Great lesson.I'm an" OLD" bass player and thought my heavy gigging days are mostly behind me I still play every day.My bass is still very dear to me and I can't imagine life without it.Sometimes the simple things can be the thing to get one back on track when you run out of ideas.
Another great video lesson.I’ve looked and discovered your bass channel and you remind me so much of a teacher I’ve had in the past who also played both the electric and upright bass.Keep up the great work.👍🎸
Great lesson as ever. And by the way I’m enjoying working my way through ‘architecture and language’ and will be purchasing another book in the series very soon!
I'm not sure what it is about your signal chain Jim but my speakers regularly distort more on the low end with your videos than on most other bass channels. I always have to turn the volume down! Great lesson nonetheless
Yes, unless they are extended chords. The triads define the chord, but you can have chord tones that aren't a part of the triad. For instance, a Dm7. The flatted 7th is a chord tone, but not a part of the triad.
@@realbasslessons9356 Thank you. I felt I was in the same ballpark. But I get it now. Triad's are exactly what they say they are. Cord tones is more general and could include more than 3 notes.
Jim is the best teacher on UA-cam ! Great lesson!!
You left us the best of your knowledge! We miss you a lot!
this channel has been nothing short of a revelation.
fire that bad boy up!!
I agree
Great lesson.I'm an" OLD" bass player and thought my heavy gigging days are mostly behind me I still play every day.My bass is still very dear to me and I can't imagine life without it.Sometimes the simple things can be the thing to get one back on track when you run out of ideas.
Thanks.
You are an exceptional teacher - and have a great way of communicating this material. Struggled with these ideas for years, thank you for the clarity!
You are welcome.
Such a good lesson. I keep coming back to this one and trying it with inversions and on different areas of the neck. Thanks.
You are welcome. Yes, all forms of triads need to be internalized / muscle memory, all over your instrument. Good on ya.
Great lesson. Take the time and do it right.
Thanks.
Thanks Jim.
Your an amazing teacher ❤️🎶
Another great video lesson.I’ve looked and discovered your bass channel and you remind me so much of a teacher I’ve had in the past who also played both the electric and upright bass.Keep up the great work.👍🎸
Thaks, will do. ;)
Great lesson as ever. And by the way I’m enjoying working my way through ‘architecture and language’ and will be purchasing another book in the series very soon!
Thanks. That's cool. Thanks for your business.
Great stuff, Mr. Stinnett!
Thanks.
This is so funky, i'm studying it
Great lesson. More soloing videos please!
There are over 80 (eighty) vids on my channel about soloing. I suggest you get to work. Start by looking at the "playlists" under "soloing."
Learnt alot from you
Great.
Nice!!
Thanks. :)
Sure miss you Jim.
Yeh. He was a great teacher
I'm not sure what it is about your signal chain Jim but my speakers regularly distort more on the low end with your videos than on most other bass channels. I always have to turn the volume down! Great lesson nonetheless
Is this loop also available on your page?. Great lessons as allways straight to the point and really helpful.
No. It's just me playing a low E. Make your own.
Bass God
Cool ! What strings do you use please?
Labella black tape wound
Could triads also be called cord tones?
Yes, unless they are extended chords. The triads define the chord, but you can have chord tones that aren't a part of the triad. For instance, a Dm7. The flatted 7th is a chord tone, but not a part of the triad.
Triad= 3
@@Hexenhammer Thank you for the clarification.
@@realbasslessons9356 Thank you. I felt I was in the same ballpark. But I get it now. Triad's are exactly what they say they are. Cord tones is more general and could include more than 3 notes.
You stumbled upon anaesthesia pulling teeth right around 3:50