I laughed out loud a few times during this video despite a good case of tonsillitis - nice one (mumble mumble….) :) One you missed is: Playing lots of notes vs. Grooving! The first time I heard you played Victor Wooten’s “Can’t Hold No Groove” on 25. July…. _that_ is a benchmark for groove. Sorry, superfans but…. I respect VW but he’s never made me smile like that. That _grooved_ !
I have stopped looking at genius players that way. Simply respect them for their talent. And don't strive to be that good. Just be good at what I want to play and achieve. And I'm actually having my first ever bass lesson tomorrow. Because I want more from my technique, but not to learn to be great.
It’s at this point i normally add a tonne of emphasis on the notes that the kick and snare should occur on to bring the drummer back in time. A couple of bars might sound a bit off, but it’ll improve the performance overall.
"Playing with an out-of-time drummer". I can say that I've always been blessed to play with great drummers. My favorite was a guy named Kit. When we got in the groove, it was like we were one person playing one instrument... it was amazing. Then there is my other favorite drummer, named Tim... I once knocked over his snare drum with my tuba. I'm not sure he ever forgave me for that. It was a very nice snare drum.
Was friends with the drummer of our church band. Sadly the only drummer in our church.... He was a very self insecure person. If you had him alone, he was extremely good. But when he had to play with the band, let alone in sunday service, he often went out of step and wrestled to change to the rhythm of the other players which brought them out of step. Guess he never understood that HE played the instrument others act upon!
my favourite guy was someone with tuba named Tom, but once he knocked over my snare drum. i never forgave him for that. edit. it was a very nice snare drum.
I think for me the issue is the isolation when recording, I can hear every little twang and pop and buzz, and every mistake seems to be amplified by 1000, so I get deep in my head looking for that "perfect" track...have deleted so many tracks because of that
Because at slow tempi you hear a 3% variation in how long you think a beat is, while it's not that clear when you play faster. There's also so much stuff between 120 and 140 BPM, that you tend to play less at slower tempi and that makes you want to rush. You know you've spent too much time thinking about polymeters when you think "a quarter note at 100BPM? That's just 5 tied sextuplets at 120!" and that actually helps...
Because you're thinking too much instead of playing. It happens to the best. That's why there are so many stories about engineers getting great takes when the artists were warming up or didn't know they were being recorded.
I laughed pretty hard at the "Easy bass lines but you're recording" because one of the first songs that I learned all the way through is "Another One Bites the Dust". I use Rocksmith and a screen recorder, and I always mess up while recording it. 100% spot on! I'm not up to the level of the other things that you have mentioned, but I trust that they are accurate because they make total sense.
I hear ya, I screwed up my left hand and awaiting surgery so I can't play right now, and after watching this guy I realized I never could "play" before I just made slightly rhythmic noise
Ok it's official...you're just showing off now: Not just your bass playing skills but your video production, comedic timing, EVERYTHING!!🤣🤣 Favorite video so far!! Keep up the great work in EVERYTHING you continue to do!!👏🏼👏🏼
It always makes me uneasy to listen to Debussy, not because he wasn't a superb composer, but because it always remind me that according to French teachings, he's the first guy in the world to have undergone colostomy because of a cancer, making him live 3 last miserable years.
@@tnyamaneko6093 I didn't know about it. It sounds terrible enough on its own. He must have had a superb will power to compose right to the end of his life.
What people think is hard: The Dance of Eternity What is actually hard: always being asked if you have heard of flea and hearing “slappa da bass” jokes and not shooting yourself
It's true 🤣and the only remedy I know is to just do hundreds of recordings until you're not nervous anymore. And even after that, it still feels different than practising by yourself
@@CharlesBerthoud Which is why the discerning engineer _always_ runs a room mic to a 2-track - and _never_ abuses the masters to keep the trust of the players :)
01:21 - That's the first fundamental truth for any instrument! And the second one is: your best take would be the one which you pressed play instead record!
Double-stops are pretty tricky. I taught myself the "Pink Panther" back when I pretended to play bass and I did the opening bit with 2-note "chords", sliding them to get the same gliding sound the real song had. It was fun, sounded great, but was definitely a trick to learn. Also, keeping a steady time when the feel of a song changes. Both "The Entertainer" and "Dixie" tripped me up because I'd hit the more energetic bits of the songs and start ramping up the tempo.
