LeftyBassist.com
http://leftybassist.com./

EKO 995
http://leftybassist.com./viewtopic.php?f=13&t=3206
Page 1 of 1

Author:  Frenchy-Lefty [ December 13th, 2011, 1:22 am ]
Post subject:  EKO 995

http://sfbay.craigslist.org/sfc/msg/2748686827.html

oooohhhhh!

Author:  fivebass52 [ December 13th, 2011, 2:49 am ]
Post subject:  Re: EKO 995

Man, that bass is da bomb! Did it come originally with the Captain America logo? I like the satin finish on the front, and the polished finish on the back. Good think I'm not a collector; I'd buy that just for the cool factor.... :ugeek: Seems like a fair price too....

Author:  AustinLeftyBass [ December 13th, 2011, 8:38 am ]
Post subject:  Re: EKO 995

No, the Cap decal is not original. There is supposed to be a large E on the flat, raised area at the top of the headstock. Semi-decent job of filling in the original control holes.

Author:  pjmuck [ December 13th, 2011, 9:44 am ]
Post subject:  Re: EKO 995

A British dealer had a true lefty on ebay forever a couple of months ago. Was asking $2200 with no takers for over a year, though it's gone now so maybe somebody did take the plunge.

Author:  Agent00Soul [ December 13th, 2011, 1:03 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: EKO 995

Lurrv it! And the Cap sticker is a great idea. Is $500 a bad price for something like this? Seems OK to me as long as it works.

Author:  Retag [ December 13th, 2011, 2:12 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: EKO 995

I recently moved and my wife and I were discussing decorating ideas for our new place. She suggested one of the rooms can have a Beatles theme and I quick replied: "great, I can get a lefty Beatles bass and hang it on the wall". She wasn't keen on the thought and quickly dropped the idea. :)

I am close to the Bay Area now and I also spotted the bass. Very tempting!

Author:  andrew [ December 13th, 2011, 5:10 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: EKO 995

Retag wrote:
I recently moved and my wife and I were discussing decorating ideas for our new place. She suggested one of the rooms can have a Beatles theme and I quick replied: "great, I can get a lefty Beatles bass and hang it on the wall". She wasn't keen on the thought and quickly dropped the idea. :)


Hah, I just missed the chance to buy a lefty Hofner Beatle bass for really cheap a few years ago for a similar reason. Guy had a Beatles room in his house, didn't play bass and wasn't left handed but had to have the real mccoy for his tribute room.

Author:  Carmine [ December 13th, 2011, 5:14 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: EKO 995

I happen to own a very minty one of these, right handed of course. For me an Eko 995 was one of those classic basses that I just wanted to have in the collection- I love the look of it, and the sound- very Hofner-ish thump with the flats on it, but a bit more resonant, probably due to the bigger body. My first recollection of the look and sound of this bass goes way back when I was a little kid seeing Rob Grill of the Grass Roots playing "Midnight Confession" and thinking wow, what a great bass line!). Check this out:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LuTsvTk3pMg&feature=related

Looking back now it's obviously a poorly faked lip sync performance, but I later learned that the recording was actually Joe Osborn (according to a list compiled by Vintage Bass magazine) on a 1960 Jazz bass, flat wound strings, played with a pick. Ironically, it's also pretty much exactly the way my 995 sounds!

IMO I wouldn't recommend paying $500 for a "converted" lefty with plugged holes, you'd never get your money back out of it. Better off just flipping a righty and leaving it alone; it will hold it's collectable value, and if you take the pickguard off there's really nothing that gets in your way.

For some addtional background on the 995 I've attached below an article from Vintage Guitar magazine, February 2011 issue:

The Beatles’ appearance on “The Ed Sullivan Show” in February of 1964 is often referred to as the most important event in the history of rock music, having inspired thousands (millions?) of teenagers to play in a band. Many budding bassists aspired to own a violin-shaped instrument like the one Paul McCartney played on the show; his was a Höfner, which was out of reach, cost-wise, for most at the time. But there were cheaper alternatives, like the Eko 995.

