JulesMaximus
No Lifer
- Jul 3, 2003
- 74,589
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you need to start slapping that bass. play like Wooten. get the womenz.![]()
Slap that bass!
you need to start slapping that bass. play like Wooten. get the womenz.![]()
I would go with bass but that's because I have a terrible sense of rhythm. Hopefully learning bass would help counteract that.
Little known fact- one of the hardest skills in music is to be able to sing and play bass at the same time. Your brain has to process melody and rhythm simultaneously, and very few people can do that.
Little known fact- one of the hardest skills in music is to be able to sing and play bass at the same time. Your brain has to process melody and rhythm simultaneously, and very few people can do that.
I'm going to assume that's why in bands singers are usually guitarists rather than bassists? Either way, cool fact :thumbsup:
I prefer to think of it as bass players avoiding the evolution into eccentric egotistical attention whoring frontmen with two extra strings that think they're god's gift to the opposite sex and everyone else.
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Here's a dumb question from a non-player: When do you play with your fingers and when do you use a pick?
Victor Wooten is awesome. That is pretty cool if you have one of his basses.
My son has a 1994 Mexican Fender Squire P-Bass with active EMG pickups and a new bridge. I bought it with a hard shell case for $200. Considering the guy travelled/gigged with it, it was in excellent condition.
It's a preference. You can use a pick if you want to play loud, fast, or for heavy distortion. Fingers are used for more detail, softer playing, or just for convenience.
Here's a dumb question from a non-player: When do you play with your fingers and when do you use a pick?
