The electric
bass guitar (also called
electric bass, or simply
bass; ,
as in "base") is a
stringed
instrument played primarily with the
fingers or
thumb (either by
plucking, slapping, popping, tapping, or thumping), or by using a
plectrum.
The bass guitar is similar in appearance and construction to an
electric guitar, but with a larger
body, a longer
neck and
scale length, with a four, some
with five, or six
string tuned to
the same
pitches as those of the
double bass, which correspond to pitches
one
octave lower than those of the four lower
strings of a guitar (E, A, D, and G). The bass guitar is a
transposing instrument, as it is
notated in
bass clef an octave higher than
it sounds (as is the double bass) in order to avoid the excessive
use of
ledger lines. Like the electric
guitar, the electric bass guitar is plugged into an
amplifier and speaker for live
performances.
Since the 1950s, the electric bass guitar has largely replaced the
double bass in
popular music as the
bass instrument in the
rhythm
section. While the types of
basslines
performed by the bass guitarist vary widely from one style of music
to another, the bass guitarist fulfills a similar role in most
types of music: anchoring the harmonic framework and laying down
the beat. The bass guitar is used in many styles of music including
rock,
metal,
pop,
country,
blues,
and
jazz. It is used as a soloing instrument in
jazz,
fusion,
Latin,
funk, and in
some
rock and
metal (mostly
technical death metal and
progressive metal) styles.
History
1930s

150 px
In the
1930s, musician and inventor Paul Tutmarc from Seattle
, Washington
, developed the first guitar-style electric bass
instrument that was fretted and designed to be
held and played horizontally. The 1935 sales catalogue for
Tutmarc's company, Audiovox, featured his "electronic bass
fiddle," a four-stringed, solid-bodied, fretted
electric bass guitar with a 30½-inch scale length. The change to a
"guitar" form made the instrument easier to hold and transport, and
the addition of guitar-style frets enabled bassists to play in tune
more easily and made the new electric bass easier to learn.
However, Tutmarc's inventions never caught the public imagination,
and little further development of the instrument took place until
the 1950s.
1950s–1960s
In the 1950s,
Leo Fender, with the help
of his employee George Fullerton, developed the first mass-produced
electric bass. His
Fender
Precision Bass, introduced in 1951, became a widely copied
industry standard. The Precision Bass (or "P-bass") evolved from a
simple, uncontoured "slab" body design similar to that of a
Telecaster with a
single coil pickup, to a contoured body design
with beveled edges for comfort and a single four-pole "single coil
pickup." This "split pickup", introduced in 1957, appears to have
been two mandolin pickups (Fender was marketing a four string solid
body electric mandolin at the time). Because the pole pieces of the
coils were reversed with respect to each other, and the leads were
also reversed with respect to each other, the two coils, wired in
series, produced a humbucking effect (the same effect is achieved
if the coils are wired in parallel).

A Mexican Fender Jazz Bass (front and
back views)
Monk Montgomery was the first bass
player to tour with the Fender bass guitar, with
Lionel Hampton's postwar
big band. Roy Johnson, who replaced Montgomery in
Hampton's band, and
Shifty Henry with
Louis Jordan & His
Tympany Five, were other early Fender Bass
pioneers.
Bill Black, playing with
Elvis Presley, adopted the Fender
Precision Bass around 1957. Following Fender's lead,
Gibson released the
violin-shaped
EB-1 Bass in
1953, followed by the more conventional-looking
EB-0 Bass in 1959. As with Fender's designs,
Gibson relied heavily upon an existing guitar design for this bass;
the EB-0 was very similar to a
Gibson SG
in appearance (although the earliest examples have a slab-sided
body shape closer to that of the double-cutaway Les Paul Special).
Whereas Fender basses had pickups mounted in positions in between
the base of the neck and the top of the bridge, many of Gibson's
early basses featured one
humbucking
pickup mounted directly against the neck pocket. The
EB-3, introduced in 1961, also had a
"mini-humbucker" at the bridge position. Gibson basses also tended
to be smaller, sleeker instruments; Gibson did not produce a 34"
scale bass until 1963 with the release of the
Thunderbird, which was also the first
Gibson bass to utilize dual-humbucking pickups in a more
traditional position, about halfway between the neck and bridge. A
small number of other companies also began manufacturing bass
guitars during the 1950s:
Kay in 1952, and
Danelectro in 1956;
Rickenbacker and
Höfner also produced models. With the explosion
of the popularity of rock music in the 1960s many more
manufacturers began making bass guitars.
First introduced in 1960, the
Fender
Jazz Bass was known as the Deluxe Bass and was meant to
accompany the
Jazzmaster guitar. The Jazz
Bass (often referred to as a "J-bass") featured two single-coil
pickups, one close to the bridge and one in the Precision bass'
split coil pickup position, and was designed by Leo Fender to be an
easier bass for a guitarist to play than the existing Precision
Bass, due to the narrower nut (noted later). The earliest
production basses had a 'stacked' volume and tone control for each
pickup. This was soon changed to the familiar configuration of a
volume control for each pickup, and a single, passive tone control.
The Jazz Bass' neck was narrower at the nut than the Precision bass
(1½" versus 1¾").

70's Fender Jazz Bass with maple
fretboard
Another visual difference that set the Jazz Bass apart from the
Precision is its "offset-waist" body. Pickup shapes on electric
basses are often referred to as "P" or "J" pickups in reference to
the visual and electrical differences between the Precision Bass
and Jazz Bass
pickups.Fender also began
production of the
Mustang Bass;
a 30" scale length instrument used by bassists such as
Tina Weymouth of
Talking Heads and
Bill
Wyman of
The Rolling Stones
("P" and "J" basses have a scale length of 34", a design echoed on
most current production electric basses of all makes).
In the 1950s and 1960s, the bass guitar was often called the
"Fender bass", due to
Fender's early
dominance in the market for mass-produced bass guitars. The term
"electric bass" began replacing "Fender bass" in the late 1960s,
however, as evidenced by the title of
Carol
Kaye's popular bass instructional book in 1969
How to Play
the Electric Bass. The instrument is also referred to as an
"electric bass guitar", or simply "bass".
1970s

