Write BETTER Metal Basslines!

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  • čas přidán 4. 06. 2019
  • In which I show you how to improve your metal basslines.
    My songwriting course is coming soon: bit.ly/SONGWRITINGRS
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Komentáře • 245

  • @RudyAyoub
    @RudyAyoub Před 5 lety +653

    wish i had space for walking basslines in my apartment

    • @spaceghostm384
      @spaceghostm384 Před 5 lety +60

      You're a funny guy bro! You should start a youtube channel.

    • @blakecurtis7809
      @blakecurtis7809 Před 5 lety +2

      Heyooooo!
      Sorry I could not help myself.

    • @CC-ks3tj
      @CC-ks3tj Před 5 lety +2

      Rudy Ayoub bro you can come to my house we have a good hallway for them

    • @matteoadipietro463
      @matteoadipietro463 Před 5 lety +8

      2 5 1

    • @grmnxd8842
      @grmnxd8842 Před 4 lety +2

      Sé que sabes algo de español, así que muchas gracias por tus videos, me sacan de la depresión por unos minutos 🖤

  • @nerdvananc
    @nerdvananc Před 4 lety +195

    This video got me compliments from my band within which I'm the least experienced player, thanks a ton man; truly quality content! :)

    • @treyxaviermusic
      @treyxaviermusic  Před 4 lety +24

      Very happy to hear that my dude, glad to help

    • @BTFGreg
      @BTFGreg Před 2 lety +8

      2 years later how are you playing?

    • @sniperturtle1
      @sniperturtle1 Před 2 měsíci

      So ...
      Yeah, bro...
      Been practicing
      And stuff?
      We need to hear it!

  • @blahblahsen1142
    @blahblahsen1142 Před 5 lety +281

    make your band mad by playing the 5th instead of the octave. if your guitarist plays a drop A powerchord, dont play the low A, play the E. really changed the tone of the song and they cant do anything but angrily stare. consistently play every other root and every other 5th to make them question their tuning and ponder the mystery as to why that thing they did sounds different. never explain, never smile, just keep doing it.

    • @ThorsShadow
      @ThorsShadow Před 5 lety +60

      If your guitarist doesn't understand what you're doing there and starts questioning his tuning and doesn't know why things now sound different, he deserves any musical punishment from you as a bass player. I'd say screw everything and play the tritone/augmented 4th/diminished 5th to their root.
      All the power to you,
      a guitar player

    • @garretburrow
      @garretburrow Před 4 lety +4

      Blah Blahsen, an intellectual

    • @Guy-bm5wh
      @Guy-bm5wh Před 4 lety +9

      They'll probably just think you're a shitty bassist

    • @ricardojmestre
      @ricardojmestre Před 3 lety +2

      I love your attitude 👌🏼

    • @peterjonstefan2926
      @peterjonstefan2926 Před 3 lety

      love it!

  • @diluteduk
    @diluteduk Před 4 lety +86

    Write your bass lines with the drummer then leave them to the guitarists to play over. Don't be an after thought. But also make sure you don't get Jason Newsteaded in the mix

    • @steve00alt70
      @steve00alt70 Před 3 lety +1

      Lead bass have your own technical melodies throughout the song

    • @Adam666...
      @Adam666... Před 2 lety

      Maybe buy a used bass because apparently they all "cut through the mix great"

  • @HillVillageDragon
    @HillVillageDragon Před 4 lety +15

    Carol Kaye, the legendary studio bassist, had some great advice. She said that it’s important for bassists to make use of their chord tones. Playing scales exclusively will ruin your ear and dull you to the tonal differences in different chords. Speaking of chord tones, an old trick from the Motown guys was using neutral notes for fills i.e. the fourth, fifth, and octave for fills.

  • @ugubu5359
    @ugubu5359 Před 5 lety +93

    Keep it simple and add fills where it's needed. Don't overcompensate.

  • @CrashMediaMI
    @CrashMediaMI Před 5 lety +94

    Coming from a bassist, every video you’ve posted recently has been INCREDIBLY informative and accurate. Plus the tone is killer. Even the Gear Gods theme riff has awesome bass tone haha.
    Long time subscriber, not changing that anytime soon. Thanks Trey’!

