Floating Thumb Technique - A Deep Dive
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- Опубліковано 24 лип 2024
- Who am I?
I am a professional musician from Brooklyn, NY. I play bass, mandolin, guitar, and synthesizers. I make videos about music and my lifestyle as a professional musician.
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steveburk3
steveburke.me
My Bassteacher told me, that i shouldn't even start with the thumb resting on the pick up because i should learn flexibility for changing position with my right hand. And i'm glad i followed his advise.
I just got a Sterling Stingray and my whole play style no longer worked for me, I was stumbling onto your style naturally but doubted myself. This video not only helped me but assured me I was on the right path.
I started out learning with anchored thumb, but when I moved to 5-string, my teacher suggested trying floating from pickup or ramp, to B-string, to E-string, to A-string. This maximizes right hand muting (more important for 5-string) but maintains some economy of motion by not floating all the way to the D-string (which doesn't really help with right-hand muting). This technique also allows for easier neck-bridge lateral movement of my right hand, which is an invaluable for altering tone.
Excellent lesson.
i moved to true floating thumb, and I love it.
Make sense. I'll try it. thank you Steve!
Great lesson on this topic!
Bro this is a fantastic deep dive I'm still early in my bass learnings but feels like one of those good habits you can cultivate early and it pays off a lot later, thanks for posting
Been looking for a video like this for awhile thank you so much! I always thought that floating was wrong and I felt self conscious about me doing it. Thanks for the much needed confidence boost :)
Great video. I`m a self-taught weekend wannabe bass player,but that is how I learned to play.
Great explanation
Thank you for this explanation.
Yup, using a 6 string introduced me to true floating thumb years ago. Greatly improved my playing and muting, plus you can throw in some harmonics with your thumb too.
I'm a big Iron Maiden fan and therefore spend a lot of time trying to emulate Steve Harris. He drives the strings into the neck which makes for a big part of the sound. The floating thumb not only keeps your right hand the same shape but means you can consistently hit each string in the same direction.
Great vid.
Low action?
Thank you! Im a beginner and I’ve tried to figure that out this evening. I’m so happy that I came up with the same conclusion as someone with so much experience and knowledge about bass playing. You’re video gives me confidence to stick to this technique and I hope It’s going to work for me as well! Take care bro!
Great talk, as usual! I also use a hybrid approach, despite having big hands and playing 4-string basses almost exclusively. Side note: flats on a Stingray is what's UP.
really excellent explanation here, and also immaculate tone/feel from this guy when he actually plays. watching his right hand is mesmerizing and reminds me i must go practice now
Thanks so much. Made my day.
beautiful music man, man
Great Video. I never much liked the anchoring method. I would much rather work on this technique
When I was learning I was taught to anchor. For years I hated it. It always felt very awkward. Once I got older I saw the "floating anchor" technique and tried it. It was even worse. I always felt like I was hurdling the strings when I would change string sets. Then I happened to see a video of Steve Harris playing Run to the Hills live with Iron Maiden. I noticed his floating thumb and immediately grabbed my bass. Within only a few minutes I was comfortably playing with that technique like I had used it for years. I play 5 string basses a lot, as well as a 6 string sometimes and I've found the floating thumb to be extremely beneficial on those. That's what's awesome about music and instruments; we're all different.
Thank you for your explanation. I just started my lessons and my wrist hurts a lot. I hope I can convince my teacher to switch to the floating thumb technique.
Best of luck! Wrist pain shouldn’t be happening
I have been playing for 6 years. When I first got started I was introduced the the floating anchor technique and it mostly works for me. I do find that sometimes when the tip of my thumb is on the D string (when I am plucking the G string), the side of my thumb loses contact with the E string and I have heard unwanted resonance. I think I need to become less dependent on the anchor feeling (I *do* like the constant hand shape aspect of it) so I can more truly let my thumb float and do its muting job.
Thanks for sharing John. Just curious, do you play any 5 or 6 string? I find that the true floating thumb happens a bit more naturally for me when I'm playing 5 or 6 string basses.
I’ve been anchoring my thumb on the pickguard closer to the neck because I saw Sean Hurley doing it. I’m coming from guitar so I’m trying not develop bad habits on bass
Muting and control of tone of why I use floating thumb. I anchor when playing the lowest string though as there's nothing to float on
The only advantage I see in stay anchored over the pick up is when jumping in octaves, Otherwise I would be anchoring always over the string I am playing , but anchoring actully makes my whirst bent tu much, and on the other hand, floating obligates my hand stay straight.
The only time I anchor is for disco octaves if they are super fast. I've been doing floating for so long I pretty much can't anchor
i have a hyperflexible thumb so while anchoring is much much easier it hurts so much i still have pain in my thumb 2 days after
Bom professor
Great video! I’ll say it for you lol! Floating thumb is better 👍🏾
Hi Steve: about a year ago my bass teacher presented the floating thumb technique as an alternative to the anchoring system I was using. With the anchoring system, I experienced string ringing and a hyper flexed wrist. I implemented the floating thumb technique and found it worked very well with my 5 string bass.
However, about a month ago I experienced pain in my right shoulder. I stopped playing for a while and am now resuming slowly, and am seeing a physical therapist. With the floating thumb technique, my right shoulder is rotated inward and that probably led to the pain. But I have also discovered that the muscles in my right upper back and shoulder blade area are very weak and not functioning properly. This may be the true problem, not the inward shoulder rotation.
Have you found over the years that the floating thumb technique had led to shoulder pain, and if so, what did you do? I am going to develop my upper back and shoulder muscles and get in good playing shape, but I am considering other ideas:
- Would switching from a 5 string to 4 string bass, in your opinion, help? I am a hobby player. I like the 5 string, but I could enjoy my hobby perfectly well with a 4 string.
Would love any words of wisdom you or your followers might have.
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before i watched, just by seeing a small picture and the title of the video, i will say this.. Anchor your finger on 4 strings, and float your finger on 5+ strings. :)
When your thumb floats, the anchor is your middle forearm .
How does this guy only have 1.77K subscribers?
Bruh I thought the floating thumb was the only technique, that’s how I started
I use floating thumb since I watched an old Adam Neely video on technique back when I was just starting and now anchoring feels so awkward. The thing is, that for some reason, when jumping octaves the floating technique stops being natural and back to weird. So I've been looking for solutions. Maybe is just a skill issue
Personally I prefer the five-point-palm exploding-heart-technique!
You need a thumb rest!
anchoring on a music man bass is rather hard, since the pick ups are thinner
You're talking too much for me? Don't mean to criticize but if you actually played more utilizing the technique? It would have been more useful for me?
You’re not wrong. Thanks for the input. It’s helpful.