2023 müb miezo 18″/5 “enza”

Some instruments arrive polished and familiar.

Others arrive, challenge you, and slowly become part of how you think about music.

My 2023 Müb Miezo 18″/5, “Enza,” is the second kind.


🎯 What makes her different

Enza doesn’t follow standard bass design.

  • compact 18” scale
  • 5 strings in a tight format
  • neck-through construction
  • dense, carefully chosen tonewoods

On paper, it sounds unconventional.

In your hands, it feels:

deliberate

She’s not trying to imitate a full-scale bass.
She’s built to rethink how you approach one.


🌳 Built like a serious instrument

There’s nothing “small” about her construction:

  • curly nyatoh body wings → warm, balanced foundation
  • 7-piece neck-through (white ash / ironwood / ipil / nyatoh) → stability and sustain
  • ovangkol fretboard → articulate, slightly dry response
  • curly maple back plate → attention to detail throughout

This is not a novelty build.

It’s a precision instrument in a compact form.


🔊 The voice: Bartolini clarity

With dual Bartolini CBJD pickups:

  • notes come through focused and controlled
  • low end stays tight, never bloated
  • mids are present without being nasal
  • highs remain clear but not brittle

Running passive V-V-T, she keeps things simple:

no excess shaping—just honest tone

And with an active-ready cavity, she leaves the door open without forcing it.


🎸 How she changes your playing

This is where Enza separates herself.

Because of her scale and layout:

  • you stop relying on muscle memory
  • you start listening more carefully
  • your fingers become more precise
  • your phrasing becomes more intentional

She doesn’t allow autopilot.

She demands:

awareness


🎯 Feel and ergonomics

Compact doesn’t mean compromised.

  • everything sits closer, more efficient
  • movement becomes minimal and deliberate
  • long sessions feel natural, not tiring

She behaves differently from a standard bass—and that’s the point.


🧠 The rebuild matters

Enza wasn’t just acquired—she was restored:

  • stripped down and refinished
  • cleaned electronics
  • leveled and dressed frets

What you get now is:

a fully refreshed instrument with character intact

Not worn out. Not over-polished.
Just reset and ready.


🎯 Why players should try something like this

Most basses teach you:

  • where the notes are

Enza teaches you:

  • how to find them

Most basses let you:

  • rely on familiarity

Enza pushes you to:

  • develop control

⚠️ What she’s not

She’s not:

  • a traditional long-scale bass
  • a plug-and-play comfort zone
  • an instrument that flatters careless playing

If that’s what you want, look elsewhere.


🎯 What she actually offers

Enza gives you:

  • a new physical relationship with the instrument
  • clarity in a compact format
  • tight, controlled response
  • a platform for growth, not just performance

🧠 And the human factor

Let’s not ignore this—

Part of Enza’s pull comes from Maurizio.

When a builder has a clear philosophy, you feel it in the instrument.

Enza doesn’t feel accidental.

She feels:

intentional from the ground up


One line to close it

Enza doesn’t try to fit into your playing—she reshapes it.