  • @tonynecas4825
    @tonynecas4825 Před 4 lety +10

    I like that even though I am completely uneducated in music theory, from sheer sound alone I can do what Trey is talking about. Of course it would help immensely to KNOW what I am doing. And have the ability to communicate with my guitar player properly. But I still kick ass. And none of my basslines are too basic. Cheers.

  • @RobShannanigans
    @RobShannanigans Před 2 lety +2

    I watched this video when it first came out, but I find myself continuing to reference it, years later, whenever I get stuck writing. Thanks for the great info!

  • @salottin
    @salottin Před 4 lety +1

    Pretty cool! Knowing the scale/mode that is being used is something that helps a lot!

  • @jamespeters2995
    @jamespeters2995 Před 4 lety +29

    Here is a heavy metal band with unique bass lines.. muddvayne

    • @MurryFBM
      @MurryFBM Před 4 lety +7

      br br deng

    • @tigerhearted87
      @tigerhearted87 Před 3 lety +1

      BR BR DENG! BR BR DENG

    • @tedbudswrld3538
      @tedbudswrld3538 Před 3 lety +6

      Ryan Martinie is Criminally underrated

    • @southofheck
      @southofheck Před 3 lety +1

      Primus as well.

    • @taylorrutherford4782
      @taylorrutherford4782 Před 3 lety +3

      And that was really only in their debut album. In all their albums the bass doesn't sound nearly as awesome. It's almost like the other band members got pissed that he sounded better than him and told him to tone it down .

  • @PRWilson88
    @PRWilson88 Před 5 lety +4

    Love this video, really nice to see how you treat the bass as an important instrument.

  • @thomasstunts
    @thomasstunts Před 4 lety

    What an absolutely amazing video! Thank you for sharing your ideas

  • @paganjay1085
    @paganjay1085 Před 3 lety +5

    Bass player here.
    THANK YOU!
    This is exactly what my guitar player needed to hear.

    • @revel9243
      @revel9243 Před 3 lety

      Looking to get a bass. Any recommendations

    • @paganjay1085
      @paganjay1085 Před 3 lety

      @@revel9243 what's your skill level and price range?

    • @revel9243
      @revel9243 Před 3 lety

      @@paganjay1085 Just starting out actually. I can play guitar decently nothing super special

    • @paganjay1085
      @paganjay1085 Před 3 lety

      @@revel9243 ok,so unless you can and/or want to, don't spend a shit ton of money starting out. Get something good,new or used,sit with it before you buy it. Won't be any fun to learn on if it doesn't feel good in your hands.
      Try a Squire Jazz. $300 or less maybe for the Affinity lines. They feel pretty good,sound cool and they're upgradable.
      This ain't gospel, that's the route I took and it worked for me. That's one of many routes. The rest is on you.
      Good luck brother!

    • @revel9243
      @revel9243 Před 3 lety

      @@paganjay1085 Thanks a lot! Yeah I'll definitely look into that!

  • @wrexocane
    @wrexocane Před 5 lety +1

    I love slides too! I always put them in the bassline of the songs!

  • @paniccleo
    @paniccleo Před 5 lety +3

    I was a bass player and using these techniques and others already for a long time, and then I was asked to play guitar in a band and have been doing that since by happenstance. Thinking about things in terms of the key and notes involved as a bassist really helped me in writing guitar parts too. The whole thing works in reverse too! Great video.

  • @leonk1848
    @leonk1848 Před 5 lety +13

    I started on bass before guitar. Mark King, Cliff Burton, Les Claypool, Bootsy Collins and I cant forget Alex Weber are monster bass players and an influence as a musician

  • @rawkinj6609
    @rawkinj6609 Před 3 lety

    Just subscribed! Awesome stuff man!

  • @theopinson3851
    @theopinson3851 Před 2 lety

    Dude this video is awesome! Love the explanation of walking bass lines.

  • @mikefalk2247
    @mikefalk2247 Před 3 lety +2

    Excellent presentation and actual content...rare on the interwebs.

