The Bass Geek - Words about Music, Circuitry, and Fountain Square
The Bass Geek
9Jun/091

Slap Bass Equals A Vegetarian Spread?

Well, in a manner of speaking. This Guardian article compares the sound of a slapped bass to Marmite in a "love-it-or-hate-it" sort of way. This kind of discussion hit its heyday more than a few years ago, so it's a little strange to see a mainstream publication pick up the fight again. Especially when it gets some of the facts dead wrong:

  • Louis Johnson is thought to have developed the technique in parallel with Larry Graham, or at least shortly afterward. Not to take anything away from Graham, but leaving Johnson out of the discussion is wrong.
  • Speaking of Graham, the article claims he developed the technique "simply trying to create a drum-like sound to flesh out the rhythm in the then drummerless Family Stone." He actually did this in a band before Sly put together the Family Stone.
  • "The most virtuosic expression" of bass playing? Hardly. Possibly the most unique, but the player most credited with bringing virtuosity to the bass guitar (Jaco Pastorious) slapped nary a lick.
  • "The most reviled totem of 1980s musicianship ever"? Your article addresses the inventors of the 70s and the new popularizers of the 90s. In fact, the article mentions only the Power Station (okay, fair enough), Level 42 (yep, Mark King slapped a lot, but the music wasn't terrible), and Mike Watt of the Minutemen (as a GOOD example) as examples from the 80s.
  • Calling Rick James "bad" as a qualitative example is dead wrong. DEAD wrong.
  • "The point is to create a percussive, loud, buzzing tone, with guitar solo-like techniques of hammer-ons and pull-offs replacing the usual root-note pulse." Yep - unless we're slapping a mile-a-minute, we're just plucking repetitive root notes. I'm not looking for in-depth analysis and transcriptions from the Guardian, but a little more depth would be nice.
  • "Slap is an integral component of funk, and its fluid, frenetic, spiralling groove reconnects the artform back to jazz." The first part could be considered truth, although there was funk before slap. And there was jazzy funk before slap. So the second part of the sentence makes no sense, really. Funk is music, slap is a technique used to play music.

Silly. Just silly. Slap when you need to slap, pluck when you want to pluck, pick when you want to pick, and always serve the song. Even if you serve it with Marmite.

8Jun/092

This Show Abides

LebowskiNight-1Just got the show poster for the upcoming Lebowski Night at the Melody Inn on June 19th. In addition to me two-timing with the bands (the CCR song rehearsals continue in a humid-but-comfortable rehearsal room somewhere in western Indianapolis, and the Playboy Psychonauts are always ready at a moment's notice), there's going to be door prizes and some form of drink special on White Russians.

You can have my share of the drink special, so there's more incentive for that.

Now all I have to do is find my Walter costume. Any suggestions for clothing locations are warmly appreciated. Can you even buy Blu-Blockers anymore?

5Jun/090

Fountain Square Music This Weekend

It's a rootsy weekend at Radio Radio - Justin Townes Earle plays tonight along with John Bowyer, and Webb Wilder visits tomorrow. Mandy Marie and the Cool Hand Lukes open that show.

Deano's Vino has Andy DeCarlo and the Travellin' Hillbillies tonight. Wilson and Company stop by tomorrow.

DJs ASquared are spinning tonight at Big Car Gallery.

The Vollrath has Jukebox the Ghost, Jenny Owens Young, and Christian Taylor tonight. Tomorrow, look for Bandares, Creepin' Charley and the Boneyard Orchestra, and Meth Leb Explosion.

Finally, there's live jazz at Maria's Pizza tonight. Enjoy.

4Jun/091

New IMN Podcast Is Up, and More Music on the Xbox 360

The new IMN podcast is up - download it here or listen at the site or WFYI.

Speaking of online radio, I'm a little excited about Last.fm coming to the Xbox 360 sometime in the near future. It may seem like a small step for a service that has already made its way through the Internet and on to many mobile devices. The big thing here is that putting it on Xbox 360's Live service is that it gives a huge amount of independent music a direct line to consoles inside many, many homes. You still have to trust the listener to make the leap of actually choosing the right radio station, but it places the music in a good place. Twitter and Facebook integration are a good move as well, but I'm hoping the Last.fm integration ends up making a big difference for a lot of musicians.

1Jun/090

Follow-up Bass Porn, Now With Video

I referred to a J.C. Bass in a previous entry, so it's only fair to revisit the bass with actual video of it in use by its new owner, Seth Horan. Sounds fairly decent by YouTube standards, but it's going to be good to hear the full spectrum of sound on his upcoming albums. Back to work, Seth!

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