T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1426.1 | chew gum and walk at the same time? | RAVEN1::DANDREA | have strat, will travel... | Wed Aug 16 1989 10:14 | 13 |
| How about singing and playing ANYTHING!?
I know what you mean; I can strum rhythms on my guitar and sing,
but as soon as the picking gets a little complicated while the singing
still needs to go on, I either screw up the guitar part or forget
the words.
The only songs where I've been successful at both singing and picking
are the ones where I know both parts in my sleep, with both hands
behind my back, standing on my head, in the dark. Soooooo, practice,
practice, practice.....
Steve
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1426.2 | Cat Got Your Tongue Mr. BassMan?? | SPGBAS::DADDIECO | That's Just The Way It Is ..... | Wed Aug 16 1989 10:27 | 22 |
| Glad to hear I'm not alone with this brain/motor skill deficiency.
I even have trouble just "talking" during some songs. Wierd! I dread
those times when someone from the audience just "has" to talk with you
while you're playing a choppy bass line. That's when smiling and body
language really pays off big time!
I guess that's why lots of bass players appear to be the more stoic,
quiet and reserved members of some groups. Well as they say, it's a
tough job, but someone's got to do it! Right?
I have sung in the past on some tunes but it has taken lots of
rehearsal and the songs were very very UNcomplicated.
If you ever want to silence someone - toss them a bass guitar, ask
them to play the bass line to Consider Me Gone by Sting or I Wish by
Stevie Wonder and see how quiet they get suddenly!
Good note!
Thanx ... Dan
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1426.3 | Play and sing with a "fretless"! Ya-Hoo!!!! | SALEM::ABATELLI | I don't need no stinkin' Boogie! | Wed Aug 16 1989 11:54 | 8 |
| It's all been said before, but it's true... you have to practice
it and practice it until you *can* do it. You will be able to do
it, but you do have to make the effort. Sing and play with every
song you know. Easy tunes first, harder ones second, impossible
ones next month, then after 1 month (or less) you can play/sing
Stings, "Consider Me Gone" with a *fretless*! Ya-Hoo!
Fred
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1426.4 | Time.... | CSC32::MOLLER | Nightmare on Sesame Street | Wed Aug 16 1989 13:01 | 11 |
| You'll reach a point where you can have conversations with people
as you are playing. Of course, there are occasions when you speak
in short bursts & the bursts are in 3/4 or 4/4 time. This comes
with the familiarity of a song as well as time. Odd how your
mind can multiprocess like this. Often someone from the audience
will walk up to you 10 seconds after you start a song & want to
talk to you, usually to request a song & they will stand there
until you talk to them. You'll get the hang of it, but you have
to work on it.
Jens
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1426.5 | RUN THE BASS PART TO A 2ND CPU | HAMER::KRON | KA-BOOM | Wed Aug 16 1989 16:19 | 8 |
| you've got to learn the bass part well enough so that you only have
to check on it once in a while...it takes a lot of time but you'll
see what I mean.....Some songs I haven't even played in years,
like Thin Lizzy's boys are back in town I can do on demand and
I haven't even heard let alone played them in 5-6 years.Hang tough
and keep trying,
Bill
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1426.6 | playing and singing | GLIND1::VALASEK | | Wed Aug 16 1989 16:27 | 9 |
| DITTO. DITTO.
I have had to play bass and sing in our band. Usually I play the
bass part over and over a million times till it is second nature
then I take on the words. After more practice, it starts to happen.
Tony (who personally hates it when people want to talk to you while
you are playing.)
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1426.7 | what if I don't let ya? 8^) | HAZEL::STARR | DJ Bag Man and the Condom Crew | Wed Aug 16 1989 17:22 | 3 |
| Jeez Tom - whaddya wanna sing now?????
8^)
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1426.8 | it works for me | ANT::JACQUES | | Thu Aug 17 1989 10:53 | 41 |
|
I have been playing guitar and singing for so long it's like second
nature, but the few times I was asked to play bass in a song, it
is like someone put a muzzle on me, couldn't concentrate on both
simultaneously. Of course bass is not my instrument, so It feels
foreign to me to begin with.
