MonoNeon with his signature bass (Photo: Heather Youmans)

โ€œSeeing my dad holding my bass is really crazy,โ€ says local bass phenomenon MonoNeon. โ€œHeโ€™s like my first musical hero. Heโ€™s a very funky player. Iโ€™d just practice to all of his records, try to find anything he played on and just learn it. I wanted to be just like him and I still do.โ€ Itโ€™s a moving testimony to the power of musical families to keep the spirit of creativity flowing across generations. But when MonoNeon refers to his father playing โ€œmy bass,โ€ itโ€™s not just his personal axe. It literally has his name on it: the new Fender MonoNeon Jazz Bass V.

Fender electric basses have long been the go-to axes for most professionals, and MonoNeon has been no exception, often seen playing a Fender Jazz Bass over the years. But heโ€™s also been known to deviate from that standard, with a penchant for five-string basses. The new signature instrument combines all of that, not to mention a whole lot of MonoNeonโ€™s aesthetics. The alder body sports a brilliant yellow polyurethane finish, setting off the neon orange headstock and pickguard. Other unique features include an active preamp and a three-band active equalizer to dial in the desired tone.

Other Memphians have been so honored, as with the Peavey Steve Cropper Signature Telecaster, the Magneto Eric Gales RD-3 Signature Guitar, and the Fender Donald โ€œDuckโ€ Dunn Signature Precision Bass, but the new MonoNeon Jazz Bass V is the most distinctive, visually speaking. And itโ€™s surely the only signature model that the artist himself plays upside down; the left-handed player has noted before that he favors โ€œa right-handed bass. I guess itโ€™s upside-down, youโ€™d call it. I flipped it over, so the G stringโ€™s on top and the E stringโ€™s on the bottom.โ€

Beyond the experimentalism of his music, MonoNeon, aka Dywane Thomas Jr., has always followed his own sartorial star. Lately, his love of neon colors has morphed into a taste for quilted fabrics with subtler hues. A video celebrating the new instrument on Fenderโ€™s YouTube channel features the bassist in all his quilted glory, speaking with his mother, grandmother, and father. Narrator George Clinton intones, โ€œIโ€™ll be your guide through the Monoverse, where cities were built on foundations of funk and adorned with microtonal detail.โ€ The videoโ€™s animated portions amplify the whimsical hues of the new bass and its player.

In the video, MonoNeon further explains the new modelโ€™s aesthetics and design: โ€œI love how the construction workers look on the highway, you can see them far away. Itโ€™s inspired by that. Chose the gold [hardware] because I wanted to, you know, pimp out the bass a little bit. I chose the HiMass string-through bridge because of the sustain. And Iโ€™ve got my own custom MonoNeon jazz pickups.โ€

But thereโ€™s more: Reflecting the bassistโ€™s love of decals and his habit of hanging a sock over his instrumentโ€™s tuning pegs, each MonoNeon Jazz Bass V comes with a MonoNeon sticker pack and a custom headstock sock.

Segments of the video featuring MonoNeonโ€™s family are especially moving, as when he speaks of his Grandma Liz. โ€œI really got close to my grandma because of music. The older I get, Iโ€™m starting to realize I get a lot from her, especially vocally,โ€ he notes, adding that sheโ€™s also behind his love of quilts. โ€œThereโ€™s a lot of love thatโ€™s put into making quilts, so I think I just feel that. I like to be covered up because itโ€™s like a force field. I like to be safe.โ€

Scenes of MonoNeon playing with his father, Dywane Thomas Sr. (son of jazz pianist Charles Thomas), reveal more about the familyโ€™s musical history. โ€œI got to work with a lot of people just from being me,โ€ recalls Thomas Sr., a celebrated bassist in his own right. โ€œYou tell me to go right, I go left. So thatโ€™s why I embrace what he does. Itโ€™s out of the norm, and it isnโ€™t out of the norm. Itโ€™s something new. His style is his style.โ€ Reflecting on his son having his own signature bass, Thomas Sr. muses, โ€œIโ€™m not surprised. It was going to happen, and itโ€™s going to continue to happen.โ€