I'm so bad rythmically, it's when I hit record and the metronome starts that I notice that I can't play that song I've reharsed thousands of times... without metronome.
1:29 I remember having to play 8ths instead of 16ths while recording a fast tempo bassline I played with ease live almost every weekend just because of red light syndrome. That session still lives rent free in my head.
The Le Fay brothers should be paying you. I bought one of their instruments because of your content. It’s a brilliant bass by the way, so thanks for the nudge in the right direction. Love the channel. Keep it up!
Charles, I've discovered your channel recently, and as a bass player I'm so impressed by your talent and your love for bass. There is a song I'd love to hear you play called Scarified by Paul Gilbert. Some of the guitar parts are heavily influenced by classical music, and only you could do it justice. PLEASE play this song at some point! Either way keep up the great work and keep inspiring people like me to keep pushing their abilities forward.
1:48 Funny thing. I both play the piano and the bass. I can easily read notation while playing the piano, but for the bass it's straight up hard for me and I do prefer tabs.
3:08 reminded me of the anecdote where James Hetfield and Lars Ulrich first heard Cliff Burton play. Apparently he was playing (an early version of) what would later become "Anesthesia (Pulling Teeth)" and they were counting the strings to confirm he was playing bass and not guitar. Imagine if he was on a 6 string bass! How different could metal history would be if they thought that was a guitar and moved on to someone else!
Hi Charles! I'd love to hear a full version of Arabesque - one of my favourites and I bet you'd knock the full version out of the park on the bass. Please! :D
as an amateur hobbyist bassist and drummer who recently bombed an easy bass line in my first recording session after going straight from recording on my phone to the studio, I really felt an incredible amount of pain relating to several of these
This is now my favorite video from you of all time! I’m retired now grudgingly, but I went through the same positives and negatives you showed here but those ran between 1977 through 2013. Oh, and minus anything by Victor Wooten. You left one thing out though about hard or not playing. You left out playing while slow dancing with a woman from the audience. You have her fit between you and the bass (facing or away), and play the bass line of the song the band is playing, or solo like you do. That was always met with positive applause and a few eye rolls. I made certain the girl was single and not with anyone there. LOL. I’m certain you COULD do that with your fiancé if you and her chose, but I’m just pointing out one you left out of this list. I owned a reasonably successful recording studio and would cringe when the drummer had no clue about keeping time. I learned never to use click tracks because so few would ever be able to play with them. Plus, no computers in my days. You had big balls to physically splice multitrack tape. My own recordings I’d try it. Getting paid to record…nope! NO WAY! LOL. PS….. I love your LeFay basses with four drop tuners. You make THE BEST use of those I’ve ever seen or heard! You should get a special award just for doing that bit of incredible hand eye, & timing coordination!! I looked them up years ago when I first saw you play. I’ve still have an original 1978 Rickenbacker 4001 in black with white. I loved that bass from McCartney to Squire to Lee. I even used to use the damper no one else knew what it was or what it was for. LOL. Many moons later I fell in love with the Tobias Killer B basses in all three available 4-5-6 string versions with different body woods. In my time only Jaco and Stanley Clarke were known as incredible jazz bassists. But I had the three I’ve mentioned plus players like Billy Sheehan back when he was still in his own band in Buffalo, NY, and others in the rock style. Sorry for the ramble, but I’m watching the video again as a type this. Bravo Charles!! I hope the UA-cam viewers appreciate all you do with editing for the 6-string part and the truly high quality recordings you make. Will you ever do another collab with the Higher Love guy??? And YES, making money playing music has always been very tough. I had to get my name out by word of mouth and thousands of auditions over my time. I also found out in the video world, attractive, skilled women have a much higher success rate than most men. Sexism in reverse. I’ve never liked double standards for anything, but I think that just because attractive females can play half as good and get ten times the views stinks. My eta on this point was a ton better. Unless photos were on the album cover, or you saw them in concert…all you needed to do was listen and let the music fill you and let your ‘gut’ decide what you liked or didn’t. But then along came MTV and ruined everything for live music in the USA followed by the idiotic drinking change from 18 to 21. Gotta stop rambling. Sorry. But music has always been my passion and in my life since age 4 and I’m nearing age 61! Ugh!!
