Get the FREE ultimate 5-minute fingerstyle workout here: www.patreon.com/posts/93-1-5-minute-98605814
@BX2ABT9 ай бұрын
This is not honest: its free only if you sign up for Patreon and give them your credit card details. Sorry, but I'll pass then.
@WartornNOR9 ай бұрын
@@BX2ABT Ah, so that's what he means by free... A free 7-day "trial". Not a free workout.
@BX2ABT9 ай бұрын
@@WartornNOR I get that he needs to finance his bass life by selling lessons, and I am willing to pay for stuff that is useful to me. But if I go to COSTCO I also don't have to pull out my credit card for every food stand cooking up something to entice me to buy more at the store. Just take a bite and if you like it you will buy a dozen (because it is COSTCO, so you don't buy one 😀). Just saying.
@phosphorous36917 күн бұрын
Absolute joke. Shame on you. How many people have you put off buying products and genuinely wanting to support you by this blatant lie.
@CharlesBerthoud9 ай бұрын
These are the EXACT same bass lines that fixed my fingerstyle technique too 🤯
@JustThatGuyCaleb9 ай бұрын
Wow what a coincidence 😮
@cartong88049 ай бұрын
Guys i'm starting to think that the mastermind behind bass camp MIGHT be Danny Sapko
@Maqu1nola9 ай бұрын
Never get tired of the Charles' Alter Ego system
@DesignerBerg9 ай бұрын
Oh my god. I LOL’ed AGAIN.
@sschreib9 ай бұрын
You two should bass battle.
@Jwilly0229 ай бұрын
C'mon Girl is actually a really underrated song, glad to it getting some recognition
@judowrestlerka9 ай бұрын
Geezer Butler, Steve Harris and Geddy Lee were my initiation to the bass as an instrument with its own distinct voice in an ensemble. After them I really started to get into John Taylor and Mick Karn of Duran Duran and Japan, respectively. These 5 are some HEAVY HITTERS and with a topping of Tony Franklin I was hooked.
@jea7839 ай бұрын
You enjoy Iron Maiden ? Listen to the basslines on this album ; kzbin.info/www/bejne/lWnIm4mkYtqBbac
@Longplay_Games9 ай бұрын
Duran Duran's basslines are so underappreciated. The bass is practically mixed out of a lot of their albums, too.
@josephperreault9978 ай бұрын
There are so many others but your list of favorites is good
@anandunnikrishnan41409 ай бұрын
Hey Charles Idk if you'll see my comment but I'm a huge huge fan of you , I've been watching bass content for almost 3 years and last year I bought my very first bass after some help from my guitarist friends I've been taking guitar lessons from various teachers and this channel in particular has helped a lot I hope to be as great as you one day maybe even jam with you in the future
@BassCampOfficial9 ай бұрын
That's awesome to hear and congrats on getting your first bass!! 🔥🔥
@troyiwaskow24359 ай бұрын
I played in a Maiden tribute band years ago and yes Run To The Hills is brutal. We also had a tendency to play about 10 bpm faster live and I could not wait to be finished that song!!!
@arialrus8 ай бұрын
I think Fortunes of War is more brutal than Run to the Hiils
@TexturaI5 ай бұрын
I always sucked at playing it until I discovered playing lightly. My mind was blown
@jamesadamgleason94715 ай бұрын
Flubbed it
@thebushmaster05449 ай бұрын
this is exactly what i need! ive been practicing yyz a lot and ive just kinda been doing everything at 50% to get better lmao! thanks a lot ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤
@BassCampOfficial9 ай бұрын
That's another great fingerstyle workout 🔥
@the_phobia9 ай бұрын
What most people don't realize is that 10000 practice means 10000 hours of conscious, analytical, intentional practice where you try to understand the full aspect of what you're doing. Not just mindlessly playing the same thing over and over. Your videos really instill that which is awesome
@gssong71119 ай бұрын
if you play 10,000 hours of gigs, you can get really good...all without practicing.
@KindredBrujah9 ай бұрын
Both can work. You'll make more gains with the right proactive learning, but if you're setting your bar too high, you might not do as well as just trying stuff until you nail it.