  • @natas.cancioncitas
    @natas.cancioncitas Před 5 lety +1

    yeah!!!! EXACTLY the kind of tutorial video i was looking for

  • @socialheretic5503
    @socialheretic5503 Před 5 lety +18

    Please tell us about the bass tone you have there it sounds great. what’s the settings etc

    • @aaaaa111aaaaa
      @aaaaa111aaaaa Před 5 měsíci

      Sounds Like a sansamp Bass Driver or a darkglass

  • @Mr_ang1er1
    @Mr_ang1er1 Před 3 měsíci

    Nice video gonna try to use these tips

  • @Vexicrypt
    @Vexicrypt Před 5 lety

    Really informative video Trey, thanks!

  • @garretburrow
    @garretburrow Před 4 lety +8

    "SO MUCH ROOM FOR ACTIVITIES!"

  • @AC-me5yp
    @AC-me5yp Před 3 lety +1

    Iv been playing bass for quite a long time, never was a fan of METAL bass or the music,
    But I really love this video, and im starting to like metal much more.
    Great video, Thanks

  • @SnowBoardingBassist
    @SnowBoardingBassist Před 5 lety +26

    Honestly in pretty much all genres, it's really subjective to the composition of the song as to whether or not a bassist even has the freedom to do more than just roots. A lot of singers/guitarists don't realize that there is only so much frequency spectrum, and don't write songs with the idea in mind that other parts have to fit well into the mix. That is my experience at least, no shots fired there :).

    • @SoundwaveMusic22
      @SoundwaveMusic22 Před 5 lety +9

      Amen to that, the more leads and harmonies you add the less the bass can do imo

    • @619chrismc
      @619chrismc Před 3 lety +1

      I really agree. Its hard to have a lot of that freedom in metal, especially coming from a background of jazz and blues. In those, the bass is driving force, and a bassist locked in with a drummer can make some truly tight rhythms. Honestly a lot of bass in metal is kind of treated as a pad would be in electronic music. Its just kind of there to fill out the low end.

    • @steve00alt70
      @steve00alt70 Před 3 lety +1

      Bassists sure do have freedom and flexibility they just dont put their foot forward enough because they're taught it "holds the glue" bullshit in some parts thats true.

    • @steve00alt70
      @steve00alt70 Před 3 lety +2

      @@619chrismc listen to Beyond Creation there whole band is centered around the bass lines.

    • @SnowBoardingBassist
      @SnowBoardingBassist Před 3 lety +4

      @@steve00alt70 They probably specifically composed those songs to be around the bass though. That's kind of my point. If everyone puts their foot forward in song writing, then what does the listener actually focus on? The average listener can only really actively pay attention to two, to four things at once. Typically That's the snare, vocals, kick, and one more thing. (insert foot forward part here.)

  • @Morgoth073
    @Morgoth073 Před 5 lety +2

    Nice. Excellent lesson. Right on it. The power of the bass in setting the overall tone chord. (guitars players don't like the admit).
    Knowing Basic theory was literally the key that allowed me to understand the chord progression and harmony that I always eared in my head.
    I finally know what note I can play and create my own bass line with arpeggios, rhythm... Using contrary motion with the guitars really add to the composition.
    Great explanation and demonstration covering key elements to composing. I am sure this lesson will benefits many. Thanks. \m/
    With 7+ strings guitars, if they come play in my low range, I like to go higher and support the melody or take the lead role 😏

  • @yellsatcloud175
    @yellsatcloud175 Před 4 lety

    This is my favorite gg video ive seen so far

  • @damnpete
    @damnpete Před 4 měsíci +1

    Really cool vid. I think doubling the guitar in some parts even on the higher end can really accentuate a riff or arpeggio if done sparsely. When you doubled the implied phrygian dominant it could really stand out positively if you don't double anywhere else in the song, sounded awesome. Helps to have a killer bass tone like that too though.
    By the way, dude reminds me of this guy in an old tv show called Dead Last hahaha

  • @CoreyRive
    @CoreyRive Před 5 lety

    So much room for activities ! It’s making my head spin, so many activities you can do.

  • @F.Castle
    @F.Castle Před 3 lety +2

    Good video, honestly bassists watching this who dont know blues or walking basslines anything basic theory would benefits tremendously taking lessons.

  • @suicidebag666
    @suicidebag666 Před 5 lety +1

    This was great - thanks dude

  • @tomrobinson8103
    @tomrobinson8103 Před 5 lety +1

    Thank you! Good stuff for a guitarist taking up bass.