Dude, the Beethoven segment was perfect. I was like "Ha, wouldn't it be great if the 3rd Movement would be the actually hard one..." And, there it was. 🤘😊
On piano (as a medium skill player) I find that doing triplets on one hand and an entirely different rythm on the other is fairly hard. I can't imagine it's any easier when tapping on bass.
Hardest : Tapping melody & baseline at the same time; #VW Style. Fav : Playing in Alt. Tuning & Changing it while playing. Simply #FiresomeAwesome!! 🔥🔥
Charles eats bass strings for breakfast! But I'm disappointed 😞 they weren't raw. Also, as someone that's a math afficionado, I loved the Pi/8 time signature. That would make anyone's head explode!
This is obviously great ability from very young bass guitar players. As an old guy who can still remember the Beatles on the Ed Sullivan show (live), I can attest to the great accomplishments in the technical way young people now play. When I was in a garage band back in 1965, all we had were a few cheap electric guitars and some "Magnatone" amplifiers. The amps even had "reverb" and "vibrato" built into them. Yeah, we were on the cutting edge of technology back in 1965. We were as good as you guys are, "relatively speaking". In reality we sucked. But after watching all of this "virtuosity" I'm still waiting to hear the genius of music created by the likes of Carol King, the Beach Boys and of course the Beatles. All I'm hearing is technically fantastic guitar playing. Much better than we ever could have dreamt possible back in the day. But as the old saying goes, "Where's the beef?"
#3 Alternate tunings and changing tuning while playing . I spoke to Michael Manring and he did mention you took a few lessons from him . I guess you paid attention !
pfioufffffff Taping melody and bassline at the same time sounds so awesome i had trouble watching the rest of the video as i was comming back to it every 12 secs
The "tapping melody and bassline at the same time" sounds great. It's almost like you're playing the notes a piano would play, but with the expressivity of a bass. I guess it's not surprising then that it would be hard.
The recording one is so damn accurate. Not even on bass but I can rip through Blood and Thunder on guitar until someone wants to see me do it. Then I fuck up the main riff every time.
Your sense of humour (humor -- Brit) makes the example to your detractors! So, from Portland, Oregon (Or-uh-gyn) on the Left coast of the States, sandwiched (pun intended) somewhere over the rainbow of LA and at the Pot 'O Gold in Canada, oh Canduude. Rooting for you. (routing?) NHG, I seem to remember the banjo came from Africa, dawdled in Scotland, and produced blue grass in Appalatch--ee-uh.
Decided I'll walk in and the evenings and put my small speaker, phone, ad Pandora sub to use. See all the names I found when searched for bassists. What I wanted however was bass only but still was happy.
So many people say that Jaco only needed 4 strings..but actualy he had 5 string too. I know the luthier that made it for him, and he still have pictures of it, and also picture of the original costum document when Jaco traveled back home with the bass ( the bass was made in Denmark ) now the bass is owned by a collector that also play bass, and there is a picture of the guy and the bass in a magazine.
I can relate to the last one so well 😂😂 Don't even play the bass, play a traditional instrument and it's novelty (to others) really attracts a lot of questions 😂
Which one do you think's the hardest? I'd probably say making a living... hardly anywhere accepts exposure coin 😢
Agreed! Thanks and safety to ya friend!!
Getting paid, listening to bass on your phone. This sums up the whole thing 😂✌
Sell the few exposure coins you have, and buy GameStop!! :/ it's, like, a meme stock, so, like, it's good. :/
as someone who made their living in bar bands through most of the 2000's, I definitely agree
I laughed out loud a few times during this video despite a good case of tonsillitis - nice one (mumble mumble….)
:)
One you missed is: Playing lots of notes vs. Grooving! The first time I heard you played Victor Wooten’s “Can’t Hold No Groove” on 25. July…. _that_ is a benchmark for groove. Sorry, superfans but…. I respect VW but he’s never made me smile like that. That _grooved_ !
What people think is hard: Everything in this video.
What actually is hard: Everything in this video.
for real
@6061 when is your full 6061 bass ready?
Yes thank you!
Imagine how hard it is to please the 59 people that gave a thumbs down??