@lucianogoyenechea87049 ай бұрын
@@gssong7111 thats definitely NOT true
@nathanwahl92248 ай бұрын
"Play" is an integral part of the learning process for most adult learner styles. For some it is absolutely essential.
@indigo_05 ай бұрын
@@gssong7111 but what do i do if im fourteeeen :(
@Kreln12219 ай бұрын
*While it isn't the traditional two finger technique, (as derived from playing vertically orientated acoustic upright Double-Bass Viols), that Steve Harris uses..., for that Maidenesque style triplet gallop rhythm, I've always just used the three finger style that players such as Billy Sheehan and John Myung are noted for. For a very fast gallop triplet like that, it's just more efficient, with the work and speed of the three fingers used evenly distributed three ways. When only using two fingers, even if you only use alternate picking the entire time, alternating the downbeat back and forth between the two fingers, then each of the two fingers will have to do 50% of the overall work and speed instead of only 33.33% of it. And if you do it **_"Steve Harris two finger style",_** as displayed in the video, then one finger will have to do twice the work and speed of the other, with one finger doing 66.66% of the work and speed, and the other only doing 33.33%.* *Don't get me wrong... Who am I to argue with the greatness that is Steve Harris? Back in the 80's, it was bands like Maiden, Priest, Sabbath, RUSH, etc..., that made me want to play guitar and bass in the first place... So..., I guess the best approach is to go ahead and woodshed on the original techniques used by these truly great original artists..., but to also use their amazing music to work on other techniques as well. A great example of this is to not only play using fingerstyle, but to also be able to play with a pick. I remember an interview once with John Paul Jones, and he mentioned that while fingerstyle was generally his preference when playing bass, if either he or the producer felt that that the dynamics and timbre of a pick suited a composition better, then he would use a pick. He then mentioned the Zeppelin tune **_D'yer Mak'er_** as a good example of that.*
@vegetoultrainstinct7079 ай бұрын
i've been racking notes without even thinking of it for a while and i instantly got a more sexy sound as soon as i forced myself to play correct alternate fingerstyle, thank you man !
@mojorisin20499 ай бұрын
For those who want more advanced bass lines to work what Charles shows in the video : - Stamina and fast fingerstyle practice : Dean town - Vulfpeck - Fast octaves : River people - Jaco Pastorius
@kailoswift83089 ай бұрын
Something that really helped me with my technique was playing Godzilla by blue oyster cult. one time I had a jam session with my uncle and he gave me that song to learn and ofc I learned it but I was adding some cool fancy licks that only made the song more complicated. I was obsessed with playing super complicated basslines and being the spotlight but my uncle told me something that changed my playing which was that nobody cares about how fancy I am and the only thing i should worry about is getting the gig which would help me realize that the bass can be as complicated as you want as long as you keep a solid foundation. up until that point, I took a melodic approach to bass but then after I jammed with my uncle I realized that i needed to chill and I began to be more rhythmic and now I play in a church band where I stick to rhythm and people are always complimenting my ability to hold that foundation.
@timtoado1069 ай бұрын
I shouldn't name names but I think they can take it... Paul McCartney, John Entwistle, Bruce Thomas and Graham Maby absolutely ruined me as a bass player for years and years because I wanted to do what they were doing. I thought I could and should run before I could walk, so to speak.
@vicenteraira9 ай бұрын
You are such a liar, how could you be jamming with your uncle and on Law's crew at the same time, uh, Bepo?
@kailoswift83089 ай бұрын
@@vicenteraira it was a long time ago. Before my life of piracy
@buckemptier9 ай бұрын
@@timtoado106really, those are your examples of guys who play superfluous bass lines? Maybe Entwhistle, but Paul McCartney? Bruce Thomas? Oh wait a minute, you must be British. Fair enough.
@stephencooney60759 ай бұрын
Took me a few tries, but I was able to play the basslines to completion. I love both your channels, you are very inspiring! I am very thankful for this BassCamp channel, I love that you get straight to the point with the exercises/transcriptions. I started on the tapping one and Classical Thump not too long ago, they have been super helpful in refining my technique. I'll be adding this as well to clean up and speed up my fingerstyle. Thank you so much for what you do, Charles!