Music Man Stingray Bass.
Notice the pick-up placement that is ideal for slapping.
The 1970s saw the founding of
Music
Man Instruments by Tom Walker, Forrest White and Leo Fender,
which produced the
StingRay, the
first widely-produced bass with active (powered) electronics. This
amounts to an impedance buffering pre-amplifier on-board the
instrument to lower the output impedance of the bass's pickup
circuit, increasing low-end output, and overall frequency response
(more lows and highs). Specific models became identified with
particular styles of music, such as the Rickenbacker 4001 series,
which became identified with progressive rock bassists like
Chris Squire of
Yes, while the StingRay was used by
Louis Johnson of the funk band
The Brothers Johnson.
In 1971,
Alembic established the
template for what would subsequently be known as "boutique" or
"high end" electric bass guitars. These expensive, custom-tailored
instruments featured unique designs, premium wood bodies chosen and
hand-finished by highly skilled luthiers, onboard electronics for
preamplification and equalization, and innovative construction
techniques such as multi-laminate
neck-through-body construction and graphite necks.
In the mid-1970s, Alembic and other "boutique" bass manufacturers
such as
Tobias, and
Ken
Smith produced 4- string basses and 5-string basses with a low
"B" string. In 1975, bassist
Anthony Jackson commissioned
luthier
Carl Thompson to a
6-string bass tuned (low to high) B, E, A, D, G, C.
1980s–2000s

An early 1980s-era Steinberger
headless bass
In the 1980s, bass designers continued to explore new approaches.
Ned Steinberger introduced a
headless bass in 1979 and continued his innovations in the 1980s,
using
graphite and other new materials and
(in 1984) introducing the
Trans-Trem
tremolo bar. In 1987, the Guild Guitar
Corporation launched the fretless
Ashbory
bass, which used silicone rubber strings and a piezoelectric
pickup to achieve a "double bass" sound with a short 18" scale
length. In the late 1980s,
MTV's
"Unplugged" show, which featured bands performing with acoustic
instruments, helped to popularize hollow-bodied
acoustic bass guitars amplified with
pickups.
During the 1990s, as five-string basses became more widely
available and more affordable, an increasing number of bassists in
genres ranging from
metal to
gospel began using five-string
instruments for added lower range - a low "B" below the standard
"E" string. Some bass players who performed a lot in a solo setting
used five-string basses to get a higher range by adding a high "C"
string as the fifth string. As well, the onboard battery-powered
electronics such as preamplifiers and equalizer circuits, which
were previously only available on expensive "boutique" instruments,
became increasingly available on modestly priced basses.
In the 2000s, some bass manufacturers included
digital modelling circuits inside
the instrument to recreate tones and sounds from many models of
basses (e.g.,
Line 6's Variax bass).
Traditional bass designs such as the
Fender Precision Bass and
Fender Jazz Bass remain popular in the
2000s; in 2006, a 60th Anniversary P-bass was introduced by
Fender, along
with the introduction of the
Fender
Jaguar Bass.
Design considerations
Bass bodies are typically made of wood although other materials
such as
graphite (for example, some of the
Steinberger designs) have also been
used. While a wide variety of
woods are
suitable for use in the body, neck, and fretboard of the bass
guitar, the most common type of wood used for the body is
alder, for the neck is
maple, and
for the fretboard is
rosewood.
Other commonly used woods include mahogany, maple, ash, and poplar
for bodies, mahogany for necks, and maple and ebony for
fretboards.
Other design options include finishes, such as lacquer, wax and
oil; flat and carved designs;
Luthier-produced custom-designed instruments;
headless basses, which have tuning machines in the bridge of the
instrument (e.g.
Steinberger and
Hohner designs) and several artificial
materials such as
luthite. The use of
artificial materials (e.g.
BassLab) allows
for unique production techniques such as die-casting, to produce
complex body shapes. While most basses have solid bodies, they can
also include hollow chambers to increase the resonance or reduce
the weight of the instrument. Some basses are built with entirely
hollow bodies, which change the tone and resonance of the
instrument.
Acoustic bass
guitars are typically equipped with piezoelectric or magnetic
pickups and amplified.
Instruments handmade by highly skilled
luthiers are becoming increasingly available.
Exotic materials include woods such as
bubinga,
wenge,
ovangkol,
ebony and
goncalo alves.
Graphite composite is used to make
lightweight necks Exotic woods are used on more expensive
instruments: for example, the company 'Alembic' is associated with
the use of cocobolo as a body material or top layer because of its
attractive grain. Warwick bass guitars are also well-known for
exotic hardwoods: most of the necks are made of ovangkol, and the
fingerboards wenge or ebony. Solid bubinga bodies are also used for
tonal and aesthetic qualities.
The "long scale" necks used on Leo Fender's basses, giving a
scale length (distance between
nut and
bridge) of 34", remain the standard for
electric basses. However, 30" or "short scale" instruments, such as
the
Höfner Violin Bass, played by
Paul McCartney, and the
Fender Mustang Bass are popular,
especially for players with smaller hands. While 35", 35.5" and 36"
scale lengths were once only available in "boutique" instruments,
in the 2000s, many manufacturers have begun offering these lengths,
also called an "extra long scale." This extra long scale provides a
higher string tension, which yields a more defined tone on the low
"B" string of 5- and 6-stringed instruments (or detuned 4-string
basses).
Fretted and fretless basses

A fretless bass with flatwound
strings; note the markers inlaid into the side of the fingerboard,
to aid the performer in finding the correct pitch.
Another design consideration for the bass is whether to use
frets on the fingerboard. On a fretted bass,
the frets divide the fingerboard into
semitone divisions (as on a guitar). The original
Fender basses had 20 frets, but modern basses may have 24 or more.
Fretless basses have a distinct sound,
because the absence of frets means that the string must be pressed
down directly onto the wood of the fingerboard as with the
double bass. The string buzzes against the wood
and is somewhat muted because the sounding portion of the string is
in direct contact with the flesh of the player's finger. The
fretless bass allows players to use the expressive devices of
glissando,
vibrato
and microtonal intonations such as
quarter
tones and
just intonation.
Some bassists use both fretted and fretless basses in performances,
according to the type of material they are performing, as with
Pino Palladino, whose performance on
the fretless bass during the 1980s made him a highly desirable
session player backing high profile
musicians that included
Eric Clapton,
and
David Gilmour. However, the late
1990s showed a shift toward fretted basses as well, as he branched
out into a wide variety of
genres. While
fretless basses are often associated with
jazz
and
jazz fusion, bassists from other
genres use fretless basses, such as metal bassist
Steve DiGiorgio and
Colin Edwin of modern/progressive rock band
Porcupine Tree.
The first fretless bass guitar was made by
Bill Wyman in 1961 when he converted an
inexpensive Japanese fretted bass by removing the frets. The first
production fretless bass was the Ampeg AUB-1 introduced in 1966,
and Fender introduced a fretless Precision Bass in 1970. In the
early 1970s, fusion-jazz bassist
Jaco
Pastorius created his own fretless bass by removing the frets
from a Fender Jazz Bass, filling the holes with wood putty, and
coating the fretboard with epoxy resin. Some fretless basses have
"fret line" markers inlaid in the fingerboard as a guide, while
others only use guide marks on the side of the neck. Tapewound
(double bass type) and flatwound strings are sometimes used with
the fretless bass so that the metal string windings will not wear
down the
fingerboard. Some fretless
basses have fingerboards which are coated with epoxy to increase
the durability of the fingerboard, enhance
sustain and give a brighter tone. Although
most fretless basses have four strings, five-string and six-string
fretless basses are also available. Fretless basses with more than
six strings are also available as "boutique" or custom-made
instruments.
Strings and tuning

