Bass Lines, Any help advice? |
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Fri 20 May 2005, 13:15
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From: Umeå - SE
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Again a very personal subject with a thousand variations, at least. You have at a bare minimum three basic approaches. 1: Lets drums and bass follow each other closely. 2: Let drums and bass have very free independant roles. ( more jazz oriented ) 3: Let drums and bass play very tightly interlocking parts. Listen to the album "Drop it In the Slot" by Tower of Power from the late 70:ies early 80:ies something for an outstanding example of number three. ( David Garibaldi & Francis Rooco Prestia really know how to lay down a funky groove ) Of course no approach is usually pure examples of either way to do it, Try to listen to different kinds of music and listen to work of the drummers & bassplayers extra carefully, to get ideas for your own work. Analyze your own bass-playing - what is it you do - can you do anything different? Cheers & good luck: Dixiechiken
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Thu 9 Jun 2005, 21:08
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One thing I do sometimes is, if I think of a melody that I like and I'd normally try it as a vocal or lead instrument line, I will instead have the bass play it, and then write additional parts on top. Of course, this approach doesn't suit every song, but it's a nice variation and I tend to like a melodic approach from the bass when it's suitable.
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Thu 23 Jun 2005, 08:28
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Simple but effective way of emulating Dixie Chickens tip 1). (The tightest Drummer/Bass Duo possible) Copy and Paste the Kick drum to another track with a Bass synth/sample. Move the midi notes in pitch but keep their timing the same. This works particularly well for R n B/ Urban and Funk.
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Thu 15 Sep 2005, 14:23
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I can sympathise with your issues when playing bass. At least by identifying that your lines are a little samey, you realise that there is a wider scope out there. Progression is fantastic. I always look to the blues when in doubt. Not saying you should rip out a busting blues fill, just rely on the fact that the 'blues' invokes a feeling/reaction in majority of listeners. Am I assuming too much?? I don't think so. A bass slide here and there does wonders....in the right spot. Silence is golden....look to add space to a line.... If playing a two bar pattern, think of the first bar as the question, the second bar the answer. I also dig players who 'lay back' a bit on beat 3 + 4. Someone Pino Paladino (D'angelo, Paul Young etc) does this and it is great. Keep it low and and keep it mean. willismatt
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