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Bass Guitar For Dummies, 3rd Edition P Pfeiffer

Bass Guitar For Dummies, 3rd Edition von P Pfeiffer

Bass Guitar For Dummies, 3rd Edition P Pfeiffer


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Bass Guitar For Dummies, 3rd Edition Zusammenfassung

Bass Guitar For Dummies, 3rd Edition P Pfeiffer

Way more than just the bass-ics

Whatever you're playing-funk, soul, rock, blues, country-the bass is the heart of the band. Bassists provide a crucial part of driving force and funky framework that other members of any and work off. From John Paul Jones of Led Zeppelin, to The Pixies'' Kim Deal, to James Brown's favored bassist, Jimmy Nolan, bass players have made big names for themselves and commanded respect throughout music history.

In Bass Guitar For Dummies, Patrick Pfeiffer-who coached U2's Adam Clayton, among others-is your friendly guide to laying down the low end. Starting from the beginning with what bass and accessories to buy, the book shows you everything from how to hold and position your instrument to how to read music and understand chords. You'll develop your skills step-by-step until you're confident playing your own solos and fills.

  • Sharpen skills with instructional audio and video
  • Discipline your play with exercises
  • Understand chords, scales, and octaves
  • Care for your instrument

Whether you're new to the bass or already well into the groove, Bass Guitar For Dummies gives you the thorough balance of theory and practice that distinguishes the titanic Hall of Famer from the just so-so.

P.S. If you think this book seems familiar, you're probably right. The Dummies team updated the cover and design to give the book a fresh feel, but the content is the same as the previous release of Bass Guitar For Dummies (9781118748800). The book you see here shouldn't be considered a new or updated product. But if you're in the mood to learn something new, check out some of our other books. We're always writing about new topics!

Über P Pfeiffer

Patrick Pfeiffer is a professional bassist, bass educator, and composer. His former clients include Polygram, Red Ant Records, Arista Records, and other major labels as well as Adam Clayton of U2. He has recorded with George Clinton, Phoebe Snow, Jimmy Norman of the Coasters, Paul Griffin and Bernard Purdie of Steely Dan, and many other stars.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Foreword xv

