Bass of the Week: Tüi Instruments Mammoth Slayer

Tui Bass Mammoth SlayerThis week we’re checking out a brand new ancient bass by Tüi Instruments. Gert Simso shared his latest creation with us, which he calls the Mammothslayer.

“[My Friend] got me bog oak as a present, so it felt only right to make him a bass from the best piece. He wanted something raw. Something, when played, makes that mammoth frozen in a glacier shiver in fear. And something we can use to make woolly, slow and heavy music together.”

The spear-shaped body is made from bog oak while the lower bout features a deer horn for a leg rest. Its neck also has bog oak laminated with ebony and maple. The Mammothslayer has just three strings, tuned C-D-C, and an elongated 35.5-inch scale. For electronics, Simso dug up a rare find.

“The pickup is a random MusicMan-style one I bought from the internet. It doesn’t even have a company name,” he explains. “It cost 30 Euro and it sounds like a boutique one – all the high end without bleeding ears and all the low end with no mud. And the mids in balance.”

Tüi Instruments Mammothslayer Bass Specs:

Scale:35.5″
Body:Bog Oak with Deer Horn Leg Rest
Neck:Bog Oak, Ebony, and Maple
Fingerboard:Bog Oak
Frets:22 Stainless Steel with Zero Fret
Pickup:Unknown MM-style Blade Pickup in Custom Bog Oak Housing
Tuners:Schaller Lightweight M4S
Bridge:Custom Tüi Pin Bass Bridge

In his time with No Treble, Kevin has met hundreds of amazing bassists and interviewed icons like Jack Casady, Victor Wooten, Les Claypool, Marcus Miller, and more. He's a gigging bassist performing jazz in Northern Virginia and bluegrass with The Plate Scrapers up and down the East Coast. Kevin appreciates all genres of music, from R&B to metal and everything in between. Connect with Kevin on Facebook and check his performance schedule on his website.

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Leave a Reply to Mark l Sellers Cancel reply

  1. Todd

    I love it! Gert does his own thing and stays creative.

  2. Mark l Sellers

    But why?

  3. Grant Koeller

    Why 3 string, with CDC tuning?
    That makes no sense, remember bass is tuned in 4th’s.