Fender Performer Bass
The Fender Performer was an electric bass guitar released in 1985 and discontinued in 1987, assembled in the United States and Japan. A Fender Performer electric guitar was also available.
Description
The Fender Performer Bass was a uniquely styled bass guitar, designed by John Page, and renowned for its extremely slender neck. The Japanese Performer Standard has an alder body, with a bolt-on 34" 24-fret micro-tilt adjustable maple neck and a 2-octave rosewood fingerboard, as opposed to the United States-made Performer Elite, never actually put into production, which would have sported an ebony fretboard. Controls are: Volume, Pickup Selector Switch and TBX Circuit Control. The latter provided the same tonal range as the Jazz Bass between 0 and 5, with the range 5-10 providing significantly brighter sound – oriented towards solo playing and particularly suiting the sharp attack needed for a slap bass playing style. Both basses were available in Burgundy Mist, Gun Metal Blue, Candy Green, White and Tobacco Sunburst. All finishes were metallic except for the sunburst. Both versions featured a number of minor features underlying the 'high end' design, including rubber inserts around the volume and tone controls, a 'micro-tilt' adjustable neck, tuners with enclosed worms, a high-quality fully enclosed jack socket, a then new and contemporary Fender logo, sculpted pickups marked with an Fender logo, felt washers to prevent the strap buttons marking the body. Individual intonation adjustment for each string was standard.The Performer Bass was only ever available in one Standard version. The Standard retailed at $499, but still had a level of fittings comparable to high-level Precision and Jazz models. Unlike the Japanese-made Performer Standard, which featured a 3-ply white pickguard, dual single coils, 3-way toggle switch and a rosewood fretboard, a rumoured Performer Elite, having rear-routed controls and sporting three specially designed single coil pickups, 5-way switching and an ebony fretboard to be manufactured in the United States, retailing at $949, was never actually put into production.
A 5-string prototype of this bass was made in 1987.