@SurfandSand8089 ай бұрын
I’ll definitely consider becoming a paid member after I finish the lessons I bought from another KZbinr. I’ve wanted to learn exercises using songs I can hear and play normally. This is the exact format I’ve been looking for. I used to think that maybe your exercises might be too advanced, but maybe they’re starting to become within reach. Thanks for the great lessons!
@LorenzoDeLeon9 ай бұрын
My top 4 fingerstyle workout basslines : - Vulfpeck - Dean Town - Weather Report - river people - ToP - what is hip ? - Muse - Hysteria If you can play these 4 tracks clean, at tempo, in a row, you can say your fingerstyle game is on point and you got serious stamina my friend (to this day, I can’t). Thx for the Steve Harris lead, as a funk/ soul bassist I never really listened to big rock basslines, I should give it a try
@bonjournaste9 ай бұрын
Accenting Iron Maiden gallop with third finger vs index finder will give you that more lopey, percussive attach. 121, 121, 121, is fine, def a smoother, more consistent tone, but 323, 323, 323 is gives you a more accented attack.. He's playing two finger, but the ring finger is sort of along for the ride with middle finger (kind of a flipper style) , I think this is what gives you some additional mass/momentum that helps with the attack, and gives it that lumpy, galloping feel!
@henrihell9 ай бұрын
I just use 3 fingers for fast gallops. Index always on the first downbeat then I "rake" through the next 3 notes starting with the ring finger. Makes the whole thing into a single wave-like movement, rather than having to pick each note separately.
@tomilchik9 ай бұрын
Same here. Rarely use all three; but gallop-wave is when I find it most useful
@keanu_yves9 ай бұрын
It's much simpler and more comfortable this way...
@johalareewi9 ай бұрын
Me too. Athough it gets more interesting when you have to change string mid gallop.
@tomilchik9 ай бұрын
@@johalareewi if you mean mid-three: that’s wicked :) If you mean three on one - skip - another: I deal with it by always playing the “starter one” with ring. Since it comes 1st - it’s free to skip to another string by the time mid-index are done
@tomilchik9 ай бұрын
…I see what you mean! It’s always mid-3 :) Yeah… Well - skipping is anyway part of my tech/speed drills, ever since I realized that it’s what’s likely to trip me up most of time
@markdavis47549 ай бұрын
If your working out a song that is complex and fast. I find it a massive help to explore all the fingering possibility. I made the mistake of working out Donna Lee without doing this and now I have to reprogram my muscle memory. I find this topic hardly ever covered. And yes including the plucking hand too.
@mirak639 ай бұрын
The Gallop on Caught Somewhere In Time is the hardest because the song is very long, and if i didn't practice Maiden regularly I will need to simplify with half notes or I cramp. Killers, Only The Good Die Young are slightly harder than Run To The Hills. River People by Jaco is a technic fixer i think.
@banditbiker51909 ай бұрын
I've been practicing Billy Sheehan style 3 finger technique. For 16th note spam Ive been doing Billy idol white wedding. For endurance I've been doing Sade hang on to your love and for gallops I've been practicing heart barracuda in both alternate finger and 3 finger styles... We have similar approaches which is cool
@Sebastian_Mroczek6 ай бұрын
I am pushing myself to go through the Run to the Hills section at 85% speed... Imagine Steve is in his 60s and can still do it for hours and at the speed that I cannot even match yet! WHAT A LEGEND!! p.s. whats helping me to beat the speed barriers is trying to be as relaxed as possible.
@BassByTheBay9 ай бұрын
"What Is Hip?" - Tower of Power
@MrSkeptik-z5r9 ай бұрын
As long as I gets my little golden shower😇
@Slamminbassplayer6 ай бұрын
Good call. If you can't play those 16ths evenly, it ain't gonna groove! Not to mention the skips up to D and C# can get a lil sloppay at the end of the night!
@flugkiller61629 ай бұрын
Great examples, gonna try practicing these later. Donna Lee was what personally made me improve my fingerstyle the most (so far), especially trying to get the phrasing right at higher tempos.
@stuartcole90959 ай бұрын
Dude… Flea’s crazy fast finger style playing really throws me off as well. The string skipping in “Right on Time” really gave me fits when I first learned it.