  • @tyrred
    @tyrred Před 4 lety

    Loving this

  • @PaulKingMetal
    @PaulKingMetal Před 5 lety

    Really cool video, good stuff man!

  • @Amhiel
    @Amhiel Před 5 lety +1

    That's a great video for sure! all the information is fantastic and the tone is beautiful in a brutal way. As a bass player you need to think about the band as a whole as if it was a single instrument in which every member is playing part of the harmony. You might want to keep in mind is all the possible voicings and inversions of the chords, you can use the bass to change the voicing the whole band is playing just by changing a single note. Also you might want to try piano, it'll boost your composition skills to a whole new level, the sinergies with the bass (specially if you're a finger player) are huge and the way chord voicings work on the piano will give you a ton of ideas. Plus it's great fun.

  • @gabrieldesrochers3447
    @gabrieldesrochers3447 Před 5 lety

    Love the vid, keep up the good work!

  • @OKFCPrez
    @OKFCPrez Před rokem

    Great video with some awesome concepts we can apply. My key takeaway: I can play on the other bass strings beyond the E.

  • @mybiggrin
    @mybiggrin Před 2 lety

    Loved this

  • @fernandovasconez8581
    @fernandovasconez8581 Před 3 lety

    Plesea more videos like this more examples, excelent thank you

  • @bassimprovjams3772
    @bassimprovjams3772 Před 3 lety +2

    A ton of power you say? I can't wait to tell my band this 😆🤘

  • @shredward_norton
    @shredward_norton Před 5 lety +1

    That tone!!!

  • @curtislitchfield1378
    @curtislitchfield1378 Před 5 lety +1

    only 9 minutes in so far. As a Guitar player with a University Music degree behind me (read: THEORY CLASSES!), who finds himself playing bass for the first time in a folk metal band, This video is heckin ace! I love this kind of content. Keep it up. We all have things to learn.

  • @AtlasAtPeace
    @AtlasAtPeace Před 3 lety

    I’d love to see a vid on writing top line, vox and lyrical phrasing

  • @TH-gu4wj
    @TH-gu4wj Před 5 lety

    Tone is killer. Really informative video!

  • @matijaravnik5411
    @matijaravnik5411 Před 5 lety +69

    Just listen to Cliff Burton's basslines.

    • @sovietcomrade4970
      @sovietcomrade4970 Před 4 lety +7

      Well, most of them are sloppy and have a weak attack. if you are not taking about Orion or call of Cthulhu.

    • @zal8424
      @zal8424 Před 4 lety +12

      most of them is the same as guitar part. still a boring player

    • @HillVillageDragon
      @HillVillageDragon Před 4 lety +3

      Matija Ravnik Cliff pretty much would just mimic the guitars. Listen to James Jamerson, Carol Kaye, and Paul McCartney -- players who knew how to lock in with a drummer and make a potent musical statement while propelling the song forward.

    • @feindwalker
      @feindwalker Před 4 lety +7

      Don't listen to just his the studio music. Listen to live versions as well. There are also very noticeable occurrences in studio material, like For whom the bell rolls, Call of Ktulu, and Orion where he's not following the guitarists most of the way through the song, even having solos or adding to the song in ways that aren't traditionally a bass position.

    • @BassMan-wr3lq
      @BassMan-wr3lq Před 4 lety +4

      80s Metallica, megadeth and Pantera have very heavily influenced my bass playing 🤘😈🤘

  • @WizardOfArc
    @WizardOfArc Před 4 lety +1

    That bass tone!

  • @neonblack612
    @neonblack612 Před 2 lety

    Your glen impression had me rolling.. well played sir

  • @tammycoates7816
    @tammycoates7816 Před 5 lety +1

    Hi Trey,
    Cool stuff.. that's one beefy looking Bass!

  • @Lunarplex
    @Lunarplex Před 5 lety

    Thank you Professors Xavier 😜 but seriously, i know the premise of this video but the way you put it helped me think of the bass from a slightly different perspective. I’m going to try your techniques out. so a genuine thanks.

  • @Zazmiz
    @Zazmiz Před 3 lety

    What gauge strings were you using for this video and tuning?

  • @MrGochiefs1
    @MrGochiefs1 Před 2 lety

    Do have any videos on you recording equipment & process on how to do what you're doing doing in this video, minus the bass playing?

