T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
275.1 | my style | STOWMA::LANGE | back to the doinkture | Mon Jun 08 1987 14:44 | 12 |
| Paul,
Hi my name is Jeff..
When I play,I usually hammer the strings to death,which gets pretty
expensive...I go through a pac of Roto sounds in a week and a half.
When I'm not slapping with my thumb,and pulling off with my index,and
little finger; I generally play in a picking fashion with all my
fingers on my right hand including my thumb. Using the tips of the
fingers.
During "fast" passages,I concentrate on position,and plan ahead
where I'll be going next.
|
275.2 | | REGENT::SCHMIEDER | | Mon Jun 08 1987 15:07 | 10 |
| You don't think about it once you've been playing awhile. When you're starting
out, you do all sorts of exercises where you DO think about it. You keep doing
exercises later on, but it becomes natural. Your fingers know where to go to
be ready for the next note. It isn't something you can really get in a quickie
lesson from a notes file. The best thing to do is to go out and find a
teacher who will work with you one-on-one until you have enough chops to start
teaching yourself.
Mark
|
275.3 | If it feels good, do it... | BRAT::SHEPARD | a.k.a. Spazzo Caffinelli | Mon Jun 08 1987 16:26 | 14 |
|
I remember seeing a TV interview with John Entwistle of The Who.
They asked him to diplay his "style of play". He then proceeded
to show about 6 different styles that he uses at any given time!
Each method gave a completely different sound/feeling to what
he was playing.
I guess it just goes to show that even "professionals" don't
necessarily have a set style that they adhere to. Unless you're
a stickler for form, I would just recommend that you play the
way you feel most comfortable. That's all I do.
allen
|
275.4 | My Suggestion | BMT::COMAROW | | Tue Jun 09 1987 07:34 | 15 |
|
To get a full, rich sound, get as much flesh into each note, and
play a gently as a little baby. This is sort of string bass technique,
but start with your finger against the string, pointing up at the
head. Then, with all you finger against the string, ever so gently,
evenly, pluck, the gentler the better.
That's how you practice. The idea is when you play you don't think
about technique, you think about technique when you practice.
Once you have that, you can add all types of sounds but you need
a solid foundation.
By the way, solid tone is also achieved by pressing very hard on
the neck, a monster with the left, a baby with the right.
|
275.5 | The voice of experience 8^) | 36914::HARMON | | Tue Jun 09 1987 10:00 | 15 |
| re: .2
Mark, I've been playing bass for ~18 years, and I'm still looking for good
ideas - you probably will be after that long, too. I wasn't really looking
for a "quickie lesson"!
In a retrospective way, you're right about the lessons. But unfortunately,
when I was starting out, what was being attempted on bass was a mere
shadow of the situation today. When I heard Jaco the first time, I immediately
started a re-education and bad-habit shedding process. I started asking myself,
"how would I have to use my fingers to play that well?", and began re-teaching
myself accordingly. I'm still thinking about and working on my chops...I have
a feeling the process goes on till death do us part.
Paul
|
275.6 | | REGENT::SCHMIEDER | | Tue Jun 09 1987 12:40 | 36 |
| RE: .5
I wasn't insulting you, but I don't think you took it that way anyway. I just
thought you were an absolute beginner, the way the question was worded.
I could use a good bass teacher myself. I suffered a great deal of stagnation
last year through to this summer, having burnt out on studying under a guitar
teacher who could teach me lots of musicality, theory and arranging plus give
me some exercises for reading, rhythm and note memory; but who had nothing to
offer in the way of actual bass technique per se.
Right now, though, playing in a good band doing complex material is helping me
to teach myself. I don't worship Jaco, and only like the stuff he did with
Joni Mitchell and a few others, but I know what you mean about hearing a great
player and wanting to sound like them. Tonally, Jaco is probably the electric
bassist I would most want to emulate, as I can't exactly get Charlie Haden's
string bass sound on an electric. But I don't care for his choice of notes,
quite often, and find he often uses way too much vibrato for my taste (like
Ron Carter and Stanley Clarke).
