Aria SB series basses

Introduction

This webpage tells you a bit about the Aria SB family of basses. There are links to individual models below.

Above all, readers who own an SB are encouraged to send in photos and stories about their instrument to share with everyone. Without their wonderful contributions this page would not exist.

A Little Background

Bass guitars as such haven't been around all that long. Leo Fender introduced the first electric bass, the Precision, in 1951. Up until roughly the early 70s if you wanted quality you basically had a choice between expensive models made by the American companies Fender, Gibson and Rickenbacker. If you couldn't afford the real thing, you could try buying one of the numerous cheap imitations produced by manufacturers in the East. Most of these left a bit to be desired, but some makers like Ibanez and Aria could not only make decent copies but actually had the audacity to try to improve on the originals!

Aria's SB-1000 bass is widely recognised as the first high-quality original Japanese bass. Several noteworthy bassists such as John Taylor of Duran Duran and Jack Bruce helped popularise SBs in the early 80's, but the models' heyday was short-lived. Nowadays with so many other good basses on the market, SBs have become something of a forgotten secret. Yet these basses not only look beautiful, they sound good, play well if they've been properly looked after, and are superbly and solidly constructed.

Aria are still producing SBs in Japan (see below), and recently reissued the SB-1000 which sells in the UK for a hefty £1500. However this site deals mainly with the original SBs from the early 80s. If you can find a good secondhand example you may be getting a real bargain!

Construction

sculpting The backbone of every SB bass is a maple through neck which offers superb sustain. The neck is inset with two strips of darker mahogany laminate, and is nicely sculpted at the back allowing unbeatable access to the upper frets.

Careful thought has also gone into Aria's hardware. In the original series, each pickup has a little ledge where you can rest your thumb. The jack socket is on the front of the bass which makes it easier to play sitting down and easier to locate in the dark. The bridge is a very rock-solid design, and I love the fact that the strings slot in rather than passing through holes. It makes changing them a dawdle.

Smaller/shorter bass players may find the typical SB something of a handful. They can be heavy instruments (see below). It is also quite a stretch to the first fret.

open book and bat's ears headstocks The long, distinctive headstock has an end shaped like an open book, though some SBs have a cutout which makes the end look like a pair of bat's ears.

Machine heads are the small, fully-enclosed, smooth kind that has become standard nowadays. The body sides of the bass are often made from ash, and are coloured or stained to highlight the through-neck. There are various side finishes available, including black, blue and red. Personally I think the most attractive are the golden and honey stains.

Weight

Several owners have commented how seriously heavy their SBs are. This depends on the wood used for the body. It seems that oak is the culprit. If you look at my bass (immediately below), and Lionel's SB-R60 and Gerhard's SB-700 in the individual sections, you can see the same dense wood.

Most SBs are not as heavy as these, and your shoulder will be spared!
Narrow neck SB-700. Click to enlarge.

Narrow Necks

The original type of SB bass is typified by the flagship SB-1000. It has active circuitry and features a six-position rotary switch to kick in the various sounds from it's single pick-up. The bass in the picture is one of mine - it's the SB-1000's passive “baby brother”, the SB-700.

Such basses have dot fret inlays and a narrow yet deep, super-fast neck. Slung with a lowish action, it is possible to play at lightning speed. If my bass is typical, the neck measures 44 mm wide at the nut. At the 12th fret the width is just 52 mm but a large 83 mm round the back. At the brass bridge the string-gap is a VERY narrow 16 mm, in fact the strings run almost parallel!


Wide neck SB-R80. Click to enlarge.

Wider Necks

This narrow string-gap was created for the slightly smaller hands of the typical far-Eastern player. But Aria also made a family of SB basses with wider, shallower necks strung with a slightly higher action. The easy way to recognise such a bass is the distinctive elliptical fret inlays.

The SB-R80 shown is typical of this family. It has two pick-ups (the single pick-up version is called the SB-R60) and, for comparison, the neck is 42 mm wide at the nut, 55 mm at the 12th fret but still the same 83 mm round the back. The string-gap at the bridge, chrome this time, is a more normal 18 mm. That's still narrower, I am told, than a Fender Jazz! The strings on SBs such as this have a more pronounced taper inwards from bridge to nut than the narrow-necks have.

