while micing and DI is generally consider the best, I just do DI since I don't really have a great sounding bass amp and DI really captures the bass well.
That actually, paradoxically, might be a good reason to use it.
I had a hell of a time getting a bass tone I was happy with - it's what I think I've struggled with the most. I picked up
a Sansamp RPM pre a couple years ago, and for a while I was recording through that but still wasn't happy with my tone. I thought the "gain" the preamp produced was, well, awful, but if I kept it really low and just used the EQ it sounded ok, but still wasn't quite what I was after. I had slightly better luck using that direct, then sending an uneffected out to my Recto and recording a slightly grittier track that way, but I still wasn't really happy.
What finally worked for me was running the uneffected out direct, and then running the effected out, with a fair amount of grit from that really unappealing distortion sound I didn't care for, and then blending the two, lowpassing the "clean" channel somewhere around 3-4khz and compressing it a fair amount, then cutting the bass a bit on the gritty channel. The "effected" distorted sound was pretty blah on its own, but with a deeper, clearer low end coming from the clean track, and then offsetting the start times ever so slightly until I liked what I heard, I got something that I really dug.
Here's the demo I was working on when I finally got a bass tone I was happy with - it's pretty rough (especially the solo), but you get the picture.
So, if you can split your signal somehow, run an uneffected DI to the board, and then capture your amp sound as well, give it a shot. It's one of those truisms of recording, but sometimes something that sounds really shitty on its own absolutely owns face in the right context, and sometimes something that sounds great in isolation just doesn't work in the mix.
EZ Willis - I've never actually heard any of your music before, man. Is that you singing? If so you've got a great voice, dude. Musically that's not the kind of thing I normally go for, but I kind of dig that track nonetheless.

I'd love to hear some more of your stuff, dude.