Neck pressure is definitely important. Also, I anchor my right thumb against
the fretboard (or against the tumb rest on my fretless), which helps me keep
the rhythm with the two fingers (I may start using three fingers eventually on
certain types of passages or in certain contexts). Others don't rest the
thumb anywhere. I've found the thumb rest on the fretless causes me to play
better rhythmically, as it forces my fingers to stretch more and therefore
makes me lighten up on the force and get a springier touch to my picking.
Playing a fretless has helped me on the P-bass too, as I am more inclined to
hit a note right on and therefore get a cleaner sound. I really recommend to
EVERY electric bassist that they play BOTH. Today's music demands it, besides,
what with all the reggae and jazz influences to be found among the more
progressive modern pop bands.
Mark
|
275.7 | The Mouth from the South | RICKS::CALCAGNI | | Tue Jun 09 1987 14:15 | 15 |
| I believe that Jaco only uses two fingers on his picking hand (not
counting all his false harmonic techniques). Absolutely amazing
when you hear what he can do with them. Also important to Jaco's
sound is picking at different distances from the bridge to vary
the tone.
In a recent Guitar Player, some studio bassist stressed the importance
of a light touch for both picking and fingering hands and how much
this improved his technique. Jaco also refers to "touching the
instrument to make it sing". I've always tried to use a somewhat
light touch, although it requires concentration; my left hand wants
to push harder than it needs to. Perhaps a "monster on the left" is
only necessary for upright.
/rick
|
275.8 | | KIM::HARMON | | Wed Jun 10 1987 09:55 | 30 |
| re: .6
No insult taken. Actually, it gave me a good chuckle when I realized how
the question came across.
I have about the same view of Jaco, too, although scrutinizing his technique
did have the effect of causing me to copy him a lot for a while. I finally
made a deliberate effort to stop using his licks, especially the myriad
variations on this: (the numbers are scale degrees)
_ _ _
| | | |
6 6 5 1
I haven't stopped using those notes, necassarily, but just that "Jacoesque"
way of playing them; know what I mean?
It's funny how different players reach different conclusions about techniques.
I used to anchor my thumb on the e string, but I made myself stop at a point,
because I realized that it was interfering when I needed to play a note on
that string. I think the reason I got started resting my thumb on the string
to begin with was the fact that it is always there, no matter where you are
plucking. I don't rest it on anything now, because that seems to help
me play with greater relaxation, plus I think my mobility is enhanced a little
by not anchoring. On the other hand, I play with my fingers curled back a
little more, so I also *need* more mobility.
Mark, if you ever do figure out how to get a sound like Charlie Haden's from an
electric bass, let me know...
Paul
|
275.9 | | REGENT::SCHMIEDER | | Wed Jun 10 1987 17:06 | 8 |
| >Mark, if you ever do figure out how to get a sound like Charlie Haden's from an
>electric bass, let me know...
Damned if I will! I'll patent it and make some MONEY off of it!
Mark
|
275.10 | Bow Question | AQUA::ROST | The old fart was breathing freely | Tue Jul 14 1987 18:03 | 5 |
|
Anyone out there who plays upright (acoustic) bass as well as electric?
I need some light shed on how to buy and use a bow....
|
275.11 | It's been a while but... | KIM::HARMON | | Wed Jul 15 1987 09:19 | 26 |
| re: .10
I studied acoustic bass many years ago. Probably the first thing you need
to do is decide whether you want to use a French or German bow. The French
type is like a violin or cello bow (overhand grip) while the German type is
like a viola da gamba bow (underhand grip). Most classical players these
days use the French bow. I did, because it seemed to me to offer better
playing facility. You don't have to look very hard to find players who still
use the German bow, though.
My advice about purchasing and using the bow would be to find somebody who
can help you in person. It would be pretty difficult to verbalize a lot of
the information you're looking for without being able to demonstrate as well.
When you buy a bow, if you don't know what you're looking for, you run the risk
of buying something that will encourage you to form bad habits which will be
very hard to break later. And of course, even with a bow that is right for you
you can do the same thing.
Some standard technical things would be to try to keep the bow as perfectly
perpendicular to the strings as possible when playing, to find a bow hold
which balances the bow in your hand/on the strings and to remember to stay
relaxed (if you fight with a bass and a bow, chances are they'll win).
Hope this helps.
