One handed bass player.
Moderators: rickenbrother, ajish4
One handed bass player.
Buy it before someone else does.
- 4stringnosing
- New member
- Posts: 94
- Joined: Tue Feb 28, 2006 10:36 am
Pretty cool, eh? Apparently he has an album out - details here: http://kzoomusicgroup.com/music.html
Dreaming of one day owning a Fender bass is like dreaming of one day driving a Chevrolet Impala.
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billy_sacco
- Junior Member
- Posts: 106
- Joined: Sat Feb 18, 2006 2:16 pm
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billy_sacco
- Junior Member
- Posts: 106
- Joined: Sat Feb 18, 2006 2:16 pm
The guy can play. No question about that. Nice sound too. It sound, like it's finger picked not hammered on. He should be an inspiration to us all to overcome ANY adversity that we might face. I'm sure his sound has developed BECAUSE of his technique, but in no way is it limiting. Thanks for posting the link. I have in tern sent it to some of my bass player friends.
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sabbath_of_bass
- Intermediate Member
- Posts: 699
- Joined: Tue Jun 21, 2005 4:16 pm
- Contact:
Wow. That was just awesome. Doesnt it make you feel like youv been slacking tho? When someone with only one hand pulls off some stuff you cant do with both of yours. I feel lazy. I have to go play for the rest of the night. Thanks...
Really tho. You have to respect someone like that so much. Thats just awesome.
Really tho. You have to respect someone like that so much. Thats just awesome.
Well, just speaking as a pocket player, he is WAY too busy. I have a hard time with bass lines that tend toward "noodling". Of course 90% or more of the jazz solos I hear sound like noodling. Speed os not everything. That said, he noodles really fast!
definition of noodling. - playing scales and runs so fast as to be almost incoherent. I believe "style" and "groove" comes in the spaces, and jazz guys don't leave spaces.
He ducks and runs for cover........
definition of noodling. - playing scales and runs so fast as to be almost incoherent. I believe "style" and "groove" comes in the spaces, and jazz guys don't leave spaces.
He ducks and runs for cover........
If a guy with both hands played that busy all the time, he would be showing off, but this fellow kind of has to prove himself (or feels like he should).
I certainly wouldn't call him handicapped!
And I do agree that frequently it's what you don't play that sets one's playing apart.
I certainly wouldn't call him handicapped!
And I do agree that frequently it's what you don't play that sets one's playing apart.
Plus five minus five!
I gotta' agree with Charlie. Maybe it's some kind of old guy thing, but I'd rather hear a guy play four really good notes than thirty-two of those frantic ones. I felt pretty much the same way about the Entwistle video. You have to admire the sheer finger speed, but for me, there is not much else that's memorable, or in many cases, very interesting about the bass line that's being played. Granted, I haven't been a true rock and Roll bassist since the late 1960's and there wasn't much room for that kind of playing in the folky end of the business, so I probably don't have an appreciation for that genre of music like many do. But where many of the bass lines played by folks like Macca and John McVie (Fleetwood Mac) truly "shaped" and drove songs, these warp-speed bass lines seem pretty empty. The first good bass lines I ever learned, way back in high school, were for the Zombies "She's Not There" and a couple of tunes by The Animals (songs like "We Gotta' Get Out of This Place") and the bass lines really made those tunes. They were perfect. At an age when being cool was a big deal, being a bass player and playing those runs was cool (I must admit that I also really liked watching the silver dust caps on my JBL 140's dance while I played - the ones for the lead guitar players hardly even moved and were nowhere near as neat).
An interesting, but rather simple, driving bass line with a few REALLY good, well placed transitional runs gets my attention every time, where all this busy stuff just reminds me of a Saturday afternoon at my local Guitar Center and the kid in the corner wailing away on a cheap strat. Some of these kids have some serious chops, but it makes you wonder why local bands aren't better than they are? It also sometimes makes me wonder whether that kid can actually play four really good notes and make it amount to something?
Chalk it up to different ages, different tastes in music or whatever, there seems to be room for everybody. I generally play a lot fewer notes now than I ever did back when I was playing on stage or in the studio, but there is no question in my mind that they're better notes and that I have progressed, rather than regressed. My advice - play for many years, it's neat to see the changes you'll go through (and buy a pair of old JBL D or E 140's so you'll have something fun to watch while you play).
An interesting, but rather simple, driving bass line with a few REALLY good, well placed transitional runs gets my attention every time, where all this busy stuff just reminds me of a Saturday afternoon at my local Guitar Center and the kid in the corner wailing away on a cheap strat. Some of these kids have some serious chops, but it makes you wonder why local bands aren't better than they are? It also sometimes makes me wonder whether that kid can actually play four really good notes and make it amount to something?
Chalk it up to different ages, different tastes in music or whatever, there seems to be room for everybody. I generally play a lot fewer notes now than I ever did back when I was playing on stage or in the studio, but there is no question in my mind that they're better notes and that I have progressed, rather than regressed. My advice - play for many years, it's neat to see the changes you'll go through (and buy a pair of old JBL D or E 140's so you'll have something fun to watch while you play).