200 px
The standard design for the electric bass guitar has four
strings, tuned E, A, D and G, in fourths
such that the open highest string, G, is an eleventh (an octave and
a fourth) below middle C, making the tuning of all four strings the
same as that of the
double bass. This
tuning is also the same as the standard tuning on the lower four
strings on a 6-string guitar, only an octave lower. String types
include all-metal strings (
roundwound,
flatwound, groundwound, or halfwound),
metal strings with different coverings, such as tapewound and
plastic-coatings. The variety of materials used in the strings
gives bass players a range of tonal options. In the 1950s, bassists
mostly used
flatwound strings with a
smooth surface, which had a smooth, damped sound reminiscent of a
double bass. In the 1960s and 1970s,
roundwound bass strings similar to guitar strings
became popular, though flatwounds also continue to be popular.
Roundwounds have a brighter
timbre with
greater
sustain than
flatwounds.
A number of other tuning options and bass types have been used to
extend the range of the instrument. The most common are four, five,
or six strings:

- Four strings with alternate tunings to obtain
an extended lower range. Tuning in fifths eg. CGDA gives an
extended upper and lower range.>
- Five strings usually tuned B-E-A-D-G, which
provides extended lower range. Five string basses tuned to
B-E-A-D-G (and sometimes A-D-G-C-F) are often used in contemporary
rock and metal alongside seven string guitars, baritone guitars, and otherwise downtuned
instruments. Another common tuning used on early five-string basses
is E-A-D-G-C, known as "tenor tuning". This is still a popular
tuning for jazz and solo bass. Other tunings such as C-E-A-D-G are
used though rare. The fifth string provides a greater lower range
(if a low B is used) or a greater upper range (if a high C string
is added) than the 4-string bass, and gives access to more notes
for any given hand position. The earliest five string was created
by Fender in 1965. The Fender Bass V had the E-A-D-G-C tuning, but
was unpopular. The common low B five string was created by Alembic for Jimmy Johnson as a custom
instrument, and later Yamaha offered the
first production model as the BB5000 in 1984.
- Six strings are usually tuned B-E-A-D-G-C. The
6-string bass is a 4-string bass with an additional low "B" string
and a high "C" string. While much less common than 4- or 5-string
basses, they are still used in Latin, jazz, and several other
genres, as well as in studio work where a single instrument must be
highly versatile. Alternate tunings for 6-string bass include
B-E-A-D-G-B, matching the first five strings of an acoustic or
electric guitar, and EADGBE, completely matching the tuning of a
6-string guitar but one octave lower allowing the use of guitar
chord fingerings. Rarer tunings such as EADGCF and F#BEADG provide
a lower or higher range in a given position while maintaining
consistent string intervals. The original six-string bass was
created by Danelectro in 1958, as a guitar tuned down an octave
(EADGBE). These earlier instruments had a sound similar to an
electric guitar tuned an octave below instead of a bass sound. In
the 70's, Anthony Jackson worked
with Carl Thompson and
(later) Fodera-Smith
to create the Contrabass guitar, which evolved to the modern
six-string bass (BEADGC).
- Detuners, such as the
Hipshot, are mechanical devices operated by
the thumb on the fretting hand that allow one or more strings to be
quickly detuned to a pre-set lower pitch. Hipshots are typically
used to drop the "E"-string down to "D" on a four string bass.
Extended range approaches

A seven-string fretless bass
Some bassists have used other types of tuning methods to obtain an
extended range or other benefits such as providing multiple octaves
of notes at any given position, as well as a significantly larger
tonal range. Instrument types or tunings used for this purpose
include
basses with fewer than four strings
(1-string bass guitars, 2-string bass guitars, 3-string bass
guitars (E-A-D);)
alternate tunings (e.g., tenor
bass,
piccolo bass, and guitar-tuned
basses) and
8, 10, 12 and 15-string basses, which
are built on the same principle as the
12-string guitar, where the strings are grouped
into "courses" tuned in unison or octaves, to be played
simultaneously.
Extended Range
Basses (ERBs) are basses with 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, or
12 strings which are not doubling unisons or octaves. The 7-string
bass (B-E-A-D-G-C-F) was built by luthier Michael Tobias in 1987.
This instrument, which was commissioned by bassist Garry Goodman,
was an early example of a bass with more than six single course
strings.
Conklin builds 8- and
9-string basses. The Guitarbass is a 10-string instrument with four
bass strings (tuned E-A-D-G) and six guitar strings (tuned
E-A-D-G-B-E).
Luthier Michael Adler built the first 11-string bass in 2004 and
completed the first single-course 12-string bass in 2005. Adler's
11- and 12-string instruments have the same range as a grand piano.
Sub-contra basses, such as C#-F#-B-E ("C#" being at 17.32 Hz)
have been created.
Ibanez had released
SR7VIISC in 2009, featuring a 30" scale and narrower width, and
tuned as B-E-A-D-G-C-E; the company dubbed it a cross between bass
and guitar. Yves Carbonne developed 10 and 12 string fretless
sub-bass guitars.
Pickups and amplification
- For more information on pickups, see Pick up .
Magnetic pickups
Most electric bass guitars use magnetic pickups. The vibrations of
the instrument's metal strings within the magnetic field of the
permanent magnets in magnetic
pickup produce small variations
in the magnetic flux threading the coils of the pickups. This in
turn produces small electrical voltages in the coils. These
low-level signals are then amplified and played through a speaker.
Less commonly, non-magnetic pickups are used, such as
piezoelectric pickups which sense the
mechanical vibrations of the strings. Since the 1980s, basses are
often available with battery-powered "active" electronics that
boost the signal and/or provide equalization controls to boost or
cut bass and treble frequencies.

