I thought it would be a good idea to expand on the techniques used when playing live bass lines with the left hand.
It's a very different mind set from traditional piano playing, and works best when the melody is coming from somewhere else. ( Singers, other players etc. )
Playing your own bass lines is a great way to personalize an arrangement, and make a really tight rhythm section on the fly.
First thing to do:
TURN OFF THAT ARRANGER !!!!
You can make all the rhythm needed with your right hand. Lets try a simple song like Rt 66. Straight ahead 12 bar blues tune - EZ chords. Let's do it in F.
F/// Bb/// F/// F7///
Bb7/// //// F/Gm/ Am/AbM/
Gm7/// C7/// F/// C7///
For starters ... just play quarter notes in the right hand. Full 4 or 5 note chords, and you can embelish with 2nds, 6ths, 9ths etc.... to taste. ( In he bars that change fast, just stay on the root till you have room to walk again.)
Next, try the bass hand and simply walk through the chord as an arpeggio.
eg: F = F A C A F
(you can get fancier after this gets comfy)
If you can get both hands running at the same time .... try singing the melody along with it. If you can't ( or won't ) sing, then record the backing with a shuffle beat at about 136BPM.
Now, you can play the melody over top of it.
Then, you can reverse the process and record the melody with a drum track only. Then, you play the bass and piano with the track. This is an ez, fun way to practice, and it's almost as good as being in a band!
* * * * * * * * * * * * *
The persona of the bassist is one of "attitude". You need to accept that. Embrace that, and bulid on it. The bass is the pulse of the arrangement. The very soul of the chord structure. It DEFINES most chords, and creates either tensions or smoothness throughout. It's very, very cool.
A bassist is a supportive player. Not a show off. Not a star. Not a busy, melodic player. ( In most cases, anyway ) The bass putw down the bottom. Stay on the root as often as needed to define the feeling of the piece.
If you are a singer, and have descent facility with your right hand for chords, then there is no excuse to NOT at least try a few numbers with manual bass.
There is no need for auto accompaniment if you are playing the full chords and bass lines along with the melody. It's an intimate, trio sound that is authentic to the tee when it's done right.
On my website - "A Nightingale Sang" was done as I described above. Just LHbass, RHpiano and drum machine.
Check it out @
www.boydsongs.com In an intimate setting .... it's vibrant, creative, tight and above all "BELIEVABLE". Sometimes, the arranger sounds too produced or canned at lower volumes or slower tempos. A good solid bass line and the right rhythm beat is all you need to make people dance. The rest of the stuff you add, just makes it all the prettier!
Now, "Go forth and Bassify !"