Paul
|
275.12 | | BMT::COMAROW | | Tue Sep 01 1987 13:23 | 5 |
| I studied accoustic for many years. I like a French Bow.
Take a least a few lessons to learn proper bowing technique.
F. Simandle (sp) is the Bible for bass players.
|
275.13 | on the other hand... | RICKS::CALCAGNI | | Tue Sep 01 1987 17:40 | 8 |
| I also studied upright. I was taught the German bow, mostly because
that was what my teacher favored. German bow is initially awkward
but offers (I think) better, more natural leverage than the French
and makes it easier to get a good tone.
Good bows cost beaucoup bucks.
/rick
|
275.14 | | SUBURB::DALLISON | OU812? no I81B4U! | Tue Dec 20 1988 07:21 | 21 |
|
I figured this might be the best place to put this....
A friend of mine would very much like to learn to play bass, so
he went out and borrowed one from another friend.
I've been showing him some exercises and scales that I do, so he
can get his fingers hardened (he hasn't played a guitar before),
and also some simple runs that I've picked up from listening to
various records. Obviously, I can't *teach* the guy to play,
coz I'm not a bassist, but what I m hoping to do is give him an
appetiser for playing, and he will then hopefully then seek
lessons.
So, have any of you bassists out there got any exercises for a
*complete* beginner on bass ?? Are there specific licks or runs
that *you* have found useful in learning, or that were simple,
but sounded great (so as to keep him interested) ??
Cheers,
-Tony
|
275.16 | Basic Lick Dictionary | AQUA::ROST | Marshall rules but Fender controls | Tue Dec 20 1988 09:08 | 181 |
|
Here are some common bass licks. All are movable. The note marked "R" is the
root of the chord you're playing. To simplify things I've put numbers in where
you place you fingers (the fret is to the right, the string below) which
represents the *scale degree* not the finger to use. Left out is rhythmic
notation but most of these licks are pretty obvious.
*****************************************************************
| | | | | | | | |
-----------------------------------------------------------------
| | | | | | | | |
-----------------------------------------------------------------
| | 3 | | | 5 | | | |
-----------------------------------------------------------------
| | | R | | | | | |
-----------------------------------------------------------------
| | | | | | | | |
*****************************************************************
1. The most basic rock and roll bass lick:
R-3-5-3 or R-R-3-3-5-5-3-3
*****************************************************************
| | | | | | | | |
-----------------------------------------------------------------
| | 6 | | | | | | |
-----------------------------------------------------------------
| | 3 | | | 5 | | | |
-----------------------------------------------------------------
| | | R | | | | | |
-----------------------------------------------------------------
| | | | | | | | |
*****************************************************************
2. This variation is common in Chuck Berry songs:
R-3-5-6 or R-R-3-3-5-5-6-6 or R-3-5-6-5-3, etc.
Syncopate for Elvis Presley or New Orleans:
R-3-5-6-5
*****************************************************************
| | | | | | | | |
-----------------------------------------------------------------
| | 6 | b7 | | | | | |
-----------------------------------------------------------------
| | 3 | | | 5 | | | |
-----------------------------------------------------------------
| | | R | | | | | |
-----------------------------------------------------------------
| | | | | | | | |
*****************************************************************
3. This gives a rockabilly feel:
R-3-5-6-7-6-5-3
*****************************************************************
| | | | | | | | |
-----------------------------------------------------------------
| | 6 | | | R* | | | |
-----------------------------------------------------------------
| | 3 | | | 5 | | | |
-----------------------------------------------------------------
| | | R | | | | | |
-----------------------------------------------------------------
| | | | | | | | |
*****************************************************************
4. Walking blues:
R-3-5-6-R*-6-5-3, R-3-5-3-R*-6-5-3, etc.
*****************************************************************
| | | | | | | | |
-----------------------------------------------------------------
| | | b7 | | R* | | | |
-----------------------------------------------------------------
| | 3 | | | 5 | | | |
-----------------------------------------------------------------
| | | R | | | | | |
-----------------------------------------------------------------
| | | | | | | | |
*****************************************************************
5. Variant on walking blues:
R-3-5-b7-R*-b7-5-3, R-3-5-b7-R*-b7, etc.
