man I'd love to get my hands on Joe's bass!
as for me, I have a modest electric bass collection-
1996 Fender P-bass with a rosewood jazz neck and P/J pickups.
1980s Washburn B-15 with a rosewood neck that I defretted myself.
a BEAUTIFUL new Dean Rhapsody hollowbodied fretless with an ebinol fingerboard(soon to be replaced by a warmoth neck, wood type not yet decided)
and my newest, a Brice Douglas 5 string '75(style) Jazz Bass with a solid ash body. This one is HEAVY. I'm probably going to sell it in favour of the 4 string model... LOVE the bass, don't like the 5 strings.
On all of my basses I like Rotosound Swingbass 66 strings, except for the Washburn. The rotosounds are GREAT.. I think of them as the bass equivalent to the "German" tuba sound we talk about.. dark, lush, full. They're hard on the fingers and fretboards, though.. stiff as piano wire and coarse like sandpaper. but I can handle it
If I put those on the washburn though I'd be refinishing the fretboard everymonth, so I haven't really settled on a set of strings for her.. right now it's a set of GHS silencers which are a bit bright for my liking.. I'm not a fan of flatwounds in most instances, so I think I'll probably settle for some D'Addario roundwounds for the Washburn... won't be as easy on the fretboard, but won't be as harsh as the rotosounds.
no upright bass right now

as for playing, I just do a tiny bit of session work(for a local R&B record label), and am working on 2 jazz/funk/blues projects that have yet to go "public".
..oh, and I have a few amplifiers