Dual "J"-Style Pickups.
- "Jazz" pickups (referring to the original
Fender Jazz Bass), which are also referred to as "J pickups", are
wider eight-pole pickups which lie underneath all four strings. J
pickups are typically single-coil
designs, although there are a large number of humbucking designs.
As with the halves of the P-pickups, the J-pickups are
reverse-wound with reverse magnetic polarity. As a result they have
hum canceling properties when used at the same volume, with hum
cancellation decreasing when the pickups are used at unequal volume
and altogether absent when each pickup is used individually. 'J'
Style pickups tend to have a lower output and a thinner sound than
'P' Style pickups making it perfect for most rock music. Many
bassists choose to combine a 'J' pickup at the bridge and a 'P'
pickup at the neck, to be 'blended' together for a unique
sound.
- "Precision" pickups (which refers to the
original Fender Precision Bass), which are also referred to as "P
pickups", are actually two distinct single-coil pickups. Each is offset a small
amount along the length of the body so that each half is underneath
two strings. The pickups are reverse-wound with reversed magnetic
polarity to reduce hum. This makes the 'P' pickup a [humbucking]
single coil pickup; something which is almost unique to the 'P'
style pickup. Less common is the single-coil "P" pickup, used on
the original 1951 Fender Precision bass.
- "Dual Coil" (Humbucker)
pickups, also known as "DC pickups", have two signal
producing coils which are reverse wound around opposed polarity
magnets (similar in principle to the two individual J-pickups).
This significantly reduces noise from interference compared to
single coil pickups. Humbuckers also often produce a higher output
level than single coil pickups. Dual coil pickups come in two main
varieties; ceramic or ceramic and steel. Ceramic only magnets have
a relatively harsher sound than their ceramic and steel
counterparts, and are thus used more commonly in heavier rock
styles.
- A well-known bass humbucker is the pickup used on the Music Man
series of basses; it has two coils, each with four large
polepieces. This style is known as the "MM" pickup for this reason,
and many aftermarket pickup manufacturers and custom builders
incorporate these pickups. The most common configurations are a
single pickup at the bridge, two pickups similar in placement to a
Jazz Bass, or an MM pickup at the bridge with a single-coil pickup
(often a "J") at the neck. These pickups can often be "tapped",
meaning one of the two coils can be essentially turned off, giving
a sound similar to a single-coil pickup.
- "Soapbar" Pickups are so-named due to their
resemblance to a bar of soap and originally referred to the Gibson
P-90 guitar pickup. The term is also used to
describe any pickup with a rectangular shape and no visible pole
pieces; most of the pickups falling into this category are
humbucking. They are commonly found in basses designed for the rock
and metal genres, such as Gibson, ESP Guitars, and Schecter. 'Soapbar pickups' are
also called 'extended housing'.
Many basses have just one pickup, typically a "P" or soapbar
pickup. Multiple pickups are also quite common, two of the most
common configurations being a "P" near the neck and a "J" near the
bridge (e.g. Fender Precision Bass Special, Fender Precision Bass
Plus), or two "J" pickups (e.g. Fender Jazz). A two-"soapbar"
configuration is also very common, especially on basses by makes
such as
Ibanez and
Yamaha. A combination of a J or other single-coil
pickup at the neck and a Music Man-style humbucker in the bridge
has become popular among boutique builders, giving a very bright,
focused tone that is good for jazz and thumbstyle.
Some basses use more unusual pickup configurations, such as a
soapbar and a "P" pickup (found on some Fenders),
Stu Hamm's "Urge" basses which have a "P" pickup
sandwiched between two "J" pickups, and some of
Bootsy Collins' custom basses, which had as
many as 5 J pickups. Another unusual pickup configuration is found
on some of the custom basses that
Billy
Sheehan uses, in which there is one humbucker at the neck and a
split-coil pickup at the middle position.
The placement of the pickup greatly affects the sound. A pickup
near the neck joint emphasizes the fundamental and low-order
harmonics and thus produces a deeper, bassier sound, while a pickup
near the bridge emphasizes higher-order harmonics and makes a
"tighter" or "sharper" sound. Usually basses with multiple pickups
allow blending of the output from the pickups, with electrical and
acoustical interactions between the two pickups (such as partial
phase cancellations) allowing a range of tonal effects. Sound
demonstrations of the tonal effects of varying blends of the P and
J pickups are demonstrated at the following
link.
Non-magnetic pickups
The use of non-magnetic pickups allows bassists to use non-ferrous
strings such as nylon, brass or even
silicone rubber, which create different tones.
- Piezoelectric pickups (also
called "piezo" pickups) are non-magnetic pickups that use a
transducer crystal to convert the
vibrations produced by the string into an electrical signal. They
produce a different tone from magnetic pickups, often similar to
that of an acoustic bass. Piezo pickups are often used in acoustic
bass guitars.
- Optical
pickups are another type of non-magnetic pickup. They use an
infrared LED to optically track the movement of
the string, which allows them to reproduce low-frequency tones at
high volumes without the "hum" or excessive resonance associated
with conventional magnetic pickups. Since optical pickups do not
pick up high frequencies or percussive sounds well, they are
commonly paired with piezoelectric pickups to fill in the missing
frequencies. The Lightwave company builds basses with optical
pickups.
Amplification and effects

This amplification setup is a "bass
stack" approach, in which an amplifier (in this case a Hartke 5000)
is plugged into separate speaker cabinets.
Like the
electric guitar, the
electric bass guitar is often connected to an amplifier and a
speaker with a
patch cord for live
performances. Electric bassists use either a "combo" amplifier,
which combines an amplifier and a speaker in a single cabinet, or
an amplifier and a separate speaker cabinet (or cabinets). In some
cases when the bass is being used with large-scale
PA amplification, it is plugged into a
"DI" or "direct box", which routes their
signal directly into a
mixing
console, and thence to the main and monitor speakers. Recording
may use a microphone setup for the amplified signal or a direct box
feeding the recording console. The performer or producer may also
use a blend of the miked and direct signals.
Various electronic
bass effects such as
preamplifiers, "stomp box"-style pedals
and
signal processors and the
configuration of the
amplifier and
speaker can be used to alter the basic
sound of the instrument. In the 1990s and early 2000s, signal
processors such as
equalizers,
overdrive devices, and
compressors or
limiters became increasingly popular. Modulation
effects like chorus, flanging, phase shifting, and time effects
such as delay and looping are less commonly on used with bass than
with electric guitar, but they are used in some styles of
music.
Playing techniques
Sitting or standing
Most bass players stand while playing, although sitting is also
accepted, particularly in large ensemble settings, such as jazz big
bands or in acoustic genres such as folk music. It is a matter of
the player's preference as to which position gives the greatest
ease of playing and what a bandleader expects. When sitting,
right-handed players can balance the instrument on the right thigh
or like classical guitar players, the left. Balancing the bass on
the left thigh usually positions it in such a way that it mimics
the standing position, allowing for less difference between the
standing and sitting positions. Balancing the bass on the right
thigh provides better access to the neck and fretboard in its
entirety, especially lower frets.
Performing techniques
Plucking techniques

