
cstockdale
supafly killa homey
Tony Levin.
Flint Loveless said:Victor Wooten's got game, but it's a lot of riff-raff! Jaco Pastorious is the same way.
I can play bass better then most people who play guitar.
I'm a Bass player who can't get along with musicians because I play like a lead guitar.
there's always Vic to fall back on, but I've been mulln' it over and I think they're a couple of blow hards. Over rated by far!
Flint Loveless said:I'am almost embarrassed to tell people I play bass but then I realize that I can play bass better then most people who play guitar.
-Flint
BASS in '08
G. Simon said:I was thinking a lot of these things about Mr. 'Hey Nineteen' (that's a reference to an obscure 70s NYC jazz-rock band called 'Steely Dan'), and then a number of you started posting them!
Thank you - I find the middle school tone embarrassing, as well. What's next? " Hey I bet none of you can fart arpeggios over the circle of fifths like me"...
I respect that. Every person has his or her own musical preferences. However, I hope that you can appreciate its technical merits.Flint Loveless said:I just don't get a kick out of that kind of music.
Do you have any soundclips of your playing? If you really can play like that, you've got quite a gift! We'd all love to hear what you can do. I have to admit that I'm skeptical. When you make statements like "I love how his lines seem to change every other beat," it implies to me that you really don't comprehend the tonic modulations / chord substitutions that he's constantly using throughout the piece. Without that harmonic knowledge, it's impossible to "play like that."Flint Loveless said:I can play like that, however.
I think that we can all agree with this statement. I'm a guitar player by trade, but I can't tell you how much I appreciate a good bass player. However, you yourself may want to give some recognition to the guys whom you dismissed at the beginning of the thread, like Les Claypool and Victor Wooten. Both are highly visible players who have brought loads of recognition to the instrument.Flint Loveless said:I just feel that the bass doesn't get enough recognition and it deserves it, DAMN IT!
Sal4001 said:When your only musical competition is a beaver banging on a log
I think that he was being sarcastic with the "obscure" comment, but at least it was a good excuse to bring up Chuck Rainey's name. He does some fantastic work on albums like "The Royal Scam" and "Aja." The song "Peg" is a great example of combining chops, taste, and groove into a single entity. Speaking of SD bassists, I've always thought that Anthony Jackson's contributions on "Gaucho" were highly underrated.leddy said:Steely Dan is not really obscure, but speaking of them - Chuck Rainey's bass playing on those albums is incredible. Check him out: http://www.chuckrainey.com/
jerfo said:That's why I could listen all day to a guy like Tony Levin, who is not the most technical player, than to a player like Billy Sheehan...
I believe that Zappa used to refer to it as "spoo."G. Simon said:love it..ermghoti said:meedlymeedlymeeedly
Flint Loveless said:Town it down? Why wouldn't they hire me?
Flint Loveless said:I am 20 years old and why should that matter?
Flint Loveless said:I've run across this type of attitude before and I think (not sure) that it has to do something with your own playing. I'm not going as far to say jealousy but I've known a decent amount of people who've picked up the bass and had a real hard time with it. They, who I'm assuming you are like, don't like to talk about themselves much because they don't have a strong sense of talent so they down talk everyone else. I'm not saying that this is true, but the last guy I owned on bass was a guy who played for 9 years and went to collage for it. I've been playing for less then 3 with no schooling.