SO tragic to live such a life..
I did not expect to see you commenting over here. Hope the finger has completely healed.
I'm never quite sure whether Charles' videos motivate me to keep getting better or make me wanna throw my bass out of the window.
Yes, they do.
I have stopped looking at genius players that way. Simply respect them for their talent. And don't strive to be that good. Just be good at what I want to play and achieve.
And I'm actually having my first ever bass lesson tomorrow. Because I want more from my technique, but not to learn to be great.
same
hepl im cryeing
@@winstonhawke7065 Actually a really good take on it, thanks dude. Winton.
@@MayonnaiseSyrup winton
I cringed at the "out of time drummer" because it's just sooooo true.
It really is one of the hardest things to do!
@@seyne3259 The same thing can happen to bass players... If you're playing the wrong root note, the whole band sounds terrible.
And even harder when u r just getting started playing and only been playing less than a year
The worst is when said drummer blames it on everyone but himself, after saying how metronomes are useless
It’s at this point i normally add a tonne of emphasis on the notes that the kick and snare should occur on to bring the drummer back in time. A couple of bars might sound a bit off, but it’ll improve the performance overall.
"Playing with an out-of-time drummer".
I can say that I've always been blessed to play with great drummers. My favorite was a guy named Kit. When we got in the groove, it was like we were one person playing one instrument... it was amazing.
Then there is my other favorite drummer, named Tim... I once knocked over his snare drum with my tuba. I'm not sure he ever forgave me for that. It was a very nice snare drum.
Was friends with the drummer of our church band. Sadly the only drummer in our church.... He was a very self insecure person. If you had him alone, he was extremely good. But when he had to play with the band, let alone in sunday service, he often went out of step and wrestled to change to the rhythm of the other players which brought them out of step. Guess he never understood that HE played the instrument others act upon!
my favourite guy was someone with tuba named Tom, but once he knocked over my snare drum. i never forgave him for that.
edit. it was a very nice snare drum.
@@jamz9756 How did this comment not get any likes yet?
A drummer named Kit haha like a singer called Mike.
@@svenjansen2134 A pianist named Key.
hardest thing for any instrument: Simple line...slow tempo..with a metronome..while recording. WHY
I think all the space between the notes gives you too much time to zone out, overthink, doubt yourself etc.
I think for me the issue is the isolation when recording, I can hear every little twang and pop and buzz, and every mistake seems to be amplified by 1000, so I get deep in my head looking for that "perfect" track...have deleted so many tracks because of that
Because at slow tempi you hear a 3% variation in how long you think a beat is, while it's not that clear when you play faster. There's also so much stuff between 120 and 140 BPM, that you tend to play less at slower tempi and that makes you want to rush. You know you've spent too much time thinking about polymeters when you think "a quarter note at 100BPM? That's just 5 tied sextuplets at 120!" and that actually helps...
Because you're thinking too much instead of playing. It happens to the best. That's why there are so many stories about engineers getting great takes when the artists were warming up or didn't know they were being recorded.
Almost perfect but got fret buzz on one note: REDO!!
I laughed pretty hard at the "Easy bass lines but you're recording" because one of the first songs that I learned all the way through is "Another One Bites the Dust". I use Rocksmith and a screen recorder, and I always mess up while recording it. 100% spot on! I'm not up to the level of the other things that you have mentioned, but I trust that they are accurate because they make total sense.
I think what actually is hard is to pick up a bass after you see a real pro play. That requires some strength!
Truuuuuueee
Like me after watching this video
It's like wielding Mjolnir
I hear ya, I screwed up my left hand and awaiting surgery so I can't play right now, and after watching this guy I realized I never could "play" before I just made slightly rhythmic noise
Either that, or it can motivate you to be like them and start training even more. Nothing between.
Ok it's official...you're just showing off now: Not just your bass playing skills but your video production, comedic timing, EVERYTHING!!🤣🤣 Favorite video so far!! Keep up the great work in EVERYTHING you continue to do!!👏🏼👏🏼
Lol, agreed.
Bass playing 10/10
Comedy and nailing literally everything in this video, also 10/10.
