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Originally Posted by MarkRhodes
I am amazed by bass players who started out as guitarists and played bass because “there was already a guitarist (or 2) in the band.” The famous example is Paul McCartney. But Tom Petty also played bass with Mudcrutch. How he can play and sing the way he does on a completely different instrument is a wonder.
I’m sure there are a lot of other examples out there.
And this is rock music, not even jazz. But the bass is as important if not importanter in rock. Without the rhythm, there’s just a rock, no roll.
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09-21-2023 08:58 PM
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I think it was kind of a given for a lot of 60's rock bands that the bass player was basically the worst guitarist of the three when the band started out. That doesn't mean some of them didn't embrace the instrument and take it places, just that it was fairly commonplace.
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The only truth, I should say my truth, playing the bass correctly makes you a better guitarist.
It doesn't mean you will be a good bassist but you will be able to know what you're playing on the guitar.
Same thing with keyboards.
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Originally Posted by jim777
Nowadays a lot of kids study upright bass in high school or music school, but back in the day I bet most bass players started out as guitarists and took up bass only secondarily.
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Originally Posted by Lionelsax
Appreciate the comments regarding timing, not thinking like a guitarist, avoiding the phrasing freedom that we enjoy as guitarists. You will likely never see me on the bandstand with the thing, but it was that or a resonator, and this made more sense for an expansion into other stringy realms. Although, after listening to Metheny's latest, I think I really need a baritone, now.
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‘It was really only with prog rock that the average person even knew the name of the bass player.’
And only if the name was Chris Squire.
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My regular pianist can kick bass. When the regular bassist can't make it, the pianist can actually demonstrate the correct bass line for the substitute bassist.
I should be able to do that too, but I can't except in very simple situations.
The point is that, if you can't show a bassist what to play, you shouldn't be playing bass.
The non-reader in the big band probably didn't realize he was jumping into the deep end of the pool.
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Originally Posted by nevershouldhavesoldit
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Originally Posted by yebdox
Funny thing, maybe I'm going to play the bass in a big band.
It's up to me... but maybe it's not.
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Another funny coincidence: Bass classical guitar? - Classical Guitar
Anyone here have an archtop bass, btw?
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Another advantage being a piano player. Bass clef, no problem!
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Originally Posted by RJVB
Ibanez ASB140BS Semi Hollow Bass Guitar Brown Sunburst With Bag - Used
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Sore subject for me here; in 35 yrs I've played with so many "so called" bass players, but at rehearsal time I could tell they're really guitarists, it knocks the wind out of my sails. The bass always has (or should have) a special relationship with the drummer; it's almost like a marriage (musically speaking) since the two are the rhythm section of any band. This relationship does not really exist with the guitarist and drums. As a guitarist, I can play behind or on front of the beat and not have a significant impact on the rhythm of the song, but a bassist cannot do this without screwing up the song. I've met only a few guitarists who are good or descent bass players.
Cheers,
Arnie..
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OP's story resonated with me.
I had a guy about five years ago that subbed for my regular bassist. Told me "looking to branch out into playing more bass". We played the first song, a slow blues, and the dude couldn't stick the 12/8. I realized after our first song was over that he couldn't even play a basic shuffle. 10 minutes into a 3 hour set and I am officially out of material. To top it off the bartender says "bring it" lol yeah ok with this "bassist". I tried a fast shuffle but the dude kept geeking every change and blowing the rhythm.
Maybe I poured on the drinks, I don't even remember how I made it through. I just remember being pounding-on-the-dashboard pissed on my ride home. I wanted to grab the dude by his throat and beat his head against the curb for doing that to me. Nothing pisses me off like a so called musician with garbage meter who dares get on stage. Just makes my temper boil. I don't know why, I can't help it. And there are LOT of players who have garbage timing. Learn how to count, it ain't that hard.
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Originally Posted by Jimmy Smith
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^ To me, bass playing to most music is simple stuff which wouldn't sound that artistic on its own. It grooves, the fat notes are aesthetically pleasing, there is definitely some artistry to playing bass well, but I definitely don't think it's 'rocket art'. It's just a simple part that supports the band that can be somewhat creative. Now, the virtuosos like Charles Berthoud definitely take bass into rocket art territory, but I wouldn't say in general bass is rocket art. For the record, I'm a bassist. I play Hammond.
At DB: Yeah, that pisses me off too. In college when I was jamming a lot, I noticed that when someone couldn't play at all usually the other musicians would be accepting of it with a good attitude, but it always pissed me off too. Then it's one thing to jam with people and bring everyone down if you suck, but to sit in on a gig if you suck is just extremely disrespectful in my view. I'm not accepting of it either and it would piss me off too. Like go hit the street corner if you want to play like a moron.
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I'm having trouble believing that so many of you think playing bass well is so simple. Good (not even great) bass playing requires excellent timing plus the ability to precisely maintain a tempo. Notes have to be consistent in placement, attack, loudness, dwell, sustain / decay, tone, and so much more to support the dynamics and flow of the music from section to section. This takes a true understanding of what's needed plus the chops to deliver it. And it takes enough self control to avoid showing off until soloing. Even technically fine bassists can get too fancy and clutter up a tune.
Bass is the classic example of my guiding principle in hiring players. You need someone who cares at least as much about the music and the band as about his or her solos.
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^ You're right. Playing bass well does require a lot. I was just disagreeing with the idea in the previous post which said it's 'rocket art.'
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I think bass really relies on taste more than skill. As soon as someone learns to slap and pop they’re useless as a bass player.
But you can learn to walk a blues in a day and play well for life.
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Originally Posted by AllanAllen
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Originally Posted by AllanAllen
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Like listen to Steve Davis here. You mean to tell me that's extremely artistic even though he's playing really well? There is some artistry and skill that goes into doing that, but it's on the lower half of the spectrum.
Last edited by Jimmy Smith; 10-26-2023 at 01:57 PM.
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Another mystery solved.
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Michael League’s take: “Bass is the easiest instrument in my opinion to get good at and probably the hardest to be great at.”
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Originally Posted by ThatRhythmMan
This sums things up nicely.
Strings comparable to TI Bensons without the...
Today, 07:57 PM in Guitar, Amps & Gizmos