De Gier Bebop Classic 5 Gun Metal Grey Relic
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Sander de Gier has spent three decades in his Dutch workshop chasing one idea: a bass that looks like it’s been gigged for fifty years but plays like it left the bench yesterday. The Bebop is his Jazz Bass — vintage bones, modern manners — and the Classic is the most stripped-back, purist version of it.
This one wears a Gun Metal Grey relic finish: a moody metallic grey checked, dinged and worn back by hand until it reads as years of honest playing rather than a factory gloss. Block inlays and a mint pickguard give it a dressier, almost custom-shop face, and the whole thing is built around a low B that earns its place on the instrument.
This is what a '60s Jazz Bass would have turned into if it never stopped working — five strings, a worn-in finish, and not one bit of the vintage tone traded away to get there.
The body is alder, the most even-handed tonewood in the J-bass canon. It gives you a punchy, controlled low end, a present midrange that pushes through a band, and highs that stay clear without turning brittle — a neutral, balanced foundation rather than a wood with an agenda of its own.
The neck is maple with an aged finish, bolted on and carved to the Medium C that De Gier necks are quietly famous for: slim and fast through the shoulders but with enough behind it to hold onto through a long set. A 7.5″-to-12″ compound radius keeps chords comfortable down at the nut and bends clean up high, and the narrow vintage-style fret wire gives the board a smooth, broken-in feel that fits the relic theme. Rosewood handles the fingerboard, rounding off maple’s brightness and adding warmth and depth through the low mids. The block inlays dress up the neck without changing a thing about how it plays.
Scale is a standard 34″ with roughly 20 mm spacing at the bridge — tight enough for fast fingerstyle and runs, open enough to dig in and slap. It’s a five-string built to feel like a four, not a wide-neck workout.
The pickups are the heart of this one: a matched pair of Lindy Fralin Jazz 5 single-coils, wound by hand on Alnico V magnets. Fralin’s whole reputation rests on doing the vintage J-bass voice properly — tight, articulate lows, a vocal midrange, and that signature top-end zing that never tips into harsh. Across five strings they stay even, so the low B sits right in the family instead of sounding bolted on.
The wiring is pure Classic: passive Volume, Volume, Tone, and nothing else in the path. No preamp, no battery, no buffer — just two pickups straight to the jack. Balance the volumes for everything from a fat, both-pickups-up Motown thump to a nasal, mid-forward bridge-pickup growl, then use the tone control to move between vintage warmth and modern clarity. It’s the simplest circuit there is, which is exactly why it sounds this honest.
Plug it in and the vintage looks stop being the point. You get genuine ’60s Jazz Bass character with the clarity and tuning stability of a modern boutique build, in a bass that’s light on the strap and plays low and fast. This is for the player who wants a real five-string J — not a modern active beast, but a vintage-voiced workhorse with a low B — and who’d rather it already looked like an old friend. If that’s you, we’d point you straight at this one.
Specs
Body
- Body Wood
- Alder
- Color
- Gun Metal Grey
- Finish
- Relic — hand-aged antique finish with finish checking and worn edges
Neck
- Neck Wood
- Maple, aged finish
- Fingerboard
- Rosewood
- Scale
- 34"
- Fingerboard Radius
- 7.5" – 12" compound
- Neck Shape
- Medium C
- Nut Width
- 38 mm
- String Spacing
- 20 mm at bridge
- Inlays
- Block
- Frets
- 20, vintage narrow
Weight
- Weight
- TBA
Electronics
- Pickups
- Lindy Fralin Jazz 5 single-coils (Alnico V, hand-wound)
- Controls
- Volume, Volume, Tone
- Preamp
- None — fully passive
Hardware
- Pickguard
- Mint
- Bridge
- ETS
- Tuners
- Hipshot
- Includes
- De Gier branded leather gig bag