Introduction 1

About This Book 1

Foolish Assumptions 3

Icons Used in This Book 4

Beyond the Book 4

Where to Go from Here 5

Part 1: Getting Started With the Bass Guitar 7

Chapter 1: The Very Basics of Bass 9

Discovering the Differences between the Bass and Its High-Strung Cousins 9

Understanding the Bass Player's Function in a Band 10

Forging the link between harmony and rhythm 11

Moving the song along 11

Keeping time 11

Establishing rhythms 12

Looking cool 12

Dissecting the Anatomy of a Bass Guitar 12

The neck 13

The body 14

The innards 15

On a Need-to-Know Basses: Gearing Up to Play Bass 15

Coordinating your right and left hands 16

Mastering major and minor chord structures 16

Tuning your bass 16

Combining scales and chords 16

Playing Grooves, Solos, and Fills 17

Creating grooves and riffs 17

Treating yourself and your audience to solos and fills 17

Experimenting with Different Musical Genres 18

Stocking Up on Some Bass Gear 19

Buying a bass 19

Getting an amplifier 19

Accessorizing your bass 20

Giving Your Bass Some Good Ol' TLC 20

Chapter 2: Gaining the Tools and Skills to Play 21

Getting a Handle on Your Bass 21

Holding Your Bass 22

Strapping on your bass: Strings to the outside 23

Voila! Standing with your bass 23

Sitting with your bass 24

Placing Your Hands in the Proper Position 25

Positioning your left hand 25

Positioning your right hand 27

Reading a Fingerboard Diagram 33

The language of music: Scales and chords 33

Viewing a diagram of the major and minor scales 36

Playing open-string scales 37

Finding the notes on the neck 37

Identifying intervals: They're always in the same place 39

Tuning Your Bass Guitar 41

Reference pitch sources to use when playing alone 41

Reference pitch sources to use when playing with others 43

Tuning the bass guitar to itself 45

Playing a Song on Your Bass Guitar 53

Making some noise with the open strings 53

Closing the strings 54

Chapter 3: Warming Up: Getting Your Hands in Shape to Play 57

Understanding the Sound Your Bass Makes 58

Performing Right-Hand Warm-Ups 58

Right-hand same-string strokes 59

Controlling the strength in your striking hand: Right-hand accents 61

Skating across the strings: Right-hand string crossing 62

Coordinating Your Left Hand with Your Right Hand 63

Doing finger permutations 64

Muting the strings to avoid the infamous hum 65

Putting it all together 66

Part 2: The Bass-ics of Playing 69

Chapter 4: Reading, 'Riting, and Rhythm 71

Reading Notation: No Pain, Much Gain 71

Chord notation: The chord chart 72

Music notation: Indicating rhythm and notes 72

Tablature notation: Showing strings, frets, and sequence 73

The vocal chart: Using lyrics and chords for a singer or songwriter 75

Finding Any Note in Any Octave 75

Using the Metronome: You Know, That Tick-Tock Thing 80

Setting the metronome 80

Playing along 80

Dividing Music into Phrases, Measures, and Beats 81

The quarter note 82

The eighth note 82

The sixteenth note 83

The half note 83

The whole note 83

The triplet 83

The dot 84

The tie 84

The rest 85

Discovering How to Read Music 85

Rhythmic chunks 85

Interval chunks 86

What comes up must come down 88

Playing Your First Song While Reading Music 90

Chapter 5: Understanding Major and Minor Structures 93

Building Major and Minor Scales 94

Major scales 95

Minor scales 96

Building Chords: One Note at a Time, Please 97

Triads: The three most important notes of a chord 98

7th chords: Filling out the triad 101

Getting your kicks with boogie licks 104

Inversions: Down is Up, and Up is Down 106

Major chord inversions 106

Minor chord inversions 108

Spicing Up Your Sound: The Seven Main Modes (Scales) 110

Using Chromatic Tones: All the Other Notes 115

Chromatic tones within the box 115

Chromatic tones outside the box 116

Bringing a Groove to Life with Dead Notes (Weird but True) 117

Playing dead - notes, that is 118

Raking dead notes 118

Sampling Accompaniments 120

Using your accompaniments in a tune 123

Keeping your groove gloriously ambiguous 124

Part 3: Making the Moves, Creating the Grooves 127

Chapter 6: Creating the Groove 129

Anatomy of a Groove: Putting Together the Necessary Elements 129

Getting your groove skeleton out of the closet 130

Playing a song using only the groove skeleton 132

Choosing the right notes for a groove 133

Creating Your Own Groove 136

Covering the basses: Creating dominant, minor, and major grooves 136

Waggin' the groove tail 144

Movin' and groovin' from chord to chord 146

Finding the perfect fit: The designer groove 150

Grooving with a Drummer 153

The bass drum 153

The snare drum 154

The hi-hat 155

Jammin' with Other Musicians 155

Preparing your ear 156

Listening for the note 156

Pivoting the note 159

Getting Creative with Existing Grooves 161

Altering a (famous) groove 162

Simplifying a groove 164

Chapter 7: Going Solo: Playing Solos and Fills 167

Soloing: Your Moment to Shine 167

Playing with the blues scale: A favorite solo spice 168

Jamming with the minor pentatonic scale: No wrong notes 171

Using the major pentatonic scale: Smooth as can be 172

Moving from chord to chord 174

Creating Fills without Any Help from Your Dentist 176

A match made in heaven: Connecting your fill to the groove 177

Timing a fill 177

Part 4: Using the Correct Accompaniment For Each Genre 183

Chapter 8: Rock On! Getting Down with the Rock Styles 185

Rock 'n' Roll: It's The Attitude! 186

Hard Rock: Going at It Fast and Furious 191

Pop Rock: Supporting the Vocals 193

Blues Rock: Doin' What Duck Does and Playing a Countermelody 195

Country Rock: Where Vocals Are King, and You Take a Back Seat 198

One Rock Fits All: Applying a Standard Rock Groove to Any Rock Song 200

Chapter 9: Swing It! Playing Styles That Rely on the Triplet Feel 203

Swing: Grooving Up-Tempo with Attitude 204

Jazz: Going for a Walk 205

Working the walk 206

Applying a jazz blues walking pattern 211

Blues Shuffle: Walking Like Donald Duck (Dunn, That Is) 214

Funk Shuffle: Combining Funk, Blues, and Jazz 217

Chapter 10: Making It Funky: Playing Hardcore Bass Grooves 221

R & B: Movin' to Rhythm and Blues 222

The Motown Sound: Grooving with the Music of the Funk Brothers 225

Fusion: Blending Two Styles into One 226

Funk: Light Fingers, Heavy Attitude 229

Hip-Hop: Featuring Heavy Funk with Heavy Attitude 232

Knowing What to Do When You Just Want to Funkifize a Tune 234

Chapter 11: Sampling International Flavors: Bass Styles from Around the World 237

