Höfner 500/1 Violin Bass | |
---|---|
Manufacturer | Karl Höfner GmbH & Co. |
Period | 1955-Present |
Construction | |
Body type | Hollow[lower-alpha 1] |
Scale | 30 in (760 mm) |
Woods | |
Body | Spruce (top), maple (back/sides) |
Neck | Maple |
Fretboard | Rosewood |
Hardware | |
Bridge | Höfner Ebony Bridge |
Pickup(s) | Höfner 511B Humbucking Pickups |
Colors available | |
Sunburst, black, laurel, rosewood and many others |
The Höfner 500/1 Violin Bass (sometimes nicknamed the "Beatle Bass" or "Cavern Bass") is a model of electric bass manufactured by Höfner under several varieties. It was introduced in 1955 and gained celebrity status during the 1960s as the primary bass used by Paul McCartney of The Beatles.
History
In 1955, Walter Höfner designed an electrically amplified, semi-acoustic bass.[1] The hollow body made this style of bass very light and easy to play, as well as giving it a rich tone similar to that of the traditional double bass. The bass was first shown to the public at the Frankfurt Music Fair in the spring of 1956.
Following the popularity of the Violin Bass created by its use by Paul McCartney, Höfner began producing a similar alternative in terms of sound and size with a different shaped body called the Höfner 500/2 Club Bass in 1964.[2]
Description
The Höfner 500/1 is a hollow-body instrument, though lacking soundholes, and is as such commonly referred to as a semi-hollow bass. It is built using a fairly traditional style, similar to that of an acoustic guitar. It commonly features a thin maple body, a spruce top and a maple neck. The fretboard is traditionally made of rosewood, though more contemporary models have utilized other, similar tonewoods. The Höfner 500/ features a two-piece bridge system, consisting of an adjustable ebony bridge, and a metal tailpiece. The Höfner 500 is also notable for its distinctive control layout, featuring two rotary knobs, as well as three sliding knobs, controlling tone and pickup selection.
Prior to 1962, the two pickups were mounted near each other up against the heel of the neck, and as a result they had very similar tone, even when played separately. In 1962, the bass was slightly redesigned to move the second pickup up against the bridge, giving each a more distinct tone. Additional cosmetic changes were made to the bass in 1962, including the use of a different logo on the headstock and different tuning pegs. Otherwise, the instrument in both configurations featured the same "brunette" sunburst finish, the same pearloid pickguard, and the same electronics and control configuration. The earlier version is often referred to as the "Cavern bass", after the Cavern Club, where Paul McCartney famously made use of this particular model. More modern re-issues have been made in both configurations.
Use by Paul McCartney
A major boost for the bass came in early 1961 when it caught the eye of a young Paul McCartney. In July 1961, before Stuart Sutcliffe decided to leave the Beatles, he briefly lent McCartney his bass until the latter could earn enough to buy a bass of his own in June 1961.[3] McCartney was drawn to the Höfner because he felt that its symmetrical shape would mean that playing it left-handed would not look as awkward as using a cutaway guitar designed for a right-handed player:[4] As Höfner did not sell a left-handed version of the 500/1 bass, McCartney had to custom order his 1961 bass. The order was placed at the Steinway Musikhaus in Hamburg, then the largest and most prestigious music store in the city. McCartney recalls ordering the bass as it was "quite cheap" in comparison to other instruments. It is likely this was the first left-handed 500/1 bass Hofner made.[5]
"I remember going along there, and there was this bass which was quite cheap. I couldn't afford a Fender. Fenders even then seemed to be about £100. All I could really afford was about £30 ... so for about £30, I found this Hofner violin bass. And to me, it seemed like, because I was left-handed, it looked less daft because it was symmetrical. Didn't look as bad as a cutaway which was the wrong way. So I got into that."[6]
