Oh, man! Do yourself a huge favor and forget tabs. Teach yourself to read music, i.e. standard notation. This book IS for jazz double bass players with standard notation throughout. I've seen Bob many times, and i've never seen him play anything but double bass.
Jazz musicians use standarrd notation charts. I've never even heard of a jazz double bassist who used tabs for anything. How can you read note duration with tabs? Standard motation is not that hard to learn. Really, you can teach yoursellf to read music.and you'll always be glad you did.
lol
I've been reading music since birth:O
I'm actually having a hard time with the tabs but I assume they are the suggested fingerings for the bass guitar and so I'm trudging through them going up the neck in closed position unlike you would do on the double bass.
I would love to see tabs for the DB though. I'm going through some Ron Carter transcriptions and you can see how he uses open strings and thumb pos for certain licks.
It would be very helpful if this book had tabs/fingerings.
For example some of the early exercises on open chord voicings are easy on bass guitar but pretty advanced for DB
Last edited by Bobsax; 11-01-2014 at 12:20 PM.
II-V7 Progression (page88) - Exercise
II-V7 Progression (page 87) - Exercise
II-V7 Progression (page 86) - Exercise
Oh, oh, sorry. I completely misunderstood where you were coming from there. Your concern is fingering, not reading. I think you just learn your instrument and find out what works for you. Across the strings, up the strings, whatever. I've never heard of tabs for double bass, though. There are names for various hand positions, but they vary with whose system you're using. Maybe others know of bass line transcriptions that include positions. I'm sorry, I don't, but I'd like to know of them, too.
Last edited by nimbleswitch; 11-03-2014 at 04:55 PM.
Additional backing tracks for Todd Coolman's book "The Bottom Line (1990), not on the accompanying CD.
[REVISED: 2014-11-22:
Todd Coolman (7)
Last edited by nimbleswitch; 11-25-2014 at 12:18 PM.
These are backing tracks for the examples and exercises in Jim Stinnett's book, "Creating Walking Bass Lines" (1988), which did not come with a CD.
[REVISED: 2015-3-9]
Jim Stinnett (19)
Last edited by nimbleswitch; 03-09-2015 at 10:08 AM. Reason: Redesign & corrections
Wow
Again. great work on these book exercises.
Thanks Jack
Bookmarks