225 px
In contrast to the upright bass (or double bass), the electric bass
guitar is played horizontally across the body, like an electric
guitar. When the strings are plucked with the fingers (
pizzicato), the index and middle fingers (and
sometimes with the thumb, ring, and pinky fingers as well) are
used.
James Jamerson, an influential
bassist from the
Motown era, played intricate
bass lines using only his index finger, which he called "The Hook."
There are also variations in how a bassist chooses to rest the
right-hand thumb (or left thumb in the case of left-handed
players). A player may rest his thumb on the top edge of one of the
pickups or on the side of the fretboard, which is especially common
among bassists who have an upright bass influence. Some bassists
anchor their thumbs on the lowest string and move it off to play on
the low string. Alternatively, the thumb can be rested loosely on
the strings to mute the unused strings.
The string can be plucked at any point between the bridge and the
point where the fretting hand is holding down the string; different
timbres are produced depending on where along
the string it is plucked. Some players are known for plucking near
the bridge where the string is most taut, such as jazz fusion
bassist
Jaco Pastorius, whereas other
bassists prefer the "looser" part of the string nearer to the
fingerboard.
Bassists trying to emulate the sound of a double bass sometimes
pluck the strings with their thumb and use
palm-muting to create a short, "thumpy" tone. The
late
Monk Montgomery (who played in
Lionel Hampton's band),
Bruce Palmer
(who performed with
Buffalo
Springfield) use thumb downstrokes. The use of the thumb was
acknowledged by early Fender models, which came with a "thumbrest"
or "Tug Bar" attached to the pickguard below the strings. Contrary
to its name, this was not used to rest the thumb, but to provide
leverage while using the thumb to pluck the strings. The thumbrest
was moved above the strings in 1970s models and eliminated in the
1980s.
"Slap and pop"
The
slap and pop method, or "thumbstyle",
most associated with
funk, uses tones and
percussive sounds achieved by striking, thumping, or "slapping" a
string with the thumb and snapping (or "popping") a string or
strings with the index or middle fingers. Bassists often
interpolate left hand-muted "dead notes" between the slaps and pops
to achieve a rapid percussive effect, and after a note is slapped
or popped, the fretting hand may cause other notes to sound by
using "
hammer ons", "
pull offs", or a left-hand
glissando (slide).
Larry
Graham of
Sly and the
Family Stone and
Graham
Central Station was an early innovator of the slap style, and
Louis Johnson of the
The Brothers Johnson is also
credited as an early slap bass player.
Slap and pop style is also used by many bassists in other genres,
such as rock (e.g.,
J J Burnel and
Les Claypool), metal (e.g.
Eric Langlois,
Martin
Mendez,
Fieldy and
Ryan Martinie), and fusion (e.g.
Marcus Miller,
Victor
Wooten (performing with
Dave
Matthews Band and
Bela Fleck), and
Alain Caron). Slap style
playing was popularized throughout the 1980s and early 1990s by pop
bass players such as
Mark King
(from
Level 42) and rock bassists such as
with
Pino Palladino (currently a
member of the
John Mayer Trio and
bassist for
The Who),
Flea (from the
Red Hot Chili Peppers) and
Alex Katunich (from
Incubus). Wooten popularized the "double thump," in
which the string is slapped twice, on the upstroke and a downstroke
(for more information, see
Classical
Thump). A rarely-used playing technique related to slapping is
the use of wooden
dowel "
funk fingers", an approach popularized by
Tony Levin.
Picking techniques
The
pick (or
plectrum) is used to obtain a more articulate
attack, for speed, or just personal preference. Although the use of
a pick is primarily associated with
rock,
picks are also used in other styles. Jazz bassist
Steve Swallow uses a pick for upbeat or funky
songs. Picks can be used with alternating downstrokes and
upstrokes, or with all downstrokes for a more consistent attack.
The pick is usually held with the index and thumb, with the
up-and-down plucking motion supplied by the wrist (one exception is
tremolo picking, in which the whole arm is used to play a note very
rapidly). Some bassists use their fingernails to play
flamenco-style, such as
Geddy Lee,
Cliff Burton,
Les Claypool,
Mike
Dirnt, and
Stanley Clarke.
There are many varieties of picks available, but due to the
thicker, heavier strings of the electric bass, bassists tend to use
heavier picks than those used for electric guitar, typically
ranging from 1.14 mm – 3.00 mm (3.00 is unusual).
Different materials are used for picks, including plastic, nylon,
and felt, all of which produce different tones. Felt picks are used
to emulate a fingerstyle tone.
Fretting techniques
The fretting hand—the left hand for right-handed bass players and
the right hand for left-handed bass players — is used to press down
the strings to play different notes and shape the tone or timbre of
a plucked or picked note. The fretting hand can be used to change a
sounded note, either by fully muting it after it is plucked or
picked to shorten its duration or by partially muting it near the
bridge to reduce the volume of the note, or make the note die away
faster. The fretting hand is often used to mute strings that are
not being played and stop the sympathetic vibrations, particularly
when the player wants a "dry" or "focused" sound. On the other
hand, the sympathetic resonance of harmonically-related strings may
be desired for some songs, such as ballads. In these cases, a
bassist can fret harmonically-related notes. For example, while
fretting a sustained "F" (on the third fret of the "D" string),
underneath an F major chord, a bassist might hold down the "C" and
low "F" below this note, so that their harmonics will sound
sympathetically.