Eko guitars and basses were crafted by the Oliviero Pigini company of Recanati, Italy, founded in 1959. From the outset, the firm concentrated on accordion manufacturing and expanded into guitar production in the early ’60s. One of its accordion clients was the Lo Duca Brothers Musical Instruments company, of Milwaukee, which joined forces with the Italian manufacturer as the exclusive distributor of Eko guitars in the U.S.

Eko guitars and basses came in myriad styles and shapes; Strat-like instruments, semi-hollow electrics, the rocket-shaped Rokes, and even map-shaped instruments, a la National. There was even an early solidbody violin-shaped bass.

The 995 was just different enough from the Höfner 500/1 “Beatle bass” to conjure its own mystique. Like the 500/1, it was a short-scale, two-pickup instrument. Unlike the 500/1, it was equipped with the sort of cheesy appointments often associated with Italian-made instruments.

One of the 995’s most intriguing aesthetic features is the square protuberance on its headstock. With its gothic E logo, it certainly was eye-catching compared to other headstocks and logos of the era – and certainly did not give off a rock-and-roll vibe! The bound rosewood fretboard on the one shown here has 21 frets, and joins the body at the 16th (Lo Duca literature claimed the fretboard was ebony). The hyper-slim bolt-on neck has five-piece laminate construction – maple with rosewood stringers. It measures 1 3/8″ wide at the nut, and there’s a zero fret. The serial number is embossed on the neck plate.

The Oliviero Pigini company also made Vox guitars and basses in the same era, and this Eko has the same truss rod adjustment system (at the end of the neck) as the Vox Saturn Bass (VG, May, 2010). The different-sized dot markers on the fretboard are also found on the Saturn.

The body is 13″ wide and 2 3/4″ deep. It has an arched spruce top, birdseye maple back and sides, and three-layer binding (white/black/white) on the edge. Its Dura-Glos finish is called Honey Brown. Electronics include two height-adjustable pickups with staple-type polepieces. A Lo Duca Brothers catalog refers to them as having “double polarity,” inferring they’re humbuckers.

The four-position pickup toggle has a standard three-way operation plus an “off” position. Control knobs are master Volume and master Tone. Hardware includes budget-grade tuners, a harp-shaped tailpiece, and a bridge that once again invites comparison to Vox. Like the Saturn Bass, it has adjustable saddles for height and intonation under the snap-on cover. The base of the bridge is rosewood.

The pickguard is made from clear plastic with the gold logo screenprinted on the underside followed by the application of brown paint. The oversized white finger rest is also plastic.

The 995’s popularity means that variants of the bass will be encountered, including examples that have a standard three-way pickup toggle switch instead of the four-position rotary switch seen here. Alternate tuners will be encountered, as will white or black pickguards, and black pickups.

Eko also made hollowbody violin-shaped guitars, marketing them as the 395 series, which included a six-string with a trapeze tailpiece, a six-string with a vibrato, and a 12-string model.

In the late ’60s, the frontline endorsers for Eko’s 395 and 995 instruments were the Grass Roots (“Temptation Eyes,” “Let’s Live for Today,” etc.), and the band appeared in an ad to promote the models. In the same era, left-handed bassist Doug Lubahn (VG, February ’10) played a flipped-over 995 (strung “righty”) with his own band, Clear Light, and used the instrument as the in-studio bassist for the Doors on songs such as “You’re Lost Little Girl,” “People Are Strange,” and “I Can’t See Your Face In My Mind,” among others.

“The Eko had a beautifully-rounded sound if you played it with a pick,” Lubahn recalled in his interview. “If you plucked with fingers, though, it didn’t sound so hot!” More recently, Les Claypool (of Primus) has been seen plunking on a vintage 995.

Eko must have been doing something right with the 995, considering its popularity in its time. It wasn’t the fanciest “Beatle bass” wanna-be, but it wasn’t the worst of the genre, either. When they see it, many a babyboomer player will nod their head and mutter, “Yeah, I remember those…”


Attachments:
Eko.JPG
Eko.JPG [ 38.19 KiB | Viewed 5158 times ]

Author:  Matt R. [ December 13th, 2011, 5:41 pm ]
Post subject:  Re: EKO 995

coolness

Page 1 of 1 All times are UTC - 8 hours [ DST ]
Powered by phpBB © 2000, 2002, 2005, 2007 phpBB Group
http://www.phpbb.com/