Bossa Nova: Baskin' in a Brazilian Beat 238

Samba: Speeding Up with Bossa's Fast Cousin 239

Afro-Cuban: Ordering Up Some Salsa (Hold the Chips, Please) 240

Reggae: Relaxing with Offbeat Riddims 242

Calypso Party Sounds: Dancing through the Groove 244

Combining Reggae and Rock: The Distinct Sound of Ska 245

African Grooves: Experimenting with Exotic Downbeat Grooves 247

Grooving on a steady beat, South African-style 247

Checking out the bass groove styles from Cameroon 248

Music without Borders: Grooving to the World Beat 251

Chapter 12: Playing in Odd Meters: Not Strange, Just Not the Norm 253

An Odd-Meter Oldie but Goodie: The Waltz 254

Beyond the Waltz: Navigating Beats in Odd Meter 255

5/4 meter: Not an impossible mission 256

Take a groove you know and make it grow 259

7/4 meter: Adding two more beats 260

Complex Simplicity: Syncopation and Subdivision 264

Syncopating in odd meter 264

Adding an eighth 265

Dealing with the rush 266

Chapter 13: Groovin' in a Genre: It's All About Style! 269

Playing Grooves in Each Genre: One Simple Song, Many Genres Strong 270

Pop: Backing up the singer-songwriter 271

Rocking by the quarter or eighth note 271

R & B/Soul, with or without the dot 272

Feeling da funk 275

Layin' down some Latin grooves 276

When you're feelin' blue, shuffle 277

To Blend or Not to Blend: Knowing How to Fit In 279

Just blending in: How to do it 280

The bold and the beautiful: Creating a bold groove 281

Blending and bolding by genre 281

Signing off with a flourish 282

Chapter 14: Eight Degrees of Separation: The Beatles' Solution 285

Playing Your Rhythm Straight or Syncopated 286

Pumping eighth notes 286

Syncopating the bass beat 287

Making Harmonic Choices 290

Feeling fine (with roots and 5ths) 290

Walking along Penny Lane 292

Coming together to move with the groove 295

Day-tripping in perfect agreement: Unison 295

Playing something to counter the melody with 299

Inverting while your bass gently weeps 300

Part 5: Buying and Caring For Your Bass 305

Chapter 15: Love of a Lifetime or One-Night Stand? Buying the Right Bass 307

Assessing Your Needs Before You Buy 308

Thinking long-term: Moving in together 309

Thinking short-term: Help me make it through the night 309

How many strings are too many? 309

To fret or not to fret 311

Needs Are One Thing . . . Budget is Quite Another 311

A Trip to the Bass-Mint: Where to Shop for Your Bass Guitar 312

Hitting the music stores 312

Consulting newspaper ads 314

Visiting online shops and individual online ads 315

When Money is No Object: Getting a Custom-Made Bass 316

Chapter 16: Getting the Right Gear for Your Bass Guitar 317

Making Yourself Heard: A Primer on Amplifiers and Speakers 318

Going with a combo or separate amp and speaker 318

Opting for solid state or tubes 319

Picking a speaker size 319

Setting the tone 320

Needs, Wants, and Nonessentials: Rounding Out Your Equipment 321

Must-haves: Cases, gig bags, and more 321

Definite maybes: Useful effects, gadgets, and practice items 323

Extras: Effects pedals 325

Chapter 17: Changing the Strings on Your Bass Guitar 327

Knowing When It's Time to Say Goodbye 328

Off with the Old: Removing Bass Strings 328

On with the New: Restringing Your Bass 330

Ensuring a Long Life for Your Strings 335

Chapter 18: Keeping Your Bass in Shape: Maintenance and Light Repair 337

Cleaning Your Bass, Part by Part 337

The body and neck 338

The hardware 338

The pickups 338

The fingerboard 339

The strings 339

Making Minor Repairs to Your Bass 340

The taming of the screw(s) 340

Taking care of the finish 341

Leaving the electronics to the experts 341

Adjusting the Bass Guitar 342

Providing relief to the truss rod 342

Raising and lowering the bridge 344

Assembling a Cleaning and Repair Tool Bag 346

Storing Your Bass 347

Part 6: The Part of Tens 349

Chapter 19: Ten Innovative Bassists You Should Know 351

Stanley Clarke 351

John Entwistle 352

James Jamerson 352

Carol Kaye 352

Will Lee 353

Paul McCartney 353

Marcus Miller 353

Jaco Pastorius 353

Victor Wooten 354

X (Fill in Your Own) 354

Chapter 20: Ten Great Rhythm Sections (Bassists and Drummers) 355

Bootsy Collins and Jab'o Starks 356

Donald Duck Dunn and Al Jackson Jr 356

James Jamerson and Benny Benjamin 356

John Paul Jones and John Bonham 357

Joe Osborn and Hal Blaine 357

Jaco Pastorius and Peter Erskine 358

George Porter Jr and Zig Modeliste 358

Francis Rocco Prestia and David Garibaldi 358

Chuck Rainey and Bernard Purdie 359

Robbie Shakespeare and Sly Dunbar 359

Appendix: Audio Tracks and Video Clips 361

Index 375

Zusätzliche Informationen

GOR011594647
9781119695578
1119695570
Bass Guitar For Dummies, 3rd Edition P Pfeiffer
Gebraucht - Sehr Gut
Broschiert
John Wiley & Sons Inc
20200915
416
N/A
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