The fretting hand can add
vibrato to a
plucked or picked note, either a gentle, narrow vibrato or a more
exaggerated, wide vibrato with bigger pitch variations. For fretted
basses, vibrato is always an alternation between the pitch of the
note and a slightly higher pitch. For fretless basses, the player
can use this style of vibrato, or they can alternate between the
note and a slightly lower pitch. While vibrato is mostly done on
"stopped" notes—that is, notes that are
pressed down on the fingerboard—open strings can also be vibratoed
by pressing down on the string behind the nut. As well, the
fretting hand can be used to "bend" a plucked or picked note up in
pitch. To create the opposite effect, a "bend down", the string is
pushed to a higher pitch before being plucked or picked and then
allowed to fall to the lower, regular pitch after it is sounded.
More rarely, a bassist may use a
tremolo
bar-equipped bass to produce the same effect.
In addition to pressing down one note at a time, bassists can also
press down several notes at one time with their fretting hand to
perform a chord. While chords are used less often by bassists than
by electric guitarists, a variety of chords can be performed on the
electric bass, especially with instruments with higher ranges such
as six-string basses. Another variation to fully pressing down a
string is to gently graze the string with the finger at the
harmonic node points on
the string, which creates chime-like upper partials.
Glissando is an effect in which the fretting hand
slides up or down the neck. A subtle glissando can be performed by
moving the fretting hand without plucking or picking the string;
for a more pronounced effect, the string is plucked or picked
first, or, in a metal or hardcore punk context, a pick may be
scraped along the sides of the strings.
The fretting hand can also be used to sound notes, either by
plucking an open string with the fretting
hand, or, in the case of a string that has already been plucked or
picked, by
"hammering on" a higher pitch
or
"pulling off" a finger to pluck a lower
fretted or open stringed note. Jazz bassists use a subtle form of
fretting hand pizzicato by plucking a very brief open string
grace note with the fretting hand right
before playing the string with the plucking hand. When a string is
rapidly hammered on, the note can be prolonged into a
trill.
Two-handed tapping

A bassist performing tapping, in which
notes are sounded by striking the strings against the
fretboard
In the two-handed
tapping styles, bassists
use both hands to play notes on the fretboard by rapidly pressing
and holding the string to the fret. Instead of plucking or picking
the string to create a sound, in this technique, the action of
striking the string against the fretboard is used to create the
sound. Since two hands can be used to play on the fretboard, this
makes it possible to play interweaving
contrapuntal lines, to simultaneously play a
bassline and a simple chord, or play
chords and arpeggios. Bassist
John Entwistle of
The
Who would tap percussively on the strings, causing them to
strike the fretboard with a twangy sound to create drum-style
fills. Some players noted for this
technique include
Billy Sheehan,
Stuart Hamm,
John
Myung,
Victor Wooten,
Les Claypool, and
Michael Manring. The
Chapman Stick and
Warr
Guitars are string instruments that are designed to be played
using two-handed tapping.
Uses
Popular music
Popular music bands and rock groups
use the bass guitar as a member of the
rhythm section, which provides the
chord sequence or "
progression" and sets out the "
beat" for the song. The rhythm section
typically consists of a
rhythm
guitarist and/or
electric
keyboard player, a bass guitarist and a
drummer; larger groups may add additional
guitarists, keyboardists, or percussionists.

150 px
The types of
basslines performed by the
bass guitarist vary widely from one style of music to another.
Despite all of the differences in the styles of bassline, in most
styles of popular music, the bass guitarist fulfills a similar
role: anchoring the harmonic framework (often by emphasizing the
roots of the chord progression) and laying down the beat (in
collaboration with the drummer). The importance of the bass
guitarist and the bass line varies in different styles of music. In
some pop styles, such as 1980s-era pop and musical theater, the
bass sometimes plays a relatively simple part, and the music
forefronts the vocals and melody instruments. In contrast, in
reggae, funk, or hip-hop, entire songs may be
centered on the bass groove, and the bassline is usually very
prominent in the mix.
In traditional
country music,
folk rock, and related styles, the bass often
plays the roots and fifth of each chord in alternation. In Chicago
blues, the electric bass often performs a
walking bassline made up of scales and
arpeggios. In
blues rock bands, the
bassist often plays
blues scale-based
riffs and chugging
boogie-style lines. In
metal, the bass guitar may perform
complex
riffs along with the rhythm guitarist
or play a low, rumbling
pedal point to
anchor the group's sound.
The bass guitarist sometimes breaks out of the strict rhythm
section role to perform
bass break or bass
solos. The types of basslines used for bass breaks of bass solos
vary by style. In a rock band, a bass break may consist of the
bassist playing a
riff or
lick during a pause in the song. In some styles
of metal, a bass break may consist of "
shred guitar"-style
tapping on the bass. In a
funk
or funk rock band, a bass solo may showcase the bassist's
percussive
slap and pop playing. In
genres such as
progressive rock,
art rock, or
progressive metal, the bass guitar player
may play
melody lines along with the
lead guitar (or vocalist) and perform extended
guitar solos. Other contemporary
musicians, such as
Edo Castro have taken
the electric bass, including 4, 5, 6, 7, 8 & 9 strings, into a
new and evolving genre centered entirely around the bass
itself.
Jazz and jazz fusion
The electric bass is a relative newcomer to the world of
jazz. The
big bands of the
1930s and 1940s
Swing era and the small
combos of the 1950s
Bebop and
Hard Bop movements all used the
double bass. The electric bass was introduced
during the late 1960s and early 1970s, when rock influences were
blended with jazz to create
jazz-rock
fusion.The introduction of the electric bass in jazz fusion, as
in the rock world, enabled the bass to be used in high-volume
stadium concerts with powerful amplifiers, because it is much
easier to amplify the electric bass than the double bass (the
latter is prone to feedback in high-volume settings). When the
electric bass is used in
jazz, it has both an
accompaniment and a soloing role. When the bass is used to
accompany, it may be used to perform
walking basslines for traditional tunes and
"
jazz standards", in smooth quarter
note lines which imitate the sound of the double bass. For
latin or
salsa tunes and
rock-infused jazz fusion tunes, the electric bass may play rapid,
syncopated rhythmic figures in coordination with the drummer, or
lay down a low, heavy groove.
In a jazz setting, the electric bass tends to have much a much more
expansive solo role than in most popular styles. In most rock
settings, the bass guitarist may only have a few short bass breaks
or brief solos during a concert. During a jazz concert, a jazz
bassist may have a number of lengthy improvised solos, which are
called "blowing" in jazz parlance. Whether a jazz bassist is
comping (accompanying) or soloing, they usually aim to create a
rhythmic drive and "timefeel" that creates a sense of "
swing" and "
groove". For information on notable jazz
bassists, see the
List of jazz
bassists article.
Contemporary classical music
Contemporary classical
music uses both the standard instruments of Western Art music
(piano, violin, double bass, etc) and newer instruments or sound
producing devices, ranging from electrically amplified instruments
to tape players and radios. The electric bass guitar has
occasionally been used in contemporary classical music (art music)
since the late 1960s.Contemporary composers often obtained unusual
sounds or instrumental timbres through the use of non-traditional
(or unconventional) instruments or playing techniques. As such,
bass guitarists playing contemporary classical music may be
instructed to pluck or strum the instrument in unusual ways.

