Squier by Fender 306702505 Vintage Modified Jazz Bass ’70s, Natural
Upgraded for 2013, Squier’s Vintage Modified Jazz Bass ’70s returns you to a great period in Jazz Bass history, with dual Fender-designed pickups and a slim “C”-shaped maple neck with a vintage-tint gloss finish. Other features include a black-bound 9.5″-radius maple fingerboard with 20 medium jumbo frets and stylish black block inlays, three-ply black pick guard, four saddle bridge, knurled chrome control knobs, and open-gear tuners. Super ’70s sound and feel for today’s bassists, with superior Squier performance and value.
Product Features
- Traditional Jazz Bass Tone delivered by two Fender Designed single coil pickups
- Rich look and presentation via a vintage tinted gloss neck with block inlays
- Super 70’s sound and feel for today’s bassists, with superior Squier performance and value
An amazing value. Great sounding bass An amazing value. Great sounding bass, I am glad Squier are really a different thing from the awful instruments we had back in the nineties. Really solid construction, this bass looks like it can withstand any kind of treatment. Great sound also, and it gets better when you change the original strings, the swap really brings the character in it. Any presentation is awesome but I especially like this natural color, you can see the 3 pieced body, but doesn’t look bad at all. Only thing I don’t…
spectacular value I haven’t played a Fender bass for several decades so I was amazed by the quality of this Squire Fretless Jazz Bass. The fit and finish are great. The playability, after truss-rod adjustments, was on par with my old Fender basses. My was a Warehouse deal and the description said it had minor scratches. All I found was one tiny chip where the neck fits the body. However, the description didn’t mention that the bridge pickup was dead and the truss rod wrench was missing. I removed the…
By now this thing is pretty well-known as THE bargain in fretless basses, so I’ll leave it up to you to Google the considerable praise that’s been heaped on it by lots of people who were blown away that a $300 bass could be this good. Make no mistake — it’s an inexpensive instrument made in Indonesia, and there are aspects that are sub-par — but it’s highly playable and looks great, and at this price I’m willing to overlook things that don’t harm the playability.Fit and finish…