  • @roberttroyhampton-peterson5022

    As a bassist this makes me happy.

  • @ButBigger42
    @ButBigger42 Před 5 lety +2

    Man, that bass part at 17:15 is fire.

  • @tedx8768
    @tedx8768 Před 5 lety +1

    This tone is amazing

  • @brallantp.2812
    @brallantp.2812 Před 2 lety

    Prolly it was this guy. I found a video wit a song I really liked but then I couldn’t find it. Guessing YT took it down

  • @rob0nemusic369
    @rob0nemusic369 Před rokem

    Cool bass tone btw

  • @SCALEBEASTS
    @SCALEBEASTS Před 3 lety

    I never heard of Low Interval Limit before! Interesting!

  • @markuskaiser3292
    @markuskaiser3292 Před rokem

    Jo, what Pickup are you using on that Stingray. They sound amazing!

  • @maliciousmallo
    @maliciousmallo Před 5 lety

    Further recommendations to build on this. Build a lot of your rhythm off the kick. Something he didn't mention but it can help quite a bit.

  • @arjunjsatheesh8899
    @arjunjsatheesh8899 Před 5 lety +1

    Much awaited content

  • @Animosity147
    @Animosity147 Před 4 lety

    What pedals are you using for that tone? Sounds sick.

  • @PooNinja
    @PooNinja Před 5 lety

    17:45 Should but do they. or do they just walk around the root :)

  • @continuum288
    @continuum288 Před 5 lety +1

    Interestingly enough, at least for me I had apparently been implementing a majority of the techniques utilized here in your video on some music i recently had been working on. Strangely enough, I have no music theory training and I'm not a bass player. I play guitar and drums mostly. However your video was still fun and informative. Letting me know also that apparently I'm on a "good" path when it comes to this type of thing. Cheers and thanks for the quality content as well!.

  • @ansonclark994
    @ansonclark994 Před 3 lety

    Your Music Man is awesome! What tuning are you in for this?

  • @richmerlino2020
    @richmerlino2020 Před 3 lety

    Thx homie

  • @rodox_sk8
    @rodox_sk8 Před 5 měsíci

    Boa aula ! ❤🇧🇷

  • @Maxischupp93
    @Maxischupp93 Před 4 lety +2

    this video holds so much value for me as a bedroomguitarist. not only does it explain bass lines, in some ways it explains how to write guitar riffs as well :D

  • @ninkichan7209
    @ninkichan7209 Před 2 lety

    10:32 If the original chord is a major chord, using a 4th will be okay as long as it resolves to a 5th or the 3rd of the chord. In Music Theory, the basic rule is to always resolve to the tonic or chord tone of the chord if you play a note that is either not a chord tone or not in the key, sort of like a passing tone.

  • @thebotanist7539
    @thebotanist7539 Před 5 lety

    awesome video

  • @hodshonf
    @hodshonf Před 4 lety

    excellent.

  • @angeldemon234
    @angeldemon234 Před 2 lety

    11:12 I like when you plays the B2B

  • @JayKayCH
    @JayKayCH Před rokem

    I am 3 years late, so I am sorry... First, thank you so much this video helped me a lot! The way you explain things is so good.
    Can you please explain one thing to me. I know you didn't want to get too much into theory, but at 14:00 you said you changed to final chord to Bmajor. How can I tell the chords, when the guitar is playing single notes? I know this is probably such a stupid question...

  • @ThatBeTheQuestion
    @ThatBeTheQuestion Před 5 lety +11

    The frustrating thing why videos like this, for me, is that I almost completely track with everything that's going on in the video, when I try to put it to practice it just all falls apart.

    • @FrightboxRecording
      @FrightboxRecording Před 4 lety +1

      I know the feeling. The key is to implement it one small step at a time and on a consistent basis.

    • @cultistsash
      @cultistsash Před 3 lety

      Never stop practicing.