That jazz part from 1:10 is absolutely mesmerizing. I'm always amazed whenever I hear such fluid continuous movement like that
ua-cam.com/video/mXxrwpXy9iM/v-deo.html if you didn't already listen to his version of Smells Like Teen Spirit
Honestly I'm more impressed with that kind of playing instead of tapping
I never thought I'd get to hear "Arabesque No. 1" on bass. I'd die to listen to you improvise on it.
I’m glad I’m not the only one that noticed. Arabesque is one of my favorite classical pieces. So beautiful 💚
It always remembers me of the sea.
@@TheAskald When I played it, for a change, I had the picture of two ballerinas having a showdown alongside each other in mind.
It always makes me uneasy to listen to Debussy, not because he wasn't a superb composer, but because it always remind me that according to French teachings, he's the first guy in the world to have undergone colostomy because of a cancer, making him live 3 last miserable years.
@@tnyamaneko6093 I didn't know about it. It sounds terrible enough on its own. He must have had a superb will power to compose right to the end of his life.
What people think is hard: The Dance of Eternity
What is actually hard: always being asked if you have heard of flea and hearing “slappa da bass” jokes and not shooting yourself
I almost put in some slappa da bass jokes but they didn't quite make the cut 🤣
@@CharlesBerthoud good thing you didn’t, otherwise you’d have a lot of deaths on your conscience
Fr listening to non musicians confidently discuss music makes me wanna melon ball my eyes
Not a bass player but not shooting myself is very hard
You wanna get some Neil Peart all up in ya?
The “Jaco only needed four strings” comment though 😂
It's funny because it's true.
"Jamerson only needed one finger!"
Mark Sandman only needed two.
It’s like saying “Neil only needed one stick
I swear everything i know about playing goes flying out the window when i'm recording.
This is so true! Always think i suck after listening to my recordings.
It's true 🤣and the only remedy I know is to just do hundreds of recordings until you're not nervous anymore. And even after that, it still feels different than practising by yourself
@@CharlesBerthoud Which is why the discerning engineer _always_ runs a room mic to a 2-track - and _never_ abuses the masters to keep the trust of the players :)
It's so true that it's saddening, lol. I'd learn a hard part and play it perfectly in time until I'd start recording
My recordings are almost always 50 % of what I want.
As a bassist who (unlike Charles) is actually human, I can say literally all of this is hard
yeah you're right
01:21 - That's the first fundamental truth for any instrument!
And the second one is: your best take would be the one which you pressed play instead record!
SO TRUE !!!!!
Do you mean 1:29?
Double-stops are pretty tricky. I taught myself the "Pink Panther" back when I pretended to play bass and I did the opening bit with 2-note "chords", sliding them to get the same gliding sound the real song had. It was fun, sounded great, but was definitely a trick to learn. Also, keeping a steady time when the feel of a song changes. Both "The Entertainer" and "Dixie" tripped me up because I'd hit the more energetic bits of the songs and start ramping up the tempo.
0:54 the most beautiful 10 seconds of music I’ve ever heard
it is his original song called highland dream, on youtube and spotify
@@superfuzzball thank you
If you like it, you may appreciate "Jon Gomm - Passionflower" too (I know isn't bass, but that's it).
@@federico42111 great song ty
we need a full version of the changing tuning while playing bit because it honestly slaps
I believe it is Highland Dream from Charles' original album, Fable.
the changing tuning in the little riff you had there was probably the most beautiful thing i’ve ever heard
That moment you hear the metronome when you hit record, you become a beginner at every instrument and just can't do it. Love this its so real!
I'm so bad rythmically, it's when I hit record and the metronome starts that I notice that I can't play that song I've reharsed thousands of times... without metronome.
1:29 I remember having to play 8ths instead of 16ths while recording a fast tempo bassline I played with ease live almost every weekend just because of red light syndrome. That session still lives rent free in my head.
The Le Fay brothers should be paying you. I bought one of their instruments because of your content. It’s a brilliant bass by the way, so thanks for the nudge in the right direction.
Love the channel. Keep it up!
I wish I had the money for a LeFay but yeah I agree, I never heard of them until I watched Charles. They look and sound phenomenal.
Charles,
I've discovered your channel recently, and as a bass player I'm so impressed by your talent and your love for bass. There is a song I'd love to hear you play called Scarified by Paul Gilbert. Some of the guitar parts are heavily influenced by classical music, and only you could do it justice. PLEASE play this song at some point! Either way keep up the great work and keep inspiring people like me to keep pushing their abilities forward.
