The acoustic bass guitar (also called ABG or acoustic bass) is an acoustic string instrument based on the configuration of the electric bass pioneered by Leo Fender's electric Fender Precision Bass.
About his invention, Ball stated:
In collaboration with George Fullerton, a former employee at Fender, Ball developed the Earthwood acoustic bass guitar, which was introduced in 1972. Production of this instrument ceased in 1974, resuming a few years later under the direction of Ernie Ball employee Dan Norton, until production finally ended again in 1985. The Ernie Ball company describes Ball's design as "an idea before its time," and, indeed, the instrument did not become de rigueur for acoustic musical performances such as the MTV Unplugged television program until the late 1980s*
Like the Fender Precision Bass and the double bass, the acoustic bass guitar commonly has four strings, which are normally tuned E-A-D-G, making it an octave below the lowest four strings of the 6-string guitar. Like the electric bass guitar, models with five or more strings have been produced, although these are less common. In part, this is because the body of an acoustic bass guitar is too small to produce a resonance of acceptable volume at lower pitches. One solution is to tune a five string bass E-A-D-G-C instead of B-E-A-D-G; another is to rely on amplification.
Because it can be difficult for a strictly acoustic bass guitar to be heard over other instruments — even unamplified acoustic guitars — many (but by no means all) acoustic basses have pickups, either magnetic or piezoelectric or both, so that they can optionally be used with an amplifier.
There are also semi-acoustic models fitted with pickups and intended to be always used with an amplifier. The box of these is principally designed to produce a distinctive tone when amplified, similarly to semi-acoustic electric guitars. Thin-body semi-acoustic basses such as the violin-shaped Höfner made famous by the early Beatles and several Fender models are not normally regarded as acoustic basses at all, but rather as hollow-bodied bass guitars. As with semi-acoustic electric guitars, the line between acoustic instruments fitted with pickups and electric instruments with tone-enhancing bodies is sometimes hard to draw.
Saga Musical Instruments produce a four-string bass resonator guitar under their Regal brand name.
Other manufacturers of acoustic bass guitars (not mentioned above) include Alvarez, Breedlove, Dean, Eston, Gibson, Ibanez, Maton, Ovation, Prestige Ribbecke Halfling Bass and Tacoma.
Traditional music of Mexico features several varieties of acoustic bass guitars.
The baja sexto, with six pairs of strings, resembles a twelve-string guitar tuned an octave lower. The heavy gauge strings generate a large string tension, yet the guitar is built relatively lightly. The baja sexto began to be used in Texas in the 1920s with the rise of "Tex-Mex" music, where it continues to be used to play the parts which would be played by the piano in traditional American popular music. A Mexican variation of the baja sexto is called bajo sexto. The tuning of these instruments is (capital letters are an octave lower than small letters):
The guitarrón or chitarrone is a very large, deep-bodied Mexican 6-string acoustic bass guitar played in Mariachi bands.
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