    • @jeremiahschoonover2774
      @jeremiahschoonover2774 Před 2 lety

      I understand what you mean completely, given that your comment is two years old this is probably pointless now, but make sure you have good tone, then just keep practicing bro

    • @ThatBeTheQuestion
      @ThatBeTheQuestion Před 2 lety

      @@jeremiahschoonover2774 nope. It's just as accurate as when I first wrote it. 😑

    • @jeremiahschoonover2774
      @jeremiahschoonover2774 Před 2 lety

      @@ThatBeTheQuestion don't stop playing

  • @veglord_the_profane
    @veglord_the_profane Před 2 měsíci

    I love metal, I love bass, but I often hate metal basslines. So freaking boring so many of them. When I cover songs I add all sorts of extra notes, melody and/or other interesting things to the basslines, like you said we deserve better!

  • @MatthewHarnage
    @MatthewHarnage Před 3 lety

    Absolutely amazing video. I felt like I'm talking to a buddy who plays bass back in music school haha. Great information, and you did a great job of showing how you'd write the bassline but also cutting out any extra work too with the editing. Seeing the PT session at the same time was a great touch as well. I'm watching this as a composer who writes basslines and usually tries to play them in, will definitely recommend this in the future to others too.

  • @Da_Swifta
    @Da_Swifta Před 4 lety

    That bass tone though! I need it!

    • @treyxaviermusic
      @treyxaviermusic  Před 4 lety +4

      EzMix 2 Metal Guitar Gods 3 Pack, Ola Feared Bass preset. Instant devastation.

    • @hyppo00
      @hyppo00 Před 4 lety

      @@treyxaviermusic Thanks!

  • @itai.617
    @itai.617 Před 5 lety +9

    I always hate writing bass lines because i just copy the guitar and its so boring. hope this video will help

    • @Tangalang22
      @Tangalang22 Před 5 lety +2

      I abuse pentatonic scales. Just dance around with scales, you don't have to do basic harmonizations or stick to root notes and what the guitar plays. I hope this helps

    • @itai.617
      @itai.617 Před 5 lety

      @@Tangalang22 ill work on it

  • @fabioc.9682
    @fabioc.9682 Před 2 lety

    excellent content, I really like all of your melodic choices! There's a little too much distortion though.. a cleaner tone would've sounded even better (most modern metal bands like Periphery, Gojira, and Opeth have cleaner bass tones especially because their bass lines are quite busy and creative). It's subjective, I know, but it makes a hell of a difference in the mix. Anyways, the focus of the video was not on tone but on songwriting, and in that sense you absolutely nailed it bro! Thank you for the thorough explanations as well.

  • @Laplap-sl6ei
    @Laplap-sl6ei Před 3 lety

    Hey I was wondering what application I are using to record all of that

  • @DoomOfConviction
    @DoomOfConviction Před 2 lety

    The lower 5th is also nice to throw in.

  • @riotchristianradio7779

    I just got my sterling stingray5 string today

  • @MrPianoMatt12
    @MrPianoMatt12 Před 4 lety

    sick video

  • @NickBEADG
    @NickBEADG Před 2 lety

    I've been playing for about 18 years and don't know anything but tablature 😕. I need help progressing but I feel stuck. I'm self taught.

  • @ChadBillAnderson
    @ChadBillAnderson Před 5 lety

    Quality content

  • @ananigma
    @ananigma Před 5 lety

    Another trick when both guitars are doing a fill is for the bass to follow and accent the drum pattern rhythmically. I personally think when the the guitars are doing a fill and the bass also does a sort of fill, the sound is quite "lush and displaced" and distracts from the cool part the guitars are doing.

  • @ShogaiDeZpair
    @ShogaiDeZpair Před 4 lety

    I kinda have a huge struggle.
    I'm not the most expirienced musician. I played a long time but still are more or less just intermediate (maybe even worse than that) wrote a few songs on my own and play the bass in another band. Those guys make some killer songs. But everytime I try to come up with a bassline it's not quite what they want. When they want me to add some more, they're not satisfied because I'm playing to much - even though I don't play a whole lot.
    Our frontman just wrote an amazing track in drop D and I play almost nothing more than the low D string - and I don't feel like that's any good.

  • @rosskane2971
    @rosskane2971 Před 4 lety +1

    Basically he is saying think like a lead guitarist, the leads you play over power chords can implie a more complex chord than a simple root and 5th

  • @troysmithfr
    @troysmithfr Před 5 lety +1

    10:28 The fifth doesn't tell you the quality of the chord because the interval between that and the root is bland (perfect), so you can't tell for sure what chord it is, unless it is augmented or diminished, which tells you the chord there. The third does that. And yes, what you said about walking past the fourth is true, that makes it a passing tone.

