Guitarist

1966 Mosrite Six-String Bass

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“This six-string bass is way out there […but] plays pretty much like a regular guitar!”

This is a 1966 Mosrite six-string bass. Up at the top of the fretboard near the body where they put their serial numbers it says ‘6 001.’ ‘6’ indicates the model year, but ‘001’? I don’t know how many six-string basses Mosrite made, but they’re not in the catalogue. And there are no markings on it anywhere that indicate a model name. I’ve never seen another one like it. I bought this guitar several years ago from another dealer here in the United States because I said to myself, ‘I don’t know if I’ll ever see another one of these things again.’ It wasn’t very costly, and it had the original brown Mosrite ’gator case with some original paperwork, which is kind of neat.

“I have to say that I’ve never been a huge fan of the Mosrite company. I realise Semie [Moseley, Mosrite founder] was a forefather of the solidbody electric guitar business and I have to give him credit for his innovation­s and designs. But this guitar is way out there. I don’t know how far this project went, but I’m sure it was in response to the Fender VI, Gibson EB-6 and Danelectro [UB-2] sixstring basses. My feeling is that everyone was jumping on the bandwagon and trying to make something.

“This one has a very deep blue sparkle finish and it has the really cool ‘Bart Simpson’ tuners – they got the name because they look like a profile of the cartoon character Bart Simpson’s head! It’s also got a Mosrite vibrato that actually functions. I mean, it works fairly well. It’s an interestin­g design, but it’s an absolute rip-off of the spring-loaded Bigsby. The pickup is basically a six-polepiece guitar pickup. The playabilit­y is great. Out of all the six-string basses or baritone guitars of this period that

I’ve played this is probably second only to the Fender VI. It’s far superior in build and design to the Gibson. There are two versions of the Gibson six-string bass – a semihollow version [from 1959] and a solidbody version [from 1961]. The hollowbody looks like an EB-2 [thinline] and the solid version has the typical SG shape. The SG-style ones tend to sound a little farty, and the earlier ones are also rather odd and cumbersome. The neck dimensions make them feel weird to play. This Mosrite six-string bass, however, plays pretty much like a regular guitar! You can pluck each individual string easily and hear each note clearly, or you can play chords. And the sound projects really well through an amplifier.

“The advantage the Fender VI has over it is that it’s got larger frets, whereas the frets on this Mosrite are tiny. You can even bend strings pretty comfortabl­y on the Fender VI and get some very cool sounds. I always think of Glen Campbell’s Wichita Lineman when I think of the VI because of the solo. But another great song featuring a Fender VI is Aerosmith’s Back In The Saddle – that’s certainly one of the most emotional sounds I’ve ever heard come out of a baritone electric guitar. But I don’t know of any recorded music performed using a Mosrite six-string bass. So I can’t recommend you listen to anything specific. This guitar is really a mystery. It’s virtually unknown. But that’s what got me interested in it to begin with. When I saw it online, I bought it for the Songbirds guitar museum in Chattanoog­a, Tennessee [David curated the museum’s incredible collection]. I bought it because I thought the museum needed something strange like this. It’s such a cool piece.

“Just to be completely transparen­t, I’ve only owned about 10 different Mosrite guitars in my life, so it’s not like there’s been a lot of them. I’ve had a couple of the setneck ones they made early on that are good. Mosrite certainly had their fans. Semie Moseley did a good job of getting his guitars out there into the country world. He got his guitars into many people’s hands. There are clips on YouTube of guitarists playing Mosrites at barn dances and even places like the Grand Ole Opry. Because of the Ventures models, Mosrites are also associated with surf music. But when this was made in ’66, the surf music era was pretty much over. The surf era really lasted from around 1960 to 1964. Once The Beatles became relevant, it was basically the end of a lot of people’s careers. I hate to diss a company I know has a big fanbase, but I just never really got the whole Mosrite thing. But I’ll say more positive things about this guitar than any [Mosrite] Ventures guitar I’ve played. I don’t think I’ve ever advertised it before. Then again, I don’t know who would be interested in it! Regardless, it’s an honour for me to own something this weird.”

Vintage guitar veteran David Davidson owns Well Strung Guitars in Farmingdal­e, New York www.wellstrung­guitars.com / info@wellstrung­guitars.com / 001 (516) 221-0563

 ?? ?? You may have heard of the Fender VI and Gibson EB-6, but a Mosrite six-string bass? Neither had we...
You may have heard of the Fender VI and Gibson EB-6, but a Mosrite six-string bass? Neither had we...
 ?? ?? With its offset body and cool bluesparkl­e finish this rare guitar is redolent of the bygone surf-era
With its offset body and cool bluesparkl­e finish this rare guitar is redolent of the bygone surf-era

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