pjmuck wrote:
LHBASSIST wrote:
funky42 wrote:
i believe this is a refin thats been on new york craigslist for a while now?maybe im wrong but im pretty sure its the one,the lack of info on the ebay listing is definitly weird.
I worked as a repair tech for Sam Ash Music in Brooklyn. N.Y., from 1979-1982. I saw a LOT of Fender basses like this in that time, but not very many left handed ones....I would've probably tried to buy 'em!
The serial number puts it at 1978. The color appears to be factory "Mocha Brown" which was a fairly common color in that era, second only to sunburst, white, and black, and the rare sienna sunburst, and the even rarer antigua finished basses. I saw a lefty antigua on Ebay a few years ago... can't remember if it was a p-bass or a jazz bass.
Were you at the store on Kings Highway or had it moved to Flatbush Ave yet (across from Kings Plaza)? Did you know/work with Jimmy Agnello? I was a regular at both shops.
The bass in question is definitely red, and the seller's in the next town over from me. Fender did offer red Ps and Js in '78.
HI! Yes, Dave Edwards here, I worked at the Kings Highway and Coney Island ave. store, and moved with the staff to Forest hills, Queens when it closed. Bummer for me, I lived in Woodside, a 10 minute bus ride from the store in FH. I moved to Gravesend in 1980, so I didn't have to ride an hour and a half on TWO subway lines to get to and from the store on Kings Hwy., to Woodside, Queens. Then, they moved to Queens! Then, I bought a car.
The small Ash store on east 13th. was right up the block from my apartment, on e. 13th.,between Kings and R. Jimmy Agnello is a longtime friend, and a great guy! He called out my name when I walked into the new Sam Ash store in Huntington beach, CA. about 9 yrs. ago. I was out there with my girlfriend, and he was the Sam Ash regional manager for Socal! Wow, it sure was great to see him. I don't think he works for Ash any longer.
The lighting in that pic is pretty bad, but it sure looks like Mocha. Paul Jackson, from the Headhunters, had a mocha P-bass with a maple neck...and is pictured with it - I saw him play that bass.
I want to tell you guys something you apparently don't know, from your comments here... it was COMMON, for Howie, the manager of the electric guitar and amp dept. at Ash...to have me swap necks to fill orders! That means, I'd remove a maple neck from a sunburst body, and put it on a white body, if it meant making a sale! I did this a lot. There's NO way to know how many mismatched basses there are. There are a lot more guitars than basses like this. The era we speak of basses had a unique to the period serial number system. There were plain white address type labels with the same serial numbers as the neck, inside the cavities, and one on the underside of the pickguard. The necks, on the headstock face, DID use the first digit as the last digit of the year, that is absolutely official. How necks from '78 ended up on later bodies is very simple...bass players have been swapping necks on Fender basses for as long as I have been repairing them, and way before that, too.
Of course, there are factory overlaps, but that is not the norm. I've seen pickups and pots that were from '65, in 66 basses...but not much more stock overlap than that.
Now think about this: if I was required by management in ONE store in Brooklyn, to swap necks and bodies to fulfill a customer's order, then how many other swaps were done around the country? I'd say quite a few. Fender was known to pull basses off the line and spray the customer's color request, OVER the finished bass body to fill orders.
Just my experience...hope this proves at least a little interesting! Happy Holidays, everyone!
P.S. TOMMY RAMONE was the drum sales counter guy in 1982, worked right above the shop in the basement! He's a nice guy, and a great drummer.