Difference between revisions of "Status Kitara Doubleneck Bass"
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First seen in 2012, [[Chris Wolstenholme | Chris]] used this bass for the song [[Madness (song)| Madness]]. The bass is incredilby unique in that the top half of the bass is a [[Misa Kitara]], cut to fit the frame of the body, and the bottom half is a [[Status S2-Classic|Status S2-Classic headless]]. Due to the Misa Kitara made out of plastic, not built for heavy touring and thus prone to failure, Chris had three of them built for backup purposes through the tour. | First seen in 2012, [[Chris Wolstenholme | Chris]] used this bass for the song [[Madness (song)| Madness]]. The bass is incredilby unique in that the top half of the bass is a [[Misa Kitara]], cut to fit the frame of the body, and the bottom half is a [[Status S2-Classic|Status S2-Classic headless]]. Due to the Misa Kitara made out of plastic, not built for heavy touring and thus prone to failure, Chris had three of them built for backup purposes through the tour. | ||
The bass was later succeeded by the greatly improved and re-colored [[Status Kitara Doubleneck Bass Mk2|Doubleneck Mk2]] version, in 2017. While keeping the original intent of the Doubleneck bass, the Misa Kitara part was ditched completely out of the Mk2, using instead, a custom-built keyboard, with all it's electronics hidden inside the neck, connected to an iPad, which connects to MIDI through wireless. The Mk1 is still kept in Chris's rack, but for backup purposes. | The bass was later succeeded by the greatly improved and re-colored [[Status Kitara Doubleneck Bass Mk2|Doubleneck Mk2]] version, in 2017. While keeping the original intent of the Doubleneck bass, the Misa Kitara part was ditched completely out of the Mk2, using instead, a custom-built keyboard, with all it's electronics hidden inside the neck, connected to an iPad, which connects to MIDI through wireless. The Mk1 is still kept in Chris's rack, but for backup purposes. The Kitara part on the Mk2 was built by a company called "Starr Labs". | ||
== Touring == | == Touring == |
Revision as of 23:51, 24 February 2022
Status Kitara Doubleneck Bass Mk 2 | |
---|---|
Manufacturer | Status Graphite/Misa |
Used | 2012-09-13 — 2018-06-23 |
Body type | Alder encased in one-piece graphite composite |
Neck joint | Bolt-on |
Body covering | Satin black paint |
Wood | Alder body, wrapped in a carbon-graphite shell |
Bridge | Mono-rail bridge/tuners |
Electronics | Master volume, pickup blend control |
Pickup(s) | 2 Status soap-bar pickups |
Special circuits | Top half of the bass is a modded Misa Kitara |
Information & Background
First seen in 2012, Chris used this bass for the song Madness. The bass is incredilby unique in that the top half of the bass is a Misa Kitara, cut to fit the frame of the body, and the bottom half is a Status S2-Classic headless. Due to the Misa Kitara made out of plastic, not built for heavy touring and thus prone to failure, Chris had three of them built for backup purposes through the tour.
The bass was later succeeded by the greatly improved and re-colored Doubleneck Mk2 version, in 2017. While keeping the original intent of the Doubleneck bass, the Misa Kitara part was ditched completely out of the Mk2, using instead, a custom-built keyboard, with all it's electronics hidden inside the neck, connected to an iPad, which connects to MIDI through wireless. The Mk1 is still kept in Chris's rack, but for backup purposes. The Kitara part on the Mk2 was built by a company called "Starr Labs".
Touring
The bass debuted at the SVT on the 13th of September 2012 where it was used for Madness. After a break from touring, it returned for a couple of gigs in 2016 and 2018. It was tuned in standard (EADG).