    • @treyxaviermusic
      @treyxaviermusic  Před 5 lety +1

      Right it won’t tell you much about the quality but it will cement which note is the root, which defines the chord vertically among all the instruments present so you can hear what chord is implied, and that will tell you the chord quality

    • @deviationblue
      @deviationblue Před rokem

      The fifth in the bass adds tension without changing the quality of the chord.
      Roots reggae bass, for example, *is* the element of tension in that genre, and therefore lives on the fifth.

  • @nicksregor4208
    @nicksregor4208 Před 5 lety +2

    This is so good! There are certain moments in SO MANY songs where the bass doing something other than the root could add so much movement & feeling... yet it's left basic and/or boring. I used to live for that shit when I still had the time & motivation to record music. Just a few extra notes here and there.... *insert dumb analogy of using spices sparingly in a dish that you're cooking

  • @brianbergmusic5288
    @brianbergmusic5288 Před 3 lety

    Good video, just an inquiry! Outside of more 'artsy' genres in the more rock and prog range, it is very difficult for the bass to not be considered anything more than a hired gun that is second fiddle to the rhythm guitarist. Metal bands where a talented bassist, has its own voice, and is loud and clear are a rarity in metal. Does anyone have some suggestions to give me to listen to bands where this is the exception?? I am a guitarist that wishes to focus heavily on composing.
    A few things I try in my DAW:
    1. Give the rhythm guitarist a break from distortion and allow the bassist free reign within non-triad walks.
    2. Gratuitous fills.
    3. Fifths and octave rhythm complications.
    4. Experimenting with thirds for harmonized parts almost like Melodeath cliches.
    I'm wishing to learn by studying organic examples. What specimens do you suggest I take to my lab?

    • @mysterybotts
      @mysterybotts Před 2 lety

      Any thing you get inspiration from. Probably repetitive to say but what you listen to should guide you. Maybe try listening to new types of music if you ever feel stuck?

    • @brianbergmusic5288
      @brianbergmusic5288 Před 2 lety

      @@mysterybotts That's just it. I start drifting away from metal when I wish to observe the bass in such a way that elevates the instrument. I'm afraid of becoming a convert to jazz-fusion. Heck, some of that stuff makes me wish I was a bassist. Some genres simply treat certain instruments better, or at least give them more opportunity to shine. That reminds me of a joke I heard somewhere on youTube:
      A guitarist who played for many years decided that he wanted to play bass. His friends thought he wasn't serious, but they discovered to their shock that he was. Therefore, to his friends' urging, he went to see a doctor.
      Doc: You sure you want to make this transition?
      Guitarist: Yeah. I guess if it's good enough for Victor Wooten it's good enough for me.
      Doc: Alright, but you will need to undergo a lobotomy. I could schedule one next week if you are still interested.
      Sure enough everything was signed and the procedure attended to; except for one problem that was discussed with the guitarist as he woke up:
      Doc: I am sorry. The younger surgeon arrived late and proceeded mistakenly; therefore the lobotomy was done twice. How are you feeling?
      Ex-Guitarist: Give me... ... ... THE DRUM STICKS! (Don't forget the cheesy drum roll)

    • @mysterybotts
      @mysterybotts Před 2 lety

      @@brianbergmusic5288 hahaha never heard that one before. But hey maybe you shouldn’t be afraid of becoming a convert? Maybe you don’t want to be as solely “metal” as you think you do? I just say that because I’ve felt the same thing. Almost feels like I’m betraying the genre I first loved. Now I really like jazz, modern classical, and world music just because sometimes they tend have more exotic “flavor”. But you can always mix and match with metal since it’s a very accepting genre, in my opinion. But then again I’m into the proggy stuff so if your not I could see how it detracts from that same feeling a bit. I hope you have fun experimenting anyhow!

