Please help me identify this bass?! Japanese? Soviet?

nickbearden

Jamestown Revival - Bass
Nov 13, 2013
93
18
4,571
Nashville, TN
www.nickbearden.com
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Reunion Blues, LR Baggs, D'Addario, Seymour Duncan, Tecovas, A-Designs REDDI Planet Waves Vic Firth
Hey gang,

Help!

Any ideas on identifying this bass? I have a bass in the collection that I am not sure of who the manufacturer is, and was hoping that someone around here may have some insight as to who exactly made it?

There are no name tags, numbers, or information on anything that I can see, to help determine. It has been refinished. The pick guard is mirrored metal, and the potentiometers / switches are sealed under a soldered-on metal cap. I am hoping that the switch plate will help give away what definitive bass it is? Other than the re-fin, the rest appears to be stock / original.

I have done some poking around searching under Tiesco, Japanese Bass, Soviet Bass, Russian Bass, the other usual suspects, and when a brand pops up under those searches, I've gone down further rabbit holes of other models / makes by whacky off-shoot Japanese & Soviet basses, nothing identical yet.

Sounds great, pickups don't strike me as microphonic, has a pretty warm / fat tone, records beautifully, just wish I knew who made it! :)

Cheers!
~N

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Has a body reminiscent of an Egmond Typhoon but I reckon it's a Klira, made in Germany. Those rotary controls were quite common in '60s European basses. The 'plate is non-original, obviously, and so might the routing underneath.
 
During cold war people in Eastern Europe were building guitars/basses based on rare photos that we could find. One of the first bass guitars in Croatia (Yugoslavia at that time) was extra large because neck scale was estimated by comparing to a bass player size who was holding it on a photo, and he was a small guy :)
All parts were recycled electronic or invented from scratch.
 
I remember reading an interview with a Russian musician who said they took apart telephone receivers to make the transducers.
In Estonia, before the Eastern Block came to an end, I spotted an early '70s Jazz Bass in a shop for £100, a bargain. I spoke to my guide about it and he said it was common for guys to wind their own pups and keep the originals from name instruments.
 
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Certainly German-made, and from the mid-'60s. It appears the refin job began with stripping off some kind of glued-on plastic covering. It could be a bass version of this Fasan "Holiday" guitar:

9948382fasan_body.jpg


But some Fasan, Isana and Klira models were very similar to each other, and even seem to have shared the name "Holiday" sometimes.

Here's a bastardized bass with the same kind of body and Schaller pickup/pickguard assembly, but what looks like a Höfner 185 neck:

3819525Vintage-Bass-Germany_Hofner.Neck.jpg
 
Certainly German-made, and from the mid-'60s. It appears the refin job began with stripping off some kind of glued-on plastic covering. It could be a bass version of this Fasan "Holiday" guita
View attachment 3315944

But some Fasan, Isana and Klira models were very similar to each other, and even seem to have shared the name "Holiday" sometimes.

Here's a bastardized bass with the same kind of body and Schaller pickup/pickguard assembly, but what looks like a Höfner 185 neck:

View attachment 3315946


Pickguard is definitely the same here, thank you for including these photos. I think that I saw this photo somewhere online when I was first poking around, and then couldn't find it again! The pickguard is definitely the same. Are you saying that these pickups were made by Schaller? Learn something new everyday, I wasn't aware they made pups too!