Techniques On The 4001/3FL
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Re: Techniques On The 4001/3FL
While the trad approach to fretless is always going to be finger style, and is certainly my preference, one should never shut their mind, (or their ears) to the possibly pick approach, or any other style.
Listen to the "Love Of Money" by the O'Jays to hear Anthony Jackson show what one can do with a pick, as this performance is a masterpiece of fretless playing, albeit in unconventional terms.
Listen to the "Love Of Money" by the O'Jays to hear Anthony Jackson show what one can do with a pick, as this performance is a masterpiece of fretless playing, albeit in unconventional terms.
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Re: Techniques On The 4001/3FL
One of my all time favorite bass lines. I never realized it was a fretless. I thought Anthony Jackson used a pick on a fretted Precision Bass.wints wrote:Listen to the "Love Of Money" by the O'Jays to hear Anthony Jackson show what one can do with a pick, as this performance is a masterpiece of fretless playing, albeit in unconventional terms.
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Re: Techniques On The 4001/3FL
It may have been Anthony Jackson on a FL on the studio version, but here's Curtis Teel on a fretted Precision on Soul Train. I prefer this bass sound to the studio version:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OCkLEo-DT1Q
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OCkLEo-DT1Q
Can we have everything louder than everything else?
Re: Techniques On The 4001/3FL
+1, I need to go over interviews I have read by him as I don't recall him playing fretless bass.rickenbrother wrote:One of my all time favorite bass lines. I never realized it was a fretless. I thought Anthony Jackson used a pick on a fretted Precision Bass.wints wrote:Listen to the "Love Of Money" by the O'Jays to hear Anthony Jackson show what one can do with a pick, as this performance is a masterpiece of fretless playing, albeit in unconventional terms.
Re: Techniques On The 4001/3FL
Well, it was a looooong time ago.
I sure thought he mentioned it was a FL.
Jeff, you find anything else?
I sure thought he mentioned it was a FL.
Jeff, you find anything else?
Re: Techniques On The 4001/3FL
Doing a Google search I came across this:
"One day during the fall of 1973, keyboardist Leon Huff was leading the members of the MFSB rhythm section, along with Jackson, through a rehearsal of "For the Love of Money." Sigma Sound Studios owner/engineer Joe Tarsia was present and noticed that Jackson had a wah wah pedal attached to his Fender Precision bass. Tarsia decided to run Jackson's bass line through a phaser, giving it a swishing sound, and later mixed in echo. During the final mixing of the track,Kenny Gamble impulsively reached over to the echo button and added echo to Jackson's opening riffs. "For the Love of Money" went to number three R&B and number nine pop in the spring of 1974. Radio stations gladly played the over-seven-minutes-long album version."
"One day during the fall of 1973, keyboardist Leon Huff was leading the members of the MFSB rhythm section, along with Jackson, through a rehearsal of "For the Love of Money." Sigma Sound Studios owner/engineer Joe Tarsia was present and noticed that Jackson had a wah wah pedal attached to his Fender Precision bass. Tarsia decided to run Jackson's bass line through a phaser, giving it a swishing sound, and later mixed in echo. During the final mixing of the track,Kenny Gamble impulsively reached over to the echo button and added echo to Jackson's opening riffs. "For the Love of Money" went to number three R&B and number nine pop in the spring of 1974. Radio stations gladly played the over-seven-minutes-long album version."
Re: Techniques On The 4001/3FL
Now, did they forget the word "fretless"...

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Re: Techniques On The 4001/3FL
Great thread and very helpful to this RRF noob!
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