How to achieve this bass sound

  • Thread starter Thread starter webstersp
  • Start date Start date
Can I use something direct in or I really have to mike his bass amp?
 
The best place to start to get a certain bass sound is at the bass itself. For high end twang, go Fender jazz base all the way. Even the Squier jazz basses sound pretty good. You can go direct in, but try adding some slight distortion from whatever plugin you like. Boost somewhere around 4K and maybe some at 8K.
 
I forgot to mention, lower the action on his bass and make sure he's playing with a pick. Some of that sound you're looking for comes from the strings buzzing against the frets.
 
Sounds like bass going through a guitar amp. A few bassists in the 60s like John Entwistle and Jack Bruce did it.
 
You don't need a Fender jazz bass for a toppy sound.
LOTS of basses can give you a toppy tone if you set thigs up right. Man, I'd hate to have to go & get brand basses for each tone I like to use!
I mean, I have 3 basses - one that I use almost always, one that has room shaking boom that is cool for live dancey stuff and an acoustic 5 string that I haven't found a role for. NONE of them has a name you'd recognise but all have performed their roles admirably. Check out my Soundclick section for samples.

Back to the point:
Round wound strings are a good idea though;
Use a pick;
Back that up a DI - the cheap Behringer BDI21 works a charm;
You can dial in the sound pretty close to what you want
&
In the box or whatever you're mixing with you'll probably have to do a little EQ'ing with a parametric ( I cut all below 50, cut 5db at 100 & add 4 db at 200 then a narrow peak @ 3khz or higher all with a Q of 3) but you won't know that until you have other instruments to work around. The sound he's after will have more cut than I use.

I've played bass through a guitar amp & it's not pretty nor does it offer much longevity for the guitar speaker.
If you REALLY want to get the max of the trebbly attack mic up the bass, not the amp whilst dooing the DI & record his pick attack &/OR use a fanged plectrum.
I'm not all that keen on that bass sound myself - though it may be the Utub compression - as there's precious little bottom end or low mid.
How the rest of the band sound when recorded will REALLY determine what you need to do to get the bass to cut through the mix.
 
Can I use something direct in or I really have to mike his bass amp?
the best would obviously to do both.
if you do, don't forget to put them in phase and, personally what I'd suggest is to mix them in an aux. channel, split them in 2 other aux, one with an high cut, and the other one with a low cut (take your time to EQ the high pass channel. find where's the attack and make a little gain there. I'd might add a bit of maximizer to on the high aux)

p.s. sorry for my poor english :spank::p
 
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