McCartney eventually acquired two basses of this model: his original 1961 model with stacked pickups, and a 1963 model with the widely separated pickups.[7] By early 1964, McCartney began using the newer bass almost exclusively, leaving the original as a backup. In 1964, he had his 1961 model refinished in sunburst and had a new updated pickup surround system installed around the original pickups, as one of the plastic original surrounds had snapped (the one nearer the neck). He can be seen using this bass in the "Revolution" promo video with the strap attached to the headstock instead of the neck heel, presumably to counteract the instrument's neck dive, which is caused by its light body. He continued to regularly use the violin bass until 1965 when he switched to a Rickenbacker 4001S; afterwards, he would rotate between the two. On 30 January 1969 the Höfner Bass made its last Beatle appearance at the Apple rooftop concert. Sometime during the recording of Let It Be, the 1961 model was stolen from an Abbey Road Studios closet, along with George Harrison's Gretsch Tennessean and Rickenbacker 360/12.[6]
In September 2023, Nick Wass, a Liverpool native and former Höfner marketing manager and guitar developer, launched the "Lost Bass Project" to recover McCartney's stolen Höfner bass.[8][9]
McCartney switched to using his 1963 model for the remainder of the album.[10] He switched back to the Rickenbacker for the recording of Abbey Road and he even used it with Wings and his solo career. In 1988, while recording the Flowers in the Dirt album, a collaboration with Elvis Costello led to a request from Costello for McCartney to bring the 500/1 back from retirement. As of 2023, he is still in possession of the 1963 bass, and regularly uses it for performances.
Images
- Paul McCartney (second from the right) with his second (1963) Höfner bass in 1965.
- Paul McCartney with his Höfner bass in 2010. Notice that McCartney has removed the pearloid pickguard. He removed the pickguard during The Beatles' 1966 US tour.[11][12]
- Höfner 500/1 50th Anniversary RH (reissue)
In their original run, the 500/1 used this stacked pickup configuration prior to 1962. - The Höfner H500/1-62 "Mersey" model. (reissue)
From 1962 onwards, the 500/1 featured a widely separated pickup configuration. - Höfner 500/1 Vintage '62 World History RH
- A Höfner bass on display at the Beatles-Museum Biebelnheim
Variations
The following variations are or were sold by Höfner:[13]
- 500/1 Vintage '58 re-issue
- 500/1 Vintage '59 re-issue
- 500/1 Cavern Bass (no longer available from Höfner)[1]
- 500/1 Vintage '61 Cavern Bass (2011 model - based on Paul McCartney's original specs)
- 500/1 Vintage '62 "Mersey"
- 500/1 Vintage '62 50th Anniversary Edition (2014) of "The Ed Sullivan Show". Limited Edition of 64 only.
- 500/1 Vintage '63 (no longer in production)
- 500/1 Vintage '64 (replaced '63)
- 500/1 125th Anniversary 'Black Violin Bass'
- 5000/1 Deluxe Bass (no longer in production)
- 500/1 KV 60th Anniversary model with graphics designed by Klaus Voormann
- H500/1-CT Contemporary Series ("Designed in Germany" printed on back of head. "Made in China" on sticker on back of head.)
- Icon series B-Bass, made in China (name changed to Ignition for legal reasons in 2010)
- Höfner produced limited runs of the Icon B Bass in 5 custom color schemes. Only 150 of each color were manufactured and made available for sale in 2008.[14]
- In 2008, the Icon B Bass was also issued in a limited edition "Dark Burst" finish, of which 88 were produced.
- HI series B-Bass (Ignition), made in Indonesia, from 2010. A cheaper budget option.
Imitators
Due to the cost of the official Höfner bass, several guitar companies offer more affordable versions of the "violin bass". These include Greco, Epiphone, Tokai, El Dégas, Jay Turser, Duesenberg, Rogue, Douglas, Harley Benton and Eko. These range anywhere from $200 to $1,500.[15] Carl Wilson and Al Jardine of The Beach Boys occasionally played a Höfner imitation bass during the late 1960s, most notably at the 1967 concerts in Honolulu, HI that produced the long-unreleased live album Lei'd in Hawaii.[16] Höfner themselves make an affordable version of their bass (the Ignition).
