The Rickenbacker 4001 bass was an icon of 1960s and 70s popular music, found in the hands of Paul McCartney, John Entwistle, Peter Quaife, and Chris Squire. Rickenbacker 4000 series basses are easily recognised by their distinctive crested-wave body shape. Model 4001 was a two pickup deluxe version of the 4000 - with maple and walnut through-neck construction, triangle inlays and checkered binding throughout. The export model (Rickenbacker 4001S or model 1999 in Europe) was the standard version of this bass, without binding, and dot inlays - and is the version used by Paul McCartney and Chris Squire
The Rickenbacker 4001 was replaced by the 4003 in the 1980s, with several reissues of the Rickenbacker 4001: 4001V63 - 1984 reissue of an early 1960s 4001S, 4001C64 - 2001 reissue of the 4001
Several rare variations of the Rickenbacker 4001 were manufactured over the years, including short-scale (30 1/2") and six string versions.
Model | Rickenbacker 4001 | Rickenbacker 4001S / 1999 |
---|---|---|
Available | 1961-1986 | 1964-86 |
Pickups | 2 single coil/horseshoe | |
Scale | 34" | |
Body | Bound maple | Unbound maple |
Neck | Maple and walnut through neck with rosewood (occasionally ebony) fingerboard. Twin truss rods. Bound, with triangle inlays. Fretless models were listed in the catalogue from 1984, but had been available by special order from the 1960s | As the 4001, however unbound neck with dot inlays |
Hardware | Two pickups, two volume and two tone controls, selector switch. Stereo Rick-O-Sound wiring first listed from 1971, although available by special order earlier. Nickel or Chrome hardware | |
Finishes | Sunburst, Cherry, Black, Walnut, Natural, White |