Fuzz Universe is another that Charles could compliment with his bass
1:48 Funny thing. I both play the piano and the bass. I can easily read notation while playing the piano, but for the bass it's straight up hard for me and I do prefer tabs.
i am literally like that
I can read bass notation, but I prefer it in bass clef, without transposition, so that the open A is in the lowest space on the staff.
I played cello and read in standard notation, but for guitar and bass it's so much harder
The changing tuning ones is so pretty!!! I'd love to hear a full version of that for real!
0:44 Is it in 13/8 time? That's pretty cool actually. Could fit really well in a relaxed chill out kind of video game.
Hey man, you always amaze in every technique. Always appreciate the talented work!
A full song with this please 0:53 .... it was beautiful
What people thinks it is hard: getting a great bass tone.
What is really hard: have the bass player to get new strings.
@@Starky_3D 6 string sets costs are killing me 😢
Old strings are fine, you just have to play different stuff. 😂
you guys are buying strings instead of boiling them?
@@BugDcBass boiling them is the best
I think my Thomastik flats will be on my bass longer than the remaining lfie span of humanity
3:08 reminded me of the anecdote where James Hetfield and Lars Ulrich first heard Cliff Burton play. Apparently he was playing (an early version of) what would later become "Anesthesia (Pulling Teeth)" and they were counting the strings to confirm he was playing bass and not guitar. Imagine if he was on a 6 string bass! How different could metal history would be if they thought that was a guitar and moved on to someone else!
Glad it was 4-string for that reason.
What people think is hard: YO PLAY SEINFELD
Actually hard: Having to play Seinfeld again...
I have a friend who is a Grammy nominated world class violinist and I always ask her to play The Devil Went Down to Georgia lol
@@yuna9044 wtf
This got to be one the most incredible things i've seen in a while. Dude, you freaking ROCK! Outstanding playing!!
01:59 hahaha yep, tapping melody and a bass line at the same time is difficult, but making a living playing bass is just another level xd
Just when I think I can't be any more amazed by you you amaze me.
Changing tuning while you're playing seriously?
Wow
I literally said out loud "what is actually hard, moonlight sonata 3rd movement" when you were playing the 1st. So happy to be validated
People asking questions while you're playing bass was like a jam session
You're channel is amazing!
Let's be real... none of this is hard for Charles haha
and all of them are hard for me 😭
@@doodoopoo *the rest of us
I was just waiting for Davey504 to pop up and scoff that none of those things are hard. Even though they are.
eating bass strings?
@@saddocatto9245 I bet he could do it
Wow! You are incredibly good!
You’re better than a huge percentage of the most famous bassists out there. Keep going!
I could seriously listen to you play your classical arrangements all day
In all seriousness.. you are the most talented bassist I've ever seen. Like the Yngwie Malmsteen of bass guitar
Hi Charles! I'd love to hear a full version of Arabesque - one of my favourites and I bet you'd knock the full version out of the park on the bass. Please! :D
as an amateur hobbyist bassist and drummer who recently bombed an easy bass line in my first recording session after going straight from recording on my phone to the studio, I really felt an incredible amount of pain relating to several of these
I love "the out of time drummer" 😂😂
Hey loopy grandma~
@@jaeyounglee5410 Sup!
this man is an amazing musician...his playing is seamless and beautiful...im a guitarist and i only wish i could play this good!!!! hats off old chap!