Höfner 500/1 players
- Paul McCartney
- Satomi Matsuzaki of Deerhoof
- Angel Deradoorian
- Murray Cook of The Wiggles
- Nick Allbrook of Tame Impala
- Tom Hamilton of Aerosmith played a Höfner on the recording sessions for Just Push Play, and on the recording of "What It Takes".
- Robbie Shakespeare[17]
- Chris Wood of Medeski Martin and Wood The Wood Brothers
- Yen Chih-Lin of Power Station
- Zach Dawes of The Last Shadow Puppets
- Charly Garcia in Random
- Doug Fieger of The Knack and Sky owned a Höfner.
- Göran Lagerberg of Tages[18]
- Jon Anderson on Olias of Sunhillow[19]
In popular culture
The Höfner 500/1 appeared in Guitar Hero II while the Epiphone Viola appeared in Guitar Hero: Aerosmith. A replica of the Höfner bass used by McCartney (albeit right-handed) is used as the basis for a guitar controller, included with the special edition bundle of the video game The Beatles: Rock Band.
References
- 1 2 "Höfner Geschichte - Über Höfner". Archived from the original on May 10, 2012. Retrieved June 10, 2012.
- ↑ "Hofner Club Bass". Hofner. Retrieved 22 April 2020.
- ↑ Miles, Barry (1997). Many Years From Now. Vintage-Random House. pp. 74–75. ISBN 978-0-7493-8658-0.
- ↑ Terry, Burrows, ed. (2013). 1001 Guitars to Dream of Playing Before You Die. Sydney: Pier 9. p. 178. ISBN 978-1-7433-6912-8.
- ↑ Wass, Nick (13 July 2022). "The history of Paul McCartney and his iconic Hofner 500/1 bass guitar". Guitar World. Retrieved 6 April 2023.
- 1 2 Crowley, John F. "McCartney's Guitars, Part 3". The Canteen. Retrieved March 27, 2019.
- ↑ "North Coast Music: Hofner Bass Specification Table". Archived from the original on 2010-07-15. Retrieved 2010-06-22.
- ↑ "Paul's Lost Bass". hofner.com. Retrieved 2023-09-24.
- ↑ "Searching for the Lost Bass". thelostbass.com. Retrieved 2023-09-24.
- ↑ "Let It Be" film, Apple Corps.
- ↑ "The Beatles, when they played Crosley Field".
- ↑ "Only known color photos of the Beatles' 1966 US tour go under the hammer for the first time | Daily Mail Online". 17 July 2019.
- ↑ "Hofner Violin Bass". Archived from the original on June 6, 2012. Retrieved June 10, 2012.
- ↑ "North Coast Music: Hofner Limited Edsition Icon Basses". Archived from the original on February 23, 2009. Retrieved February 12, 2009.
- ↑ Violin Style Bass Guitars
- ↑ Stebbins, Jon (2011). The Beach Boys FAQ: All That's Left to Know About America's Band. Backbeat Books. p. 289. ISBN 9781458429148.
- ↑ Taylor, Angus (26 June 2012). "Interview: Robbie Shakespeare". United Reggae: Online Reggae Magazine. Retrieved 27 March 2017.
- ↑ "Göran Lagerberg". www.fuzz.se. Archived from the original on 2021-08-03. Retrieved 2021-09-14.
- ↑ "Preface to the Expanded Edition", Dionysiac Poetics and Euripides' Bacchae, Princeton University Press, pp. ix–xii, 2021-01-12, doi:10.2307/j.ctv18zhdm1.3, S2CID 242671661, retrieved 2022-01-18
Footnotes
- ↑ The Contemporary series models contain a centre block.
External links
- The Lost Bass the search for Paul McCartney’s original Höfner
- Official Höfner website: A Short History of the Höfner 500/1 Violin Bass
- Detailed information on guitars used by The Beatles