Russian and Soviet composer Alfred
Schnittke, pictured here in 1989, used electric bass for his
Symphony no. 1 (1972).
American composers using electric bass in the 1960s included
experimental classical music composer
Christian Wolff (born 1934)
(
Electric Spring 1, 1966;
Electric Spring 2,
1966/70;
Electric Spring 3, 1967; and
Untitled,
1996);
Francis Thorne, a student of
Paul Hindemith at Yale University (born 1922), who wrote
(
Liebesrock 1968–69); and
Krzysztof Penderecki (Cello Concerto
no. 1, 1966/67, rev. 1971/72),
The Devils of Loudun,
1969;
Kosmogonia, 1970; and
Partita, 1971),
Louis Andriessen
(
Spektakel, 1970;
De Staat, 1972-76;
Hoketus, 1976;
De Tijd, 1980-81 and
De Materie, 1984–1988). European composers
who began scoring for the bass guitar in the 1960s included Danish
composer
Pelle
Gudmundsen-Holmgreen (born 1932) (
Symfoni på
Rygmarven, 1966;
Rerepriser, 1967; and
Piece by
Piece, 1968);
Irwin Bazelon
(
Churchill Downs, 1970).
In the 1970s, electric bass was used by the American conductor-
composer
Leonard Bernstein (1918 –
1990) for his
MASS, 1971).
American jazz pianist
Dave Brubeck used
bass guitar for his 1971 piece
Truth Has Fallen.
Russian
and Soviet
composer Alfred
Schnittke used the instrument for his Symphony no. 1,
1972. In 1977,
David Amram (born
1930) scored for electric bass in
En memoria de Chano
Pozo. Amram is an American composer known for his eclectic use
of jazz, ethnic and folk music.
In the 1980s and 1990s, electric bass was used in works by
Hans Werner Henze (
El Rey de
Harlem, 1980; and
Il ritorno d'Ulisse in patria,
1981),
Harold Shapero,
On Green
Mountain (Chaconne after Monteverdi), 1957, orchestrated 1981;
Steve Reich's
Electric Counterpoint (1987),
Wolfgang Rihm (
Die Eroberung von
Mexico, 1987-91),
Arvo Pärt
(
Miserere, 1989/92),
Steve
Martland (many works for the Steve Martland Band),
Sofia Gubaidulina (
Aus dem
Stundenbuch, 1991),
Giya Kancheli
(
Wingless, 1993),
John
Adams (
I Was
Looking at the Ceiling and Then I Saw the Sky, 1995; and
Scratchband, 1996/97), and
Michael Nyman (many works for the
Michael Nyman Band).
Pedagogy and training
The pedagogy and training for the electric bass varies widely by
genre and country. Rock and pop bass has a history of pedagogy
dating back to the 1950s and 1960s, when method books were
developed to help students learn the instrument. One notable method
book was
Carol Kaye's
How to Play the
Electric Bass.
In the jazz scene, since the bass guitar takes on much of the same
role as the double bass—laying down the rhythm, and outlining the
harmonic foundation—electric bass players have long used both bass
guitar methods and jazz double bass method books. The use of jazz
double bass method books by electric bass players in jazz is
facilitated in that jazz methods tend to emphasize improvisation
techniques (e.g., how to improvise
walking
basslines) and rhythmic exercises rather than specific ways of
holding or plucking the instrument.
Formal training
Of all of the genres, jazz and the mainstream commercial genres
(rock, R&B, etc) have the most established and comprehensive
systems of instruction and training for electric bass. In the jazz
scene, teens can begin taking private lessons on the instrument and
performing in amateur big bands at high schools or run by the
community. Young adults who aspire to becoming professional jazz
bassists or studio rock bassists can continue their studies in a
variety of formal training settings, including colleges and some
universities.
Several colleges offer electric bass training in the US. The Bass
Institute of Technology (BIT) in Los Angeles was founded in 1978,
as part of the Musician's Institute.
Chuck
Rainey (electric bassist for
Aretha
Franklin and
Marvin Gaye) was BIT's
first director. BIT was one of the earliest professional training
program for electric bassists. The program teaches a range of
modern styles, including funk, rock, jazz, Latin, and R&B.
The
Berklee College
of Music
in Boston offers training for electric bass
players. Electric bass students get private lessons and
there is a choice of over 270 ensembles to play in. Specific
electric bass courses include funk/fusion styles for bass; slap
techniques for electric bass; fingerstyle R&B; 5 & 6-string
electric bass playing (including performing chords); and how to
read bass sheet music.
In Canada,
the Humber
College
Institute of Technology & Advanced Learning
offers an Advanced Diploma (a three-year program) in jazz and
commercial music. The program accepts performers who play
bass, guitar, keyboard, drums, melody instruments (e.g., sax,
flute, violin) and who sing. Students get private lessons and
perform in 40 student ensembles.
Although there are far fewer university programs that offer
electric bass instruction in jazz and popular music, there are some
universities which offer Bachelor's degrees (
B.Mus.) and Master of Music (
M.Mus.) degrees in jazz performance or "commercial
music", in which electric bass can be the main instrument.
In the US,
the Manhattan School
of Music
has a jazz program leading to B.Mus. and M.Mus
degrees which accepts students who play bass (double bass and
electric bass), guitar, piano, drums, and melody instruments (e.g.,
sax, trumpet, etc.).
As well, there are a variety of other training programs such as
jazz or funk summer camps and festivals, which give students the
opportunity to play a wide range of contemporary music, from
1970s-style jazz-rock fusion to 2000s-style R&B.
Informal training
In other less mainstream genres, such as hardcore punk or metal,
the pedagogical systems and training sequences are typically not
formalized and institutionalized. As such, many players learn "by
ear", by copying the basslines from records and CDs, and by playing
in a number of bands. Even in non-mainstream styles, though,
students may be able to take lessons from experienced players from
these styles. As well, there are a range of books, playing methods,
and, since the 1990s, instructional DVDs (e.g., on how to play
metal bass).
See also
References
- According to the New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians,
