Thanks so much guys, I was up reading some of the old posts - and stayed up maybe a bit too late doing so - last night and have found some great & interesting info on the forums, as well as some good laughs! I'm sure I will continue to and hopefully add some of my own perspective with experience as well.
@ pjmuck - thanks for reading the story of "the unicorn" - how crazy is that to think it was 10 minutes down the road all this time? Once I first picked up a bass last fall, I knew that it was the start of something great. I've always dug bass without realizing it - being drawn to songs with prominent basslines. I'm ambidextrous (write righty, bat lefty, bowl both, etc...) from breaking my right arm at the tender age of 2 and having to learn to do things (mostly drawing & grabbing stuff! lol), and grew up playing air guitar lefty. lol! After deciding to get serious with bass, being that I'm left-handed and having hands so small that I'm part of the "small hands represent" group (I kid you not), the Fender Mustang Bass seemed like the "right" choice.
I came across Saf's in my search and like I've said, drooled over it for months! Everybody's got a "dream instrument" and mine was (and is!) a 1969 Fender Mustang Bass in Competition Burgundy (later called Blue) with matching headstock & rosewood fretboard. Thus began the search, not knowing just how nearly-impossible this bass would be to find at the time! Then I was inverting it up on that 70s relic with a broken pickup from May-July & toying around with my bf's other basses upside-down before that - a P, a Rick, Viola, Thunderbird... The Viola was the only one that felt "small" enough to work with for me. Now I've seen small women like Melissa van der Auf handling P's with ease, but I also notice that most of these women are playing with the neck tilted almost vertically, like an upright, in order to make it happen. I also guarantee they've got a larger palm spread than I! Lol Tina Weymouth got it right by me! =) In my growing knowledge and appreciation of Fender and the Mustang Bass in particular, I found out it was the last model designed at Fender by Leo Fender, which made it all the greater in my mind - like a "final masterpiece" to Fender. I discovered that I might not ever see a reissue Mustang Bass left-handed, let alone a vintage lefty Mustang Bass, but I kept hope alive! I thought of picking up one of those SX SSB's in lefty since the price was right & it got decent reviews, but held off. And lookah here! I'm still amazed everyday that I have my "dream bass", and how it came to be just seems like it was destiny to me. It was bought as a b-day gift for me - the biggest gift I've ever received, and given to me, but I like to think that she found me. I even played my first gig only a month later at an after-party for the Providence International Film Fest premiere of the movie "Sleather," - (which my bf did the original score for). Check it out -
http://www.sleathermovie.comNOW... if she'd juuust stay in tune! Thanks again Bill for your help, I'm going to hold off on the cloverleafs for now if they'll require hole-drilling (which I liken to giving your son/daughter piercings) and the cleaning & lubing will commence in the next day or two, so I'll let ya know how it goes. =)
One more thing - speaking of holes... there was a tiny pin-hole on the horn opposite the one where the strap button is - could this be part of the Fender "paint" holes? Let me know what you Fender fanatics think!