Strangely enough, I have the hardest time trying to talk while
playing. If someone asks me a question while I am playing, I pretty
much have to stop playing and blurt out a one word answer. I think
this is because the music and lyrics go togther, and after hearing
a song on the radio or record a million times, your subconcious
can handle it, but conversation does not fit in with the song, and
it distracts you. Another strange observation I've made is that
it is actually more difficult for me to sing *without* playing
than it is for me to sing and play simultaneously. I really feel
naked when I try to sing without a guitar in my hands.
Perhaps the hardest feat is to sing lead and play lead guitar at
the same time. There are very few people that can do this with
any real proficiency. A few people that come to mind is Jerry Garcia
and the late great Lowell George. Lowell could play an awesome
slide guitar solo, while singing lead on some of the most intense
songs Little Feat ever did.
Then again, there are professional musicians that cannot sing and
play simultaneously at all (ie. B.B. King).
My advice is not to try to sing and play a song until you have mastered
the instrumental part, and memorized the words. Trying to learn
both simultaeously is just too much to handle.
I used to get most of my lyrics directly from records. I would spin
the record for one sentence, then cue it up and write down the line.
Then I would start at the beginning and play upto the second sentence
and cue it up and write that line down. By the time you write out
all the words, you have heard the song several times, and you pretty
much know the words well enough to sing them.
Mark
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1426.9 | | NACAD::R_PEPE | | Thu Aug 17 1989 13:52 | 7 |
| I've found that the only way I can sing and play bass at the same
time is if I'm reading the tune's chord changes as I'm playing (as
opposed to improvising the bass line out of my head). I guess that
maybe this reduces one layer of concentration that frees you up
to sing. Does anyone else feel this way?
-RP-
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1426.10 | Choose The Right Songs | AQUA::ROST | My mind is on vacation | Thu Aug 17 1989 14:01 | 8 |
|
I take the easy way out...before I learn to sing a song, I check
out how easy the bass line is. If it's very syncopated, I scrap
it.
Hope all these replies show you're not alone. Eric Clapton once
said that he'd like to be able to play "Layla" correctly while he's
singing it, but he can't do it.
|
1426.11 | Whew! I feel better! | VIDEO::TASSINARI | Bob | Fri Aug 18 1989 09:13 | 22 |
|
I read an interview with John Entwistle about the time the Who was
starting their recent tour that touched on this very subject. The
interviewer asked him why he didn't do more of his material. His answer
was that on some of them he couldn't sing and play at the same time.
He went on to ad that some bass patterns lend themselves to singing
while others don't as Brian mentioned in the previous note.
While not a heavyweight singer (backup only), I noticed that tunes
I've know for years are no problem while new ones seem impossible.
This probably lends some support to the 'practice, practice, practice'
idea.
I do much better when I don't think about what I'm doing. Once
I start to think about it, it goes awry.
I thought this problem was only mine....thanks for lifting the
weight off of my shoulders. 8-)
Bob
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1426.12 | More is better | USEM::SEAWARD | | Mon Aug 21 1989 17:42 | 9 |
| Another big sigh of relief in this corner ! I always found
singing and playing guitar chords as straightforward; but when
I took up the bass my voice felt paralyzed. I agree with all
the other replies: practice the bass part first, memorize the
words, and practice it over and over. Since I am singing
harmony parts, I feel another level of challenge - but it
has been worth it. I might add that, the more songs you
master for bass and voice, the easier it is to pick up
new ones.
|
1426.13 | ? | DISCVR::JONEILL | | Fri Dec 08 1989 06:52 | 10 |
| I tried for years to play guitar with little success. Something I
always did was to sing along wtih the song to help with the cord
changes. I gave up on guitar and moved to bass and as stated in
previous notes, unless the bass line is pretty simple, I get all
confused as soon as I open my mouth. Is bass that much harder to sing
with, did those of us that are having such a hard time play six string
first or is it simply the nature of the bass and it's role in a song.
I tend to belive the latter.
Jim
|