welcome to the Gibson bass website, photos, history and a lot more. check out all the classic models; EB0, EB3, Thunderbird, Grabber, Ripper and Les Paul Bass GibsonBass.com RSS feed  GibsonBass.com RSS feed
Gibson bass homepage Have a look at different instruments - theres a lot more than thunderbirds Got a gibson bass question? Wiring diagrams, serial numbers, pot codes and catalogues Gibson bass guitar website sitemap Other interesting websites
Used Gibson Basses
Parts to complete guitars
www.ebay.com
D'Addario bass strings
All scales and guages
www.musiciansfriend.com
Gibson Shipment Totals
All Gibson insts. 1937-79
www.amazon.com
Bass Strings
flats, rounds, all scales
www.musicsupplystore.net

Ralphe Armstrong

GibsonBass Interview: Ralphe Armstrong

Ralphe tallks about his music, playing, and his endorsement of Gibson bass guitars By John Fertig
Introduction / Mahavishnu Orchestra | Gibson basses | Jean-Luc Ponty and beyond | Ralphe on YouTube

Ralphe Armstrong with Gibson G3 bass.
Ralphe Armstrong with Gibson G3 bass. Photo Armando Gallo, courtesy www.armandogallo.com

Introduction

By John Fertig, June 2007 Ralphe Armstrong was born into a family of musicians, and with the help of classical training as a child, he was a professional musician before he had finished his teens. His talent caught the eye of Gibson; he was chosen to endorse their basses from the mid 1970s, and as an advisor, he had input on new products such as the Ripper, G-3, RD Artist and Victory.

His early career placed him with a wide range of musicians, most notably jazz fusion acts Mahavishnu Orchestra and Jean-Luc Ponty. Later, he took time out to raise his children, but soon returned, playing jazz, funk, and even hip-hop, with the likes of Eddie Harris, James Carter, Curtis Mayfield and D-12.

Ralphe talks about his playing, musical career, Gibson endorsement, and of course, his Gibson bass guitars.

digg Add to My Yahoo! Add to Google

Ralphe Armstrong as a child, with his father Howard
Ralphe Armstrong as a child, with his father Howard, "Louie Bluie", in the early 1960s.
GibsonBass You come from a musical family: your late father was a famous musician, artist, & storyteller, and your brother also plays bass?

Ralphe Armstrong My father’s name was Howard Armstrong and his stage name was “Louie Bluie”. He was a violinist and passed, I guess, in 2001; he lived to be ninety-five years old and he played all over the world. The man played everywhere! My aunt played guitar. My brother Tommy played trumpet and was a good friend of Miles Davis in Chicago. He also played bass with my Dad.

GibsonBass He played upright bass?

Ralphe Armstrong Yes, a bass violin.

GibsonBass I understand they did some documentaries about your father, including a PBS TV series...

Ralphe Armstrong Yes, PBS. And he was given a National Heritage award, given to him by Charles Carault. He was a Tennessee violinist and an artist. That’s my dad.  He was also a famous storyteller as well.

GibsonBass What was the musical background that lead you to become a bass player?

Ralphe Armstrong My uncle Lee Crocket (LC) Armstrong was a bass player. I wanted to be like him. My father tried me on the violin when I was five, but I never liked it. Every time I picked it up it squeaked. My uncle had a big house and drove a Cadillac and I wanted to be like him. I ended up learning the bass. As a matter of fact, he made me a bass when I was 7 years old. He put a German violin neck, bass violin neck, and put it on a square body.

Ralphe Armstrong & Dwight Adams - live with James Carter (The Egg, Albany, New York, 2006). Photo Albert Brooks, courtesy albanyjazz.com
Ralphe Armstrong & Dwight Adams - live with James Carter (The Egg, Albany, New York, 2006). Photo Albert Brooks, courtesy albanyjazz.com
GibsonBass I understand you were classically trained?

Ralphe Armstrong Yes, I went to Michigan's Interlochen School of Fine Arts. I played The Pious of Rome by Rossini, The Fantasy by Domenico Dragonetti. I played in the World Youth Symphony Orchestra, I played all over. I also played with the London Symphony Orchestra with John McLaughlin, and I had lessons from Ron Carter and Buster Williams. They taught me so much about the bass, without those two guys I don’t know what I would do. Ron, I consider one of the greatest in the world. He’s my teacher; so is Buster.

GibsonBass At 17 you joined Mahavishnu Orchestra, but you played with the progressive rock act The New McGuire Sisters first. How did it all come about?

Ralphe Armstrong What happened, I went to up to Miles Davis’s bass player, Michael Henderson, who told these guys about me. That was Narada Michael Walden and a guy named Sandy Torano. I went up to Connecticut and ended up playing with the group. It’s funny, but this has never been told before, but when I was first with Sandy and Narada, there was this music store in the town, (Canaan Connecticut, which is a very expensive place to live in now) Al had this bass, he would let me use his equipment and I ended up using this bass. I wish I could find one today. It was a Gibson Studio Les Paul Bass [Les Paul Triumph bass]. It had in and out phase switches and was a light colored mahogany finish. That was a good sounding bass. I loved the sound of that. That was the first Gibson bass I ever played at a gig with a group. But the first Gibson bass I was introduced to was by a guy named Jerome Rimson- as a matter of fact he was Van Morrison’s bass player at the time, in Detroit. It was made like an ES 335. I think Steve Swallow played one.