    • @brianbergmusic5288
      @brianbergmusic5288 Před 2 lety

      @@mysterybotts I actually have no hatred towards any genre of music (except for "anti-music"/"modern music" usually found only in Universities where insanity is applauded or at least given a free pass). As a music consumer my philosophy is a "time for everything under the sun" kinda paradigm. As an amateur musician, I have grown towards metal because of a sense of jolly machismo that no other genre can supply as well. I chase that excitement that I have even found in post-romantic classical era music and filmscore. Jazz is most cerebral, yet abounds with freedom, and is even very entertaining to hear and analyze, but frankly, above my pleb-level abilities. Fusion appeals to me because it seems to have a lot of techy-fun with synths and simpler rock-lines and reminds me of awesome game soundtracks like some of the Gradius series -- fun grooves and themes with creative modulations.
      There are probably many who wish they had the time to become uber multi-faceted musicians. If I had that background I would complete prog metal albums for days... play more than one instrument competently... end each collection of tunes with an tongue-in-cheek "Anime-end-credits-jazz-fusion-number" as a running gag. However, those pipe dreams have gotta be rooted in reality, and the cards that reality deals is not always friendly to dreamers -- especially someone with the bare minimum to accomplish one specific genre. Budgeting time and resources is wise, wouldn't you agree?
      Whatever level we find ourselves, the journey is still a blast. I know I wouldn't even have a Soundcloud page if I existed a generation ago.
      [EDIT] CASE IN POINT: Today, I gave up trying to get a LOW-A to work on my 5 string bass. The LOW A sounds like crap, even with a 175 gauge string!! The Squire Dimension 5 Bass simply doesn't have enough scale length to accommodate that, it even struggled in standard tuning with completely off balance output. So far, the D as the lowest note makes it feel like an instrument again and not merely a clunky tool micromanaged by a guitarist. This actually is a game changer for my humble setup, that is, if I'm dead set on using a real bass for DI stuff. Scale length woes... what a tangled web we weave.

  • @rockboy360
    @rockboy360 Před 5 lety +1

    Sick bass tone, how did you get that?

    • @TECTheEpicChannel
      @TECTheEpicChannel Před 5 lety +2

      Possible he put it through a guitar tube amp, Glenn Fricker did it once and got an amazing tone from it

    • @braxtonfps3580
      @braxtonfps3580 Před 3 lety

      Look at other comment that he commented on.

  • @joshuaworman4022
    @joshuaworman4022 Před 2 lety

    i do feel like there is a place for super prominent bass lines in metal. punk has it all the time and it really works. i hear a song like hyena from rancid and think this could be made to work for metal. though it might be challenging.

    • @joshuaworman4022
      @joshuaworman4022 Před 2 lety

      obviously you wouldn't have it this loud, but that crushing growling sound i feel could really work in a mix. czcams.com/video/difaE4nOVa4/video.html

  • @Oilid
    @Oilid Před 5 lety +2

    😉👍
    As for me, I always put happy weird parts in my bass lines coz I know not everyone will hear it, but it's there. 😉👍

    • @NotVerySkilledBass
      @NotVerySkilledBass Před 5 lety +1

      yeah, i do that too. people won't probably hear it but at least i'm not gonna die of root note boredom.

    • @Oilid
      @Oilid Před 5 lety

      @@NotVerySkilledBass lol

  • @manicmurph
    @manicmurph Před 4 lety +10

    I was just thinking "Man Glenn would say your giving bass players too much credit".

  • @dexterj5615
    @dexterj5615 Před 5 lety +2

    Trick.. jump back and forth between rhythm and melody, play the same riff one octave higher.

  • @jamiehush
    @jamiehush Před 5 lety

    Glenn Fricker impersonation was on point

  • @AndrewStonerock
    @AndrewStonerock Před 5 lety +7

    Golly that bass sure is swell...... For reals though, that's a dope ass bass for the price.

    • @vsauce_johnny2516
      @vsauce_johnny2516 Před 4 lety +1

      There’s a bassist on YT that has one with 2 of those phat humbuckers. I think he’s a russian dude, plays a lot of great metallica covers. But yeah, can’t go wrong with a musicman stingray.

    • @user-xw6uh3yp7g
      @user-xw6uh3yp7g Před 4 lety

      Mystic _Gaemz andriy vasylenko? He doesn’t play a stingray

  • @kamk1273
    @kamk1273 Před 5 lety

    That beanie/sweater combo along with the bass hes playing wasn't a coincidence.

    • @flooptydoo1178
      @flooptydoo1178 Před 5 lety +1

      It's cold in that studio and he needed a bass to match?