Fender Mustang Bass

Mustang Bass
Manufacturer Fender
Period 1966–1981, 2002–present
Construction
Body type Solid
Neck joint Bolt-on
Scale 30"
Woods
Body Alder
Neck Maple, "C" Shape,(Gloss Polyurethane Finish)
Fretboard rosewood (9.5" Radius/241 mm) (MIJ model = 7.25" radius)
Hardware
Bridge Strings-Thru-Body with 4 Individually Adjustable Saddles
Pickup(s) 1 Special Design Split Single-Coil Mustang Bass Pickup
Colors available
Currently Vintage White, previous colors in the past.

The Fender Mustang Bass is an electric bass guitar model produced by Fender. Two variants, the Musicmaster Bass and the Bronco Bass, have also been produced from time to time using the same body and neck shape.

History

Introduced in 1966 as a companion to Fender's shorter-scaled, two-pickup Fender Mustang guitars, the Mustang Bass was the last original bass designed by Leo Fender before his departure from the company in 1965. The Mustang Bass has a short 30" scale and a single split pickup (similar to the Precision Bass), one volume and one tone control, with strings-through-body routing. Like the early Precision and Jazz basses, the Mustang Bass was fitted with string mutes (although most players removed these).

The standard finishes were red and white. Mustang Basses, like all Fender guitars, were finished in nitrocellulose lacquer up until 1968, thereafter in thick polyester finish. In 1969, both the Mustang guitar and bass were issued with 'Competition' finishes—i.e., red with three white stripes, a thick one between two thinner ones, Lake Placid Blue with lighter blue stripes, etc. and were later available in various plain finishes including black and sunburst. (The yellowing of the lacquer on some early models has also resulted in "rare" colours like Surf Green, in reality a yellowed Competition Blue).

In production almost continuously to 1981, the Mustang Bass was reissued by Fender Japan in 2002.

The Musicmaster Bass variant was also introduced in the mid-1960s and was originally marketed as a student model. Rather than the split-coil design of the Mustang Bass, it featured a single-coil pickup, which was actually a six-pole Stratocaster guitar pickup under a solid plastic cover. Production ceased around the same time as the Mustang Bass. The Squier Musicmaster Bass was reissued briefly in 1997, however it was discontinued after only one year of production and was ultimately replaced by the Bronco Bass.

Fender reintroduced the Mustang Bass as part of the Squier lineup. The Squier Vintage Modified Mustang Bass was released in July 2011, offered in black, or three-tone sunburst with a maple fretboard, a black pickguard and Stratocaster style volume and tone knobs.

For 2013, Fender launched three new Mustang basses in the Pawn Shop series, which they call an unconventional assortment of "guitars that never were but should have been". They evoke the original "competition" Mustangs of the early '70s. These basses are available in Candy Apple Red with white stripes, Olympic White with blue stripes, and three color sunburst. Their features include an alder body, "C"-shaped maple neck, 9.5"-radius rosewood fingerboard with 19 medium jumbo frets, four-ply white pearloid pick-guard, two Jazz Bass® control knobs (volume, tone) and a strings-through-body bridge with four adjustable saddles. This time, though, one obtains the huge bass sound of a single humbucking pickup whereas the original had a single-coil pickups. The Pawn Shop Mustang basses are made by Fender Mexico.

References

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