Mahavishnu Orchestra: Apocalypse
Mahavishnu Orchestra: Apocalypse. This album featured the Mahavishnu Orchestra and the London Symphony Orchestra, and was produced by Beatles producer George Martin.

GibsonBass That’s the EB-2

Ralphe Armstrong EB-2’s had a warm sound. A lot of cats in Detroit were string bass players and wanted to emulate that sound.

GibsonBass Then you and Narada Michael Walden joined Mahavishnu Orchestra, and you used Fender basses? (Later, in a 1976 issue of Guitar Player, you mention a Jazz body with a fretless Precision neck?)

Ralphe Armstrong I found a Fender Precision, you just can’t find that bass. I haven’t seen any. That was the one I was using. That was the one Jaco saw.  The only reason I got a fretless bass was because of Jamerson and Motown. He kept telling me about how he had the prototype. I ended up playing the fretless bass and that’s how I got the gig with McLaughlin, because he saw me play the fretless Fender.

One reason I went over to Gibson basses was I had so much trouble out of the Fender bridges. They were terrible. They made a lot of bad guitars. I don’t want to put all Fenders down. I got a plain Precision. It’s one of the best basses I’ve ever played. The bridges would always drop on me, they would fall! I got tired of that!

Sometime they had the bridges out of sync with the neck, a lot of bad quality. That was one of the reasons I went over to Gibson.

GibsonBass Was the spiritual aspect of McLaughlin's music and outlook was an important factor when recording those albums?

The Mahavishnu Orchestra circa 1974
The Mahavishnu Orchestra circa 1974, Ralphe is second from left. This image appeared in the programme for the Mahavishnu Orchestras performance at Knebworth 1974. Courtesey www.rockmusicmemorabilia.com
Ralphe Armstrong Definitely, we would meditate and I’m getting back to that, a spiritual way of playing. We are living in a very stressful world today.

GibsonBass Is it true that you and Jaco auditioned for a gig with the Mahavishnu Orchestra in 1973, with you getting the gig?

Ralphe Armstrong He did audition and I got the job because I had the fretless bass!

That’s how Jaco saw the fretless bass. Me and James Jameson were the first cats that had fretless basses. You could not find them so Jaco went and ripped the frets out of his bass. He was my friend, he was a beautiful person. He was really nice to me.

GibsonBass What was it like being a young kid thrown into Mahavishnu Orchestra? At 17 was it a bit intimidating?

Ralphe Armstrong Not at all, I was classically trained.



Part 2: Gibson basses
Links: Comment | More GibsonBass interviews
Used Gibson Basses
Parts to complete guitars
www.ebay.com
Gibson Shipment Totals
All Gibson insts. 1937-79
www.amazon.com
SG Reissue bass
Review of a classic Gibson
www.guitarfact.com
New Gibson basses
SGs, Thunderbirds, Les Pauls
www.musiciansfriend.com



Home | Discussion Board | Sitemap Contact Us | Terms and conditions |

new Gibson basses

Gibson SG Supreme bass
Gibson SG Supreme Bass

Natural finish

Gibson's classic dual-pickup, short scale, SG bass, has been updated with a beautiful AAA flame maple top and natural satin finish. With a slim neck for effortless playability, the SG Supreme AAA Maple bass is fast, powerful, and beautiful. A vintage-style TB Plus bass humbucker neck pickup coupled with a bass Mini-humbucker at the bridge delivers trademark tone. A real stunner.

Gibson SG bass
Gibson SG Reissue 4-String Bass

Heritage Cherry or Ebony finishes

Gibson's classic dual-pickup SG bass from the '60s is back! It has the 30-1/2' short scale of the original, as well as its slim, fast neck. Mahogany body and neck. It features a vintage-style TB Plus neck humbucker and a mini-humbucker at the bridge for wide tonal range. Includes hardshell case.

Epiphone Elitist EB-3 Bass Guitar
Epiphone Elitist EB-3 Bass Guitar

Cherry or Ebony finishes

The Elite series are instruments that approach custom shop perfection. They're made with premium woods, fitted with American pickups and circuitry -- even American-made toggle switches and Grover tuners. They are made at a special factory exclusively devoted to their manufacture where they receive a high degree of hands-on luthier attention. The EB-3 is a bass classic, made famous by Jack Bruce, with its SG-style body in bookmatched mahogany, a 30-1/2'-scale neck, a USA humbucker at the neck, and USA mini-humbucker at the bridge.

Epiphone EB-0 Bass Guitar
Epiphone EB-0 Bass

Cherry or Ebony finishes

Authorized by Gibson, Epiphone has brought back a classic of the early '60s. Based on the SG, this guitar-sized (30-1/2' scale) bass is a great axe for anyone not quite large enough for a full-size bass. Though small and light, its sound is huge, and full-size people can play it too.