an "Electric bass guitar [bass guitar] [is] an Electric Guitar,
usually with four heavy strings tuned E'–A'–D–G." The New Grove
Dictionary of Music and Musicians, second edition, edited by
Stanley Sadie and John Tyrrell (London, 2001)
- The New Grove Dictionary of Music and Musicians defines the
term bass thus: "Bass (iv). A contraction of Double bass
or Electric bass guitar." Ibid.
- The proper term is "electric bass", and it is often misnamed
"bass guitar", according to Tom Wheeler, The Guitar Book,
pp 101–2. Guitars by Evans and Evans, page 342,
agrees.
- Although "electric bass" is one of the common names for the
instrument, "bass guitar" or "electric bass guitar" are commonly
used and some authors claim that they are historically accurate
(e.g., "How The Fender Bass Changed The World" in the references
section).
- Bass guitar/Double Bass tuning E1=41.20 Hz, A1=55 Hz,
D2=73.42 Hz, G2=98 Hz + optional low
B0=30.87 Hz
- Standard guitar tuning E2=82.41 Hz, A2=110 Hz,
D3=146.8 Hz, G3=196 Hz, B3=246.9 Hz,
E4=329.6 Hz
- Model #736 Electronic Bass Fiddle (German text)
- Slog, John J.; Coryat, Karl [ed.] (1999). The Bass Player
Book: Equipment, Technique, Styles and Artists. Backbeat
Books. p. 154. ISBN 0879305738
- George,
Nelson (1998). Hip Hop America. Viking Press. p. 91. ISBN
0670971532
- Gibson EB-1
- Bacon, Tony (2000). 50 Years of Fender. Backbeat
Books. p. 24. ISBN 0879306211
- Eleven other of her instructional books, CDs, and DVDs call the
instrument "bass."
- There is a potted summary and description of graphite neck
construction at
http://wiki.basschat.co.uk/info:tech:use_of_composites_graphite_necks_in_bass_guitar_design.
- E.g. Status
brand basses, which are made from graphite.
- Roberts, Jim (2001). 'How The Fender Bass Changed the World' or
Jon Sievert interview with Bill Wyman, guitar player magazine
December (1978)
- This fretless bass can be heard on The Rolling
Stones songs such as "Paint it Black".
- In interviews, Pastorius gave various versions of how he
accomplished this; the versions mention the use of pliers, a putty knife, and, in at least one interview
(Guitar
Player magazine, 1984) he states that he bought the
instrument with the frets already removed, badly, with the slots
where the frets once were not yet filled in.
- Pastorius used epoxy rather than varnish to obtain a glass-like
finish suitable for the use of roundwound strings, which are
otherwise much harder on the wood of the fingerboard.
- Tunings such as "BEAD" (this requires a low "B" string in
addition to the other three "standard" strings), "D-A-D-G" (a "standard"
set of strings, with only the lowest string detuned), and D-G-C-F
or C-G-C-F (a "standard" set of strings, all of which are detuned)
give bassists an extended lower range. A tenor bass tuning of
"A-D-G-C" provides a higher range.
- Hipshots are similarly used to drop the "B"-string down to a
"B♭" on five or six string basses where it is advantageous when
accompanying brass bands whose music is commonly in the key of
"B♭". More rarely, some bassists (e.g., Michael Manring) will add
detuners to more than one string, or even more than one detuner to
each string, to enable them to detune strings during a performance
and have access to a wider range of chime-like harmonics.
- Japanese manufacturer Atlansia offers 1-, 2- and 3-stringed
instruments[1]
- Session bassist Tony Levin commissioned Music Man to
build a three-string version of his favorite Stingray
bass
- Tuned A-D-G-C, like the top 4 strings of a 6-string bass, or
simply a standard 4-string with the strings each tuned up an
additional perfect fourth. Tenor bass is a tuning used by
Stanley
Clarke, Victor Wooten, and Stu Hamm.
- Tuned "e-a-d-g" (an octave higher than standard bass tuning –
-the same as the bottom four strings of a guitar). This is used by
jazz fusion bassists such as Stanley Clarke.
- The D-G-B-E tuning matches the first four strings (from highest
to lowest) of a guitar, pitched two octaves lower.
- For example, an 8-string bass would be strung Ee-Aa-Dd-Gg,
while a 12-string bass might be tuned Eee-Aaa-Ddd-Ggg (four courses
of three strings each). In the case of the 12-string, the standard
pitch strings are augmented by two strings both an octave higher
than the standard pitched string. Ten-string basses have octave
strings added to the low-B of a 5-string bass. A 15-string bass
(tuned Eee Aaa Ddd Ggg Ccc) was developed by Jauqo III-X and
produced by Warrior Guitars(the 15 string bass made for Jauqo III-X
by Warrior was the world's first 15-string bass guitar ever made. A
1998 video: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G6O0Lgyn6aE )
- These have a low "F#" string below the "B" string, and the
9-string bass adds a low "F#" and a high "B♭" string.
- The guitarbass has 10 strings on the same neck and body, but
with separate scale lengths, bridges, fretboards, and pickups. It
was created [2] by John Woolley in 2005, based on a
prototype built by David Minnieweather.
- The Adler 12-string has the same range as the Bösendorfer 290
grand piano with 97 notes. This was made possible by Goodman
developing an Ab4 string for the 32" scale.
- (e.g., the Jauqo III-X from 2000 or the sub-bass guitar,
E-A-D-G one octave below standard ("E" being at 20.6 Hz)
- http://www.ibanezrules.com/namm/2009/sr7.htm
- These extended range sub-basses, Legend X YC and Legend XII YC,
were built by luthier from Barcelona Jerzy Drozd. The 12 string
Legend XII YC uses a new B string tuned at 15,4 hertz.
-
http://www.bass-musician-magazine.com/General/bass-musician-magazine-masthead-detail.asp?directory-id=807599636
Bass Musician Magazine: Yves Carbonne
-
http://www.bass-musician-magazine.com/General/bass-musician-magazine-detail.asp?year=2008&month=6&article-id=613057319
Bass Musician Magazine Article: "Why Fretless?"
- This is also known as the 'Vintage P' due to it being found on
vintage basses before the invention of the split coil pickup. The
single-coil "P" pickup is also used in the reissue and the Sting
signature model.
- http://www.berklee.edu/departments/bass.html
- http://postsecondary.humber.ca/music.htm
- http://www.msmnyc.edu/undergrad/
Further reading
External links