Bass of the Week: The Upgraded Brooks 1.2 Short-Scale, Inspired by a Classic

Brooks basses have been popular with No Treble readers, as evidenced by their two appearances on 2024’s Top 10 Bass of the Week articles. Builder Rob van den Broek has already completed his first bass for 2025 and it’s our bass of the week.
The Brooks 1.2 is a short-scale bass that the luthier explains is “basically a remake of the very first bass I ever built (the Brooks 1), but with a few upgrades.” Taking inspiration from the Gibson Les Paul Bass, the 1.2 has a 30.5-inch scale. Its chambered body is made from two pieces of mahogany and then topped with bookmatched flamed maple finished in a Wine Red. Cream-colored binding helps the red to really pop.
The three-piece mahogany neck is fitted with a rosewood fingerbaord and marked with white dot inlays. One of van den Broek’s big upgrades from the Brooks 1 is the electronics set. The 1.2 is loaded with a pair of Artec Sidewinder AlNiCo humbuckers. A six-way rotary switch gives tons of tonal variety by letting you select the coils.


























Hear the whole palette in this quick demo video:
Brooks 1.2 Bass Specs:
| Scale: | 30.5″ |
| Body: | Chambered Two-Piece Mahogany |
| Top: | Bookmatched Flamed Maple |
| Neck: | Three-piece Mahogany |
| Fretboard: | Rosewood |
| Nut: | Bone |
| Inlays: | Dot |
| Frets: | 24 |
| Pickups: | Artec sidewinder humbuckers AlNiCo |
| Controls: | Volume, Hidden Tone Pot |
| Tuners: | Hipshot |
| Bridge: | Guyker Two-Point |
| Finish: | Wine Red |
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.
I’m the proud owner of this bass, and I can confirm it’s a joy to play, it looks gorgeous and it sounds killer.
how does the “hidden tone pot” work? ~where is it?
The tone pot is hidden on the back of the bass, in the middle of the black control plate cover. You can use a screw driver to turn it.
You see it in photo #10
https://www.notreble.com/wp-content/uploads/2025/01/Brooks-1.2-Bass-Control-Cover-Tone-Pot-1000×667.jpg