This is now my favorite video from you of all time! I’m retired now grudgingly, but I went through the same positives and negatives you showed here but those ran between 1977 through 2013. Oh, and minus anything by Victor Wooten. You left one thing out though about hard or not playing. You left out playing while slow dancing with a woman from the audience. You have her fit between you and the bass (facing or away), and play the bass line of the song the band is playing, or solo like you do. That was always met with positive applause and a few eye rolls. I made certain the girl was single and not with anyone there. LOL. I’m certain you COULD do that with your fiancé if you and her chose, but I’m just pointing out one you left out of this list. I owned a reasonably successful recording studio and would cringe when the drummer had no clue about keeping time. I learned never to use click tracks because so few would ever be able to play with them. Plus, no computers in my days. You had big balls to physically splice multitrack tape. My own recordings I’d try it. Getting paid to record…nope! NO WAY! LOL. PS….. I love your LeFay basses with four drop tuners. You make THE BEST use of those I’ve ever seen or heard! You should get a special award just for doing that bit of incredible hand eye, & timing coordination!! I looked them up years ago when I first saw you play. I’ve still have an original 1978 Rickenbacker 4001 in black with white. I loved that bass from McCartney to Squire to Lee. I even used to use the damper no one else knew what it was or what it was for. LOL. Many moons later I fell in love with the Tobias Killer B basses in all three available 4-5-6 string versions with different body woods. In my time only Jaco and Stanley Clarke were known as incredible jazz bassists. But I had the three I’ve mentioned plus players like Billy Sheehan back when he was still in his own band in Buffalo, NY, and others in the rock style. Sorry for the ramble, but I’m watching the video again as a type this. Bravo Charles!! I hope the UA-cam viewers appreciate all you do with editing for the 6-string part and the truly high quality recordings you make. Will you ever do another collab with the Higher Love guy??? And YES, making money playing music has always been very tough. I had to get my name out by word of mouth and thousands of auditions over my time. I also found out in the video world, attractive, skilled women have a much higher success rate than most men. Sexism in reverse. I’ve never liked double standards for anything, but I think that just because attractive females can play half as good and get ten times the views stinks. My eta on this point was a ton better. Unless photos were on the album cover, or you saw them in concert…all you needed to do was listen and let the music fill you and let your ‘gut’ decide what you liked or didn’t. But then along came MTV and ruined everything for live music in the USA followed by the idiotic drinking change from 18 to 21. Gotta stop rambling. Sorry. But music has always been my passion and in my life since age 4 and I’m nearing age 61! Ugh!!
Your comedic timing. And production always gets better, this is one which fees extra tight and wel edited
Damn, Arabesque n°1 on bass sounds so smooth, great job!
I can't believe you played arabesque... simply amazing
1:21 your slap style is really inspiring, I hope we will get a tutorial video one day to learn how to slap this amazing riff !
Dude, the Beethoven segment was perfect. I was like "Ha, wouldn't it be great if the 3rd Movement would be the actually hard one..." And, there it was. 🤘😊
On piano (as a medium skill player) I find that doing triplets on one hand and an entirely different rythm on the other is fairly hard. I can't imagine it's any easier when tapping on bass.
I’m glad you seasoned your strings before baking them; too many people forget to do that.
we're going to need that baked bass strings recipe btw :D
Hardest : Tapping melody & baseline at the same time; #VW Style.
Fav : Playing in Alt. Tuning & Changing it while playing.
Simply #FiresomeAwesome!! 🔥🔥
0:59 oh man I love this, I hope you once record a track full with these nice sounds
He actually did: search for "BASS Solo In MEDIEVAL Tuning (Highland Dream)".
The Slap part at 1:22 is so good that i could hear a 10 hour version of it and still would smash the replay button
Charles eats bass strings for breakfast! But I'm disappointed 😞 they weren't raw.
Also, as someone that's a math afficionado, I loved the Pi/8 time signature. That would make anyone's head explode!
π
Are you even a musician if you can't play in π/8?
@@Helena-gk4ui I wanted to use that but was too lazy to find it on my keyboard.
@@CharlesBerthoud Just an average, humble appreciator of musical talent.
@@mlpreiss ok but can you play ah fuck no no no i won't say it
Oh man that segment at 0:53 is so good, I want to hear you play an entire song like this.
He actually did: search for "BASS Solo In MEDIEVAL Tuning (Highland Dream)".
@@federico42111 Thank you sir.
This is obviously great ability from very young bass guitar players. As an old guy who can still remember the Beatles on the Ed Sullivan show (live), I can attest to the great accomplishments in the technical way young people now play. When I was in a garage band back in 1965, all we had were a few cheap electric guitars and some "Magnatone" amplifiers. The amps even had "reverb" and "vibrato" built into them. Yeah, we were on the cutting edge of technology back in 1965. We were as good as you guys are, "relatively speaking". In reality we sucked.