*****************************************************************
| | | | | | | | |
-----------------------------------------------------------------
| | | b7 | | R* | | | |
-----------------------------------------------------------------
| | | | | 5 | | | |
-----------------------------------------------------------------
| | | R | | | | | |
-----------------------------------------------------------------
| | | | | | | | |
*****************************************************************
6. This is a killer pattern:
For "Whole Lotta Love":
5-b7-5-b7-R-R*-R*-R*
For "I'm A Man"
5-b7-R-R*-R*-R*-R*-R*
For "Low Spark of High Heeled Boys"
5-b7-R-R*-R*-5-R-R*-R*
For "Shotgun" (Jr. Walker)
R(or R*)-R(R*)-5-b7-5-b7-5
Blues variants:
R-5-b7-R*-b7-5, R-R*-b7-5, R-R*-5-b7-5, etc. Try using triplets on
latter part of the riff
*****************************************************************
| | | b7 | | R* | | | |
-----------------------------------------------------------------
| | | 4 | b5 | 5 | | | |
-----------------------------------------------------------------
| | | R | | | b3 | | |
-----------------------------------------------------------------
| | | | | | b7 | | |
-----------------------------------------------------------------
| | | | | | | | |
*****************************************************************
7. Blues lick used in "Messing With the Kid", variation commonly used
by Jack Bruce in many Cream tunes:
R*-b7-5-b5-4-b3-R-b7-R (try staying on R* for a measure before
descending)
*****************************************************************
| | | | | | | | |
-----------------------------------------------------------------
| | | | | | | | |
-----------------------------------------------------------------
| | R | | | | | | |
-----------------------------------------------------------------
| | 5 | | 6 | b7 | | | |
-----------------------------------------------------------------
| | | | | | | | |
*****************************************************************
8. Common Jimmy Reed style bass lines (like Stevie Ray Vaughan,
Thunderbirds, Ronnie Earl, etc.)
R-6-5-6, R-b7-5-b7, R-6-5-6-b7, etc. Notice this is a lower position
variation on the run used for "Whole Lotta Love", etc.
|
275.17 | GETTING STARTED ON BASS | COMET::BEYZAVI | | Thu Feb 09 1989 17:34 | 3 |
| Can anybody give me some pointers on choosing a bass guitar and
a good book to get started. I can read music, I am mainly interested
in playing bass with jazz music. Any information would be appreciated.
|
275.18 | Well, besides listening... | NEWVAX::PHARMON | | Fri Feb 10 1989 08:27 | 6 |
| You might want to try to find a book called _The Improvisors Bass
Method_. I haven't seen it, but it's published by the same people
who put out _The New Real Book_ (which I like a lot) and it's gotten
rave endorsements from Eddie Gomez, Rufus Reid, et.al.
Paul
|
275.19 | But,I'm just a guitarist ! | ASAHI::COOPER | if(bucks .gt. 0) call music_store | Fri Feb 10 1989 16:07 | 4 |
| If your interested in taking some lessons, go see my
jar_head_type_buddy Jeff Lange in Stow. He's great.
jc
|
275.20 | Any advice to do a roll? | VAXWRK::SAKELARIS | | Thu Apr 05 1990 14:59 | 12 |
| This has been an inactive topic for some time so I don't know how many
of you will see this. But one technique in particular that I just can't
seem to get is to be able to do a good roll. Do those of you who can
use three fingers or two? Did it take you a long time to develop or am
I just not dexterous enough?
Another technique that I need to perfect is the gliss - a roll while
sliding a fingered note down (or up) the neck. Anybody got input on
this?
"Sakman"
|
275.21 | Hope This Helps | AQUA::ROST | Bass is the place | Thu Apr 05 1990 17:51 | 25 |
|
Depends on what you mean by a "roll". I usually only hear that term
used in conjunction with banjo technique.
I personally don't know any players who use more than two fingers to
pluck with, but some bassists use all four, Glen Moore of Oregon and
Fernando Saunders for example. I used to room with a banjo player,
though, and he would use his banjo rolls on my bass and get some wicked
funk lines happening.
