Thanks for the suggestions.
The new band I'm working with is primarily an old school, groove-oriented, R&B/funk cover band, so leave that slappin' and poppin' nonsense at home kiddies.
Big band with horns and percussion. Lots of Jamerson, Motown, Average White Band, Santana, etc. I'm loving every minute of it.
About 90% of the material we're playing I'm finding either my P or J basses the perfect weapons of choice. Both are strung with flats.
I'm looking for a versatile amp, however, as to not restrict my future needs, with plenty of headroom that can comfortably fill a typical 100-300 capacity bar/restaurant/wedding gig, etc. but NOT something that ends up coloring the true tone(s) of my basses too much. (Which is why I almost always shy away from Ampeg. I get the appeal, but there's a definite signature sound there and every bass I ever ran through an Ampeg sounded like, well, an Ampeg, instead of my bass).
andrew wrote:
If you want to go lightweight amp head I'd look at the Aguilar Tonehammer 500 and G-K MB Fusion 800 first.
I find some of the class D heads have an airy quality to their lows, a real lack of meaty bass response, but I like the lows in those two amps.
Yeah, that was kind of the problem I had with the Gens Benz. It sounded "sterile"? for lack of a better word, and was missing that kick and meat.
andrew wrote:
There's some good options out there but I know the pain you'll have replacing the Eden 410; I love the 410XLT and few 410 cabs sound as good to my ears. That's why I'd look at Bergantino first, they were the company that I went to from Eden for cabs. At least as far as lighter options with some of the Eden 410 thump.
Thanks Andrew. I think I'll start with a power amp regardless. It's not like I can't use one anyway. Then I'll do some demoing of heads, combos, speakers, etc. and see if I can find somewhere to try a Bergantino first hand.