ever bother with fine tuning them. Often its needs new nut, tuners, pickups, trus rod adj, intonation, etc… but with an exchange rate of 7:1 meaning if you buy a $100 guitar they are getting $700 in their currancy. Which a setup dept should be doing to their instruments. But they are trying to save a buck. A nice apartment fully furnished in a nice part of Shanghi is $350 a month rent. Im talking big nice condo style place. Which is why when u buy a Fender or Gibson you pay extra for them to do a great setup on your high end instruments. So just be aware if u buy Chinese you will need to replace parts and get it setup properly but if you got a great deal and its well made body & neck you will still make out ok and even have a nice playing guitar.

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  • For the price I would expect to have to set it up but for a beginner this might be a pain. So when I started playing fretless bass back in the early 90s after I set the intonation I would take a silver marker and on the top of the fretboard where the dots are while using a tuner to mark each fret. I thought I was really smart then I discovered they make fretless basses with fret markings so I never went back LOL. But a buddy of mine was curious about a cheap fretless bass we watched your video and I then just told him to get the Rouge Fretless from Musicians Friend for an extra $80 and it has 2 pickups and is was better than the price reflects at $169.

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  • Also did it come with flat or round wound strings? I heard round wounds will chew up the fretboard

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  • I found this for about $70 ive been playing guitar for 14 yrs and bass for about 4 years…and honestly i just wanna make non conventional music with it so my playing doesn't have to be super accurate…however i do want its intonated…my question is…can i intonate it to where the dots are or will that not work? Also how hard would it b to put lines?

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  • I bought a very cheap "Gear4Music" fretless bass to experiment, called "Chicago", which is for sale for 150€ in Europe. Like the one you show, it came completely unplayable from the factory. After some time setting it up, it's a really good instrument now!!!
    I did pass sand paper on the fretboard to streight it up a bit. But that was not a big job.
    One thing you could mention is a very comun problem: the nut string height. It has to be quite low on a fretless, because the first couple of notes near the nut will sound off if the strings are too far from the fretboard near the nut. I recomand half a mm. Do that BEFORE setting up your bridge saddles, it will allow more freedom to set the action you like.

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  • Fretless Ps are severely underrated, especially with a pair of flatwounds and with the tone all the way up.

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  • The side position markers are always located in the same place as they would be on a fretted bass neck. It's just the way it has always been traditionally. So, the dots are NOT supposed to be where the note locations are; they are always flat of the actual note locations.

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