If you mean simply playing rapid passages with alternating fingers,
getting up to speed may take some time. What I *still* work on is
trying to get an even attack from each finger. Playing patterns that
swing, an uneven attack is disguised by the rhythm, but for duplicating
"chugging" parts such as heard in lots of hard rock, an even attack is
very important. I just set the metronome up to some ungodly tempo and
have at it. Currently my drop-dead point is playing 8th notes at about
180 bpm. I'm good for about five minutes before my fingers fall off.
As far as glisses, I just *do* them, and often the starting point for a
slide is wherever my hand happens to be (i.e. I often don't try for a
particualr pitch). Sounds fine to me, but then I'm using it sort of
like a blob of passing tones.....
Brian
|
275.22 | I guess it comes down to practice | VAXWRK::SAKELARIS | | Tue Apr 10 1990 14:08 | 16 |
| Yeah, the "roll" I meant was like a drum roll; 32nd notes. By your
example of 8th notes at 180 bpm, I'm not sure how fast that is - three
notes per second or 12. I hope it's closer to three - I can do that. 12
- never, and I might as well give up.
Right now I use a gliss between parts, maybe as an intro to the solo
coming. I have to use a pick to do it
and when I hit it all notes clean, it really sounds trick. Most of the
time I miss somewhere. No one seems to notice, but it bothers the hell
outta me. I know I should do something like you (Brian Rost) do to
practice, but somehow I just never developed my practice into a
routine. Maybe that's the key after all, eh?
"Sakman"
|
275.23 | wow! | WEFXEM::COTE | I smell a wumpus... | Tue Apr 10 1990 16:39 | 10 |
| Lessee... 180 BPM = 180 1/4 notes = 360 1/8 notes per minute = 6 notes
per second = 12 1/16 notes per second = 24 1/32 per second...
At a more leisurely 120 BPM: 2 1/4 notes per sec = 4 1/8 per sec =
8 1/16 per = 16 1/32 per.
Is anyone actually capable of doing that for more than a handful of
notes?
Edd
|
275.24 | I can't seem to explain it but... | CSC32::W_ALEXANDER | Nothing is being done! | Wed Apr 11 1990 13:28 | 18 |
| One way I practice this is starting the roll with two fingers and
adding a third without changing the accent (and also adding four) and
going back to two with no perceptable difference in spacing and going
back and fourth. for me this was important because If I had to keep
this up for an extended period of time when my fingers fall off using
two I would go to three and I could go much longer ect. Another thing we
used to do is my drummer and I would start a slow roll and increase the
tempo and I found that I would have to start with two and at a certin
speed I would go to three fingers (still not doing triplets) to keep
the exact beet with him and when he really started to cook I would go
to four fingers and we could keep the same high tempo untill we both
dropped. I also still do the previously mentioned technique of using
my drum machine as a metronome and practicing my timing at various
speeds. I feel that this has really helped my timing dramaticly.
I know this was not very clear but I gave it a try anyway.
Will
|
275.25 | Three Fingers May Be More Common Than I Thought | AQUA::ROST | Bass is the place | Fri Apr 13 1990 09:23 | 9 |
| Whaddya know...just read an article on Billy Sheehan last night (it's
in the new Bass Player issue) and he uses three fingers. He does a
roll similar to the way people "drum" their fingers, i.e. he starts
with the ring finger, them the index, then the middle, then the ring,
etc.
This has obvious advantages for rapid-fire triplets. I may try it out.
Brian
|
275.26 | | WEFXEM::COTE | A friendly stranger in a black sedan | Fri Apr 13 1990 10:14 | 13 |
| What'd I tell ya??? ;^)
I play bass with 3 fingers, usually in sets of 2. Either index and
middle, or middle and ring. I seem to switch fairly unconsciously
betwixt them, although sometimes I'll have all 3 going. The pinky
not only isn't strong enough, but seems to require more wrist-twist
to bring it into line than it's worth....
I'm sitting here drumming 3 fingers on my desk, and am surprised to
find how much faster I can go if I do ring, middle, index, as opposed
to index, middle, ring....
Edd
|
275.27 | Nothing new (sigh) | CMBOOT::EVANS | if you don't C# you'll Bb | Wed Apr 18 1990 06:17 | 6 |
|
This is a standard classical technique used a lot in Spanish (esp
Flamenco) type music....bet it's great on a bass.
Cheers
Pete.
|