@davidg99279 ай бұрын
This is gold for bassists of any level … a good refreshers for advanced players too! 😊
@vitorrigoni9 ай бұрын
Two lines that dramatically improved my fingerstyle technique were - Soul with a capital S (Tower of Power) - Power (Helloween) Maintaining consistency after 5 minutes playing 16th notes swapping strings non-stop is not as easy as it may seem. Great video👍🏻👍🏻
@nealnerdypants36899 ай бұрын
Great selections to improve or refine fingerstyle technique, whether you're starting out or dusting off the cobwebs and jumping back in. "C'mon Girl" is a good one I'll incorporate into my warmup routine. Another song I think is good to help fix, improve, or refine fingerstyle technique, increase speed/dexterity is "Root" by The Deftones. (RIP Chi Cheng). I felt so accomplished as a teen starting out when I could finally play it without slipping. 30 years later, and I still use it as part of my warmup routine. That song is a big reason my technique got cleaner and less sloppy.
@nicoloderossi38889 ай бұрын
You should have talked also about that one bridge in run to the hills where the bass goes a little bit in flamenco mode at the speed of light after having played the rest of the song until that point🥲 That's a killer lick
@marcblum53486 ай бұрын
Jamiroquai - Canned Heat (Live in Verona) -> working through that really pushed my abilities up, what makes it workable is that each groove is highly repetive, you do not have to struggle with tiny variations
@blaise19699 ай бұрын
I was surprised at Charles’ warning about raking. I thought the answer is to have your alternate plucking proficiency good enough for that whether the lead finger is 1 or 2 that you are consistent. Rather than avoiding raking which is honestly economy of movement, I’m trying to get good at leading from whichever finger will “land and lead” for the next alternate plucking run
@nicholasmaill95729 ай бұрын
This is what I've been taught as well.
@markdaniels71748 ай бұрын
Absolutely agree. Raking isn’t a “cop-out.” It can be an integral technique to use, to increase speed. (I’ve even heard other instructors call it “economy picking,” which gives it a loftier label than saying you’re “raking.”)
@KyleS.19878 ай бұрын
I picked up some good guidelines for when to rake and when to alternate from BassBuzz: -If string-crossing with even-numbered groups of notes like 2's or 4's, alternate; an even number of notes matches your even number of picking fingers -If string-crossing with odd-numbered groups of notes like 1's or 3's, it's often best to rake -Sometimes a bass line will require a mix of strict alternating for some passages and raking for others
@aaronperelmuter84338 ай бұрын
Ye but taking sounds like absolute crap in a line like the one presented here or something like What is Hip or just about ANY Jaco tune, for example.
@garetz20114 ай бұрын
I have a word to describe this selection: merciful! I spent years trying to play with three fingers. One day I moved to two and after another few years I noted I am almost 100% talentless!!! My 30 years old integral necked Ladessa is on its case since... 2020, waiting to be inherited. Double thumb, my last challenge, makes my thumb become red, purple, green and black everytime I try to do it for more than two weeks.
@glickmpb9 ай бұрын
"With great power comes great responsibility" - CB is leaps and bounds beyond MANY professionals and the fact that he teaches proves he has more to him than his talent. I could never say enough about him. Simply incredible!
@thalligator0169 ай бұрын
For gallops I always use three fingers, for me it's way more comfortable and sounds sick too
@garetz20114 ай бұрын
The same for me. In many songs, like Flight Of The Icarus, I was induced to believe that Harris used three fingers and the third noted was longer to give him time to restart the three notes burst. There was no youtube, no MP3, no Soundforge and even VCR's (for most people) in the 80's. I wasted years trying to play Rush songs using three fingers; only decades after I discovered he used to push and pull using his finger like a guitar pick. I didn't like Iron Maiden anyway. I believe steve harris plays with three fingers. Am I right? I won't check with google... who cares?
@jasoncherry34046 ай бұрын
That’s a great video with great information. As a beginner I struggle with my finger style and basic fundamentals. I travel for work a lot so my practice schedule sucks. When I come home after a week or two of traveling I fell like I’m starting all over again and it’s frustrating. Lessons like this really help to get me back on track with my practice. Thank you for the video.
