Yes, except Paul's Hofner bass, (nor his Rickenbacker 4001S -albeit with a right handed headstock) IS NOT a right handed instrument turned upside down. It is a true left-handed instrument made fully mirror style, with the controls on the bottom where they belong and the strings from "top down" EADG as they should be.
His original Hofner 500/1 (purchased from original Beatles bassist Stu Sutcliffe) was indeed a right handed instrument that he played upside down. However, in 1963 he bought a 500/5 that was left handed.
Why can't tuba players be rock God's? We got an instrument with the horsepower to get it done. Alls you youngsters have to do is play some music that yanks people's cranks.
tubatooter1940 wrote:Why can't tuba players be rock God's? We got an instrument with the horsepower to get it done.
Hmm. When I lived in M'boro, TN, I played tuba (in lieu of bass) in a few speed metal bands that gigged out in local bars. Definitely not rock god material, but tuba in a rock/speed metal band nonetheless. Playing with those bands was a trip.
It really blew people's minds to see a tuba in a rock band.
His original Hofner 500/1 (purchased from original Beatles bassist Stu Sutcliffe) was indeed a right handed instrument that he played upside down. However, in 1963 he bought a 500/5 that was left handed.
Let me take that back. Paul used Stu's Hofner 333 upside down initially, and when he ORDERED his first 500/1, they didn't have a left handed one in stock in Hamburg (where the Beatles were playing at the time in 1961) so he played a right handed one upside down for a couple of weeks, then got a left handed one.
Whew. Had to break out my "Gear of the Beatles" book for that one.