559,-
Informasjon
Stronger catch. Clean release.
No bow powder. No drying out. No hot mess.
Bassment Rosin - Summer - er utviklet og produsert av bassisten Isaac Trapkus fra New York Philharmonic.
Etter mye prøving og feiling har han utviklet et stødig alternativ til Pop's
Denne harpiksen er laget spesifikt med tanke på spilletemperaturer som er 21-32 grader celsius. Noe av det som gjør harpiks av denne typen unik, er at den ikke støver og kan holde seg optimal i opptil 5 år (!). En annen fordel er at det ikke kreves noen egen spesialbeholder eller etui for å beskytte den.
Produsent
Bassment Rosin er harpiks utviklet og produsert av Isaac Trapkus, bassist i New York Philharmonic. Bassanova er stolt av å være den første forhandleren av Bassment Rosin i verden!
Video
FAQ
What is the difference between Summer and Winter?
Summer has stronger initial catch with a cleaner release through the stroke. It is more of a standalone sticky-style rosin with the kick Winter gives you through loud or fast passages.
Winter has a more moderate start on soft or slow notes, with durable responsive grab that kicks in on loud or fast notes. It can also serve as a base-layer boost for your current rosin.
Both work well at normal indoor hall temperatures. Winter is generally best below 77°F / 25°C, while Summer is best above 70°F / 21°C.
What makes Bassment different from other newer bass rosins?
Some rosins feel great at first, then powder away. Others stay soft, but feel noisy, gritty, or gummy.
Summer and Winter are built to stay consistent: strong, clean grab without powdering, drying out, or turning weird.
Do I need to store Bassment rosin in a humidity container?
No. Summer and Winter were designed to be unaffected by humidity. Temperature matters, but humidity does not.
You can even do what I do and leave them out uncovered, though the tin is still useful for keeping dust off.
No fancy humidor needed.
Do I need a rehair before switching to Summer or Winter?
No rehair needed.
If you're coming from a powdery rosin, you may notice extra buildup on the strings at first. That's normal: Summer and Winter can grab onto old powder in the bow hair and pull it out as you play. Just wipe the strings, reapply, and play it in a few times until the buildup settles down.
You should be able to feel the difference right away, even on older hair.
Winter is not gripping as well right after a rehair. Did I do something wrong?
Probably not.
Sometimes Winter can be slower to break in brand-new hair in warmer temps.
Just start with Summer, or use a few swipes of a harder/drier rosin to get the hair going.