@chivobass9 ай бұрын
I am so happy you picked "cmon girl" that song helped me a shit ton get my right hand in shape. Before that song came out it was the song "right on time" that helped me, but you get more of a break in that one lol
@BKF09 ай бұрын
Another Flea bassline that's similar to Cmon Girl is the chorus of Right On Time
@Kickbasser9 ай бұрын
You are the best Charles! ❤
@ironDsteele9 ай бұрын
Thanks for the video Charles. I try using the three finger picking style but all of your points still apply, the odd timing is just a bit more challenging.
@juansecar29 ай бұрын
Great examples dude. I'd just add one more, for an expert higher level, it's a line a play at least once a week, which is Kuru Speak Like a Child by the great John Francis Anthony Pastorius the 3rd. Cheers n peace!
@adamattilatoth40369 ай бұрын
Great video, just as always! I just want to point out that the tabs for "Run To The Hills" are often off from what you are playing. It's not a big deal and I'm not sure if it's important to fix it, the video is amazing regardless, I just thought it might be helpful to tell you. Anyways, I love your content, you're one of my favourite musicians and also one of my main role models who inspired me to play bass.
@unclecrunch95819 ай бұрын
When I gallop, is employ my ring finger, and sweep those 3 fingers across the string, I find it easy to keep and even pace with the notes, and it's less exhausting.
@maxzero96479 ай бұрын
I'd be super interested to see your take on Clawhammer/Banjo style in non-Bluegrass styles like Nikko Whitworth used on Awakening by Unleash the Archers.
@johnmkmu9 ай бұрын
Three finger gallop!!!! First of all thank you; you are possibly the best bassist ever. I had similar music path but diverged toward guitar and song writing. Steve Harris was always a hero - and from him I learned to pluck with 3 fingers (and 4, but that is nearly impossible and never sounds good). I’m impressed you can even DO Harris with 2 fingers but it sounds weak and wrong. Has to be a strong 3 finger roll!!!
@katiebrandt98449 ай бұрын
I've been trying to play The Trooper forever! I prefer a pick, but maybe I will try more finger techniques.
@ShuKatashSam9 ай бұрын
Lighten up with the fingers hitting the strings and play with an amp/headphones. Practice 15-30 minutes a day for 2-3 weeks. It'll happen. After that, endurance building. 3 finger is the same. Then you can play extremely fast, but crossing over strings is harder with 3. 2 it is much easier.
@CrisMusiCanada9 ай бұрын
Dude, I truly love your videos and how simple you explain wicked bass techniques! Cheers
@ErikTeichmann8 ай бұрын
Thanks Charles -- bucking up and sticking to alternating fingers (no raking) really is helping me nail down a sixteenth-heavy song that I've been working on. Cheers!
@FantasyTom539 ай бұрын
Thanks for the great exercices, I'm stuggling a bit on canned heat to jump back on the lower string after the double octaves but it's fun and I'll eventually get there. Run to the hills is still too fast for me at the moment, I'd recommend Knights of sidonia by Muse to have kind of the same exercice but simpler and slower, I believe it's played with a pick but fingerstyle works too. Love your videos, keep on the great work!
@toreaunefjellstad9 ай бұрын
Whenever I've felt my stamina start slipping, I always come back to Iron Maiden's Powerslave album - if I can play it straight through in one go, I know I'm back in shape and ready to play. :)
@ScottHudson8 ай бұрын
Love your music and thanks for these informative technique videos! For the "Gallup" technique, why not use 3 fingers? What advantage or disadvantage would there be?
@mateuszstrybel83989 ай бұрын
As for me the biggest stamina effort was always IM - Losfer Words (Big 'Orra). One thing is that the tempo is insane, another is that bass plays all the time, no pauses almost, also it get a "solo" so to say at the and. Everything is so crazy in this instrumental piece...
@carlossotomurrugarra9 ай бұрын
Thank you a lot. Raking is so good until you want to really grow speed. I'm working on my alternate fingering, and the Peppers's line is easy in itself, but the trick is beating years of raking to change strings. Eternally grateful.
@X-EvilAsh9 ай бұрын
Canned heat, is such a great bassline. I played it everyday, along with some other jamiroquai basslines. And I noticed that after abit, I was able to play the bassline without my hand cramping up alot like it used too, and now I've noticed that I've gotten faster at playing other songs. I think it's Definitely helped alot!