On the SB-R80, tone and volume pots are stacked for each pick-up, and as well as the teardrop-shaped pick-up selector there is a flick-switch for each pickup.

Pickups

I am grateful to Heinrich Bietz of Germany for clarifying the way SB pickups are wired. Each pickup is a humbucker and the flick-switch is not a coil tap as I'd assumed. Rather it allows you to choose between the normal “series” setting (switch down, coils in series) and the brighter-sounding and quieter “parallel” setting (switch up, coils in parallel, less resistance).

Although SB pickups are fully-enclosed, they sometimes do go wrong. Faulty ones cannot be easily repaired. In the UK there are two places you might try. Andy Blake, the Pickup Wizard in Wales may be able to help. He does not make exact replicas but can make something similar. Alternatively I can personally recommend the excellent replacements made by the English manufacturer Aaron Armstrong :

Aaron Armstrong
Unit 31
Old Surrenden Manor
Bethersden
Ashford
Kent
TN26 3DL
England

Tel (UK) 01233-820082, or email Aaron.

Click here for a diagram showing how to wire Aaron's pickups into a passive circuit. The switch is a DPST switch.

Strings

Derek Bish, owner of an SB-600 featured on this site, has raised the question of string choice for SBs. My own thoughts are that finding the correct gauge to suit your style and your instrument is more important than which brand you choose. There are loads of good brands about, such as Rotosound, d'Addario, Elites. Just avoid hand-wound strings - a machine can ensure consistent tension far better than a human!

I go for 45, 65, 80, 100 gauge Ernie Balls on my narrow-necked SB-700, and 45, 65, 85, 105 Ernie Balls on my wide-necked SB-R60 and also on my SB-1200. These have no coloured windings and suit the wooden finishes. On my red SB-R80 I like 45, 65, 85, 105 GHS Boomers Flea Signature which have red windings at the headstock end only.

The SB Family

There is a small archive section on the Aria website which lists the various members of the SB family as follows. Click on a bass to find out more and see readers' contributions. You can help make this a better SB page. I would like to get pics of all the different models and finishes. Please send me your info, opinions and pics for inclusion here! The more the merrier.

The Designer

Nobuaki HayashiThe man we are indebted to for designing the original SBs lives in Japan and is called Nobuaki Hayashi. On some SB headstocks you can see a sort of Anglicised version of his name, “H Noble”. SBs were were actually manufactured by a company called Matsumoku, with whom Aria had ties.

Nowadays Nobuaki still designs basses and other stringed instruments, for his own company Atlansia in Nagano. His work remains right at the cutting edge of design, as you can see if you visit the Atlansia website. The site is in Japanese, but you can easily spend an hour drooling at the pictures. The sheer quality and innovation evident on the website is breathtaking. Some of the basses look gorgeous, some look a bit strange, but all are works of art.

My thanks to Masaki Kano and The Rat Hole (see above) for their help with this section.

Buying or Selling an SB

Please folks, no more emails asking if I know where you can get an SB or how much your SB is worth!! I will no longer answer such requests.

If looking to buy, I suggest you start by looking locally - in music stores, music magazines and newspapers - because it is best to try before you buy. Failing this, you could try online. You get a fair number coming up on eBay (.co.uk for UK equivalent), or you could try Gbase. There are often Classified sections on Websites like Harmony Central. Try BassLinks for some other possible avenues. Good luck!

SBs have been fetching very handsome prices recently on eBay here in the UK. It looks like people are starting to appreciate their enduring quality. Recent prices include a pearl-white SB Elite I for £450, an oak-finished early SB-700 for £420, a paduak-red SB-R60 fetched £360 and a black/gold SB Elite I went for a hefty £510! But it all depends on model, condition and playability.

eBay sellers please note

Several people auctioning SBs on eBay recently have lifted chunks of text directly from this website. I don't mind this one bit PROVIDED THE SOURCE IS ACKNOWLEDGED. A lot of time has gone into writing these pages and if you can't be bothered to write your own description please at least provide a link!

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