Every so often something comes along in life
that forces you to reevaluate. Sometimes it's something foundational and
Earth-shattering and sometimes it's a tiny tweak in perspective. Over the last
few weeks I've had a series of revelations about the nature of one of the early
Wal bass designs. I'll leave it to the reader's discretion to decide which camp
they fall into.
I have a confession to make. Having never
actually had an opportunity to play a JG series Wal bass I had always
considered them a bit of a homespun, stepping stone bass. A simple work in
progress towards a more sophisticated, complete design - as embodied in the Pro
Series bass. I now realise that assumption was very, very wrong.
Over the last few weeks there has been a strange
coincidental domino effect of emails popping into my inbox and social media
feeds. First an email arrived from a bass player I have long admired and whose
playing with Michael Nyman scales pinnacles I can hardly dream of. In it a
fascinating anecdote was related and photos of the first true JG, number JG1112
were produced. Then a JG bass suddenly turned up being offered for sale on eBay
and flagged on the Wal basses fan group on Facebook. Finally, other JG owners,
emboldened by the reaction to that bass joining in an online show-and-tell
session showcasing their own instruments. What a treasure trove.
One thing that became clear across these
communications - which encompassed the second JG ever made and one of the last
- was that my presumptions about the basses were dead wrong.