@VINZVANGO9 ай бұрын
Recently joined, excited to elevate my bass technique!! ✨💪
@flucazade9 ай бұрын
Right on time was the flea tune that helped me get that octave playing down
@asafpelleh75949 ай бұрын
Thank you! You gave me more confidence and self esteem!
@Rellik1379 ай бұрын
Nice to see someone giving Stuart Zender some credit his basslines with Jamiroquai were phenomenal
@ronin61588 ай бұрын
PLEASE show more of what and how you are doing w your left hand; like barring vs fretting individual, using one finger shifting to 2 strings on same fret vs two fingers one on each string, etc. Apparently all utub bass teachers seem to think we know this, but we dont!
@rientsdijkstra42669 ай бұрын
Next level: "Come on come over" by Jaco Pastorius! Also: many bass lines by Joe Dart of Vulfpeck and Francis Rocco Prestia from Tower of Power (What is Hip, f.i.).
@andrewmoyle46059 ай бұрын
C’mon girl and Right on Time were my go to songs for practice
@ianrichter37657 ай бұрын
As a teen metal head my bassists favourite bassist was Steve Harris and we would run through Maiden song after Maiden song. Now that I play bass instead of drums, my respect for my former bassist has grown immensely. Not that it was lacking before, he was incredible!
@SH77-J9 ай бұрын
galopping style is more easier to play with a 3-finger technic in direction 1-3-2 (index-ring-middlefinger) fast songs like run to the hills or the trooper from maiden are easy to play with this technic. direction can also be changed to 1-3-2-1-2-3 e.g. a little practice everyday and it works
@actaeon64637 ай бұрын
Disciplined use of alternating fingers isn't just for 16th note runs -- It's a good idea to do it all the time, and only rarely deviate. One reason is that it will vastly improve your ability to stay on tempo, since the first finger is always the downbeat and the second is always up. This will also bring structure structure to your sound. There is a slight difference in tone between a sting -pluked with the first finger and the second, and this difference is dramatically amplified when all the downbeats sound one way, and all the upbeats sound another. It's part of why repetition is so important in music.
@banditbiker51909 ай бұрын
Finally on my feed 4 days later. Even tho I pretty much only watch bass content... W/e 🤷🏾♂️
@EksBoi9 ай бұрын
amazing man keep like this thanks
@BassCampOfficial9 ай бұрын
👏🏻🥇
@Nononon12359 ай бұрын
another one that helped me heaps was dean town
@gracethompson42379 ай бұрын
This is so helpful - thank you!
@mdue729 ай бұрын
Great seing Charles doing lessons, the man's a bass beast 👍
@doncurtis56549 ай бұрын
Always great lessons and advice
@NelsonMontana12347 ай бұрын
Yep, Come On Girl is overlooked as demonstrating some pretty impressive right hand technique from Flea. (There's another tune where he showcases quick fingering in the right hand but the title escapes me. Anyone?)
@mohjaiswal57739 ай бұрын
just what i needed in my next steps of learning bass, thanks BassCamp!
@stephenbingham59359 ай бұрын
Thanks Charles. I am working on the Chilli Peppers song right now. Listening to your intro enabled me to see a flaw in my finger picking. My fingers trip over each other at times and I never realized why. It is swearingly frustrating to arrest and redirect the anarchy of said fingers and this is eye and ear opening. l love your playing and am going to do some of your other vids. Cheers. PS. Definitely cutting back on raking. Unless OK.
@McLovin2019 ай бұрын
Love Iron Maiden! Let's goooo!
@rallypoint19 ай бұрын
Playing Run to the Hills sitting down makes my hand fatigue since the wrist is bent. Standing up…lots better! Have fun while playing that followed by Caught Somewhere in Time….brutal!!!!🥵
@thadrin9 ай бұрын
I'll give this stuff a try later when I have time. As a huge fan of Steve Harris I've been trying to master "The Trooper" for years, as it was in a tab book I bought when I first picked up a bass. I cannot QUITE get the tempo, or that intro.
@orintrost86119 ай бұрын
awesóme video, love all songs.