But after watching all of this "virtuosity" I'm still waiting to hear the genius of music created by the likes of Carol King, the Beach Boys and of course the Beatles. All I'm hearing is technically fantastic guitar playing. Much better than we ever could have dreamt possible back in the day. But as the old saying goes, "Where's the beef?"
Ahhhhhhhh I love how he gets so into it and smiles at you.
Your channel is the only one where the ad is as good as the content.
That piece you were playing in nonstandard tuning was lovely!
that changing tuning... now THATS what I call heavenly
The dramatic background song becoming the song you play in the next part was genius
#3 Alternate tunings and changing tuning while playing . I spoke to Michael Manring and he did mention you took a few lessons from him . I guess you paid attention !
Man, that one at 2:06 is relatable to the extreme. You're the man, Charles!
pfioufffffff Taping melody and bassline at the same time sounds so awesome i had trouble watching the rest of the video as i was comming back to it every 12 secs
2:34, that grooove!!, love it!!!
The recording one is so true!! I can play something 10 times in a row near perfect but as soon as i try to record all hell breaks loose
Now THAT is a good way to integrate a sponsorship. Creative, funny to watch, and it doesn't screw up the flow of the video. Well done!
3:18 hand truck back to the right there for hauling his massive nads after playing Wooten, Coletrane, Jaco, Geddy etc etc. Damn. nice job.
0:44 my fav Highland Dream!
Great bass demonstration with comedic brilliance!
You are now officially my favorite bass player. And I know (of) a lot of fabulous players!
Man, I'm so glad even pros are nervous when recording! xD
I'm so glad you're on UA-cam man. Love all of your videos :)
That recording easy bass lines part is so true. I can play it perfect. Turn on the recorder and my brain turns off
Your change tuning is awesome always love those videos.
Love that one: easy basslines but you're recorded. So true! (Retake 82 coming up.)
bro that tapping melody and bass line... holy smokes
Every video you make is interesting, amusing and astonishing. Thanks
The "tapping melody and bassline at the same time" sounds great. It's almost like you're playing the notes a piano would play, but with the expressivity of a bass. I guess it's not surprising then that it would be hard.
3rd point actually is the most beautiful thing I've heard on a bass ever.
I don’t laugh much and when I do it’s usually internally, but I laughed out loud on a couple of those. Touché.
The recording one is so damn accurate. Not even on bass but I can rip through Blood and Thunder on guitar until someone wants to see me do it. Then I fuck up the main riff every time.
You could make a video on how hard it is not to go into blues when soloing?
I loved this one. Even as a pianist, this is relatable!
This whole ass video is so unbelievably relatable
Especially listening back to bass on a phone
Your sense of humour (humor -- Brit) makes the example to your detractors!
So, from Portland, Oregon (Or-uh-gyn) on the Left coast of the States, sandwiched (pun intended) somewhere over the rainbow of LA and at the Pot 'O Gold in Canada, oh Canduude.
Rooting for you. (routing?)
NHG,
I seem to remember the banjo came from Africa, dawdled in Scotland, and produced blue grass in Appalatch--ee-uh.
Decided I'll walk in and the evenings and put my small speaker, phone, ad Pandora sub to use. See all the names I found when searched for bassists. What I wanted however was bass only but still was happy.
OMG The recording had me in stitches..
So true, after playing bass for 40 years and hearing him play. I now realize I've only been "PLAYING" all these years!
Superb video, great editing, humor and a fine ending. Nice.
So many people say that Jaco only needed 4 strings..but actualy he had 5 string too. I know the luthier that made it for him, and he still have pictures of it, and also picture of the original costum document when Jaco traveled back home with the bass ( the bass was made in Denmark ) now the bass is owned by a collector that also play bass, and there is a picture of the guy and the bass in a magazine.
i dont think anything in this video was easy, this fellow is astounding.
2:34
Dude, that's insane!
Badass
I can relate to the last one so well 😂😂
Don't even play the bass, play a traditional instrument and it's novelty (to others) really attracts a lot of questions 😂
"Easy bass lines but you're recording" = can relate somehow
Really enjoyed the improvising in Jazz segment.
Grace and Peace 😎
thumbs up for being still creative after all this time!
cool video! loved how the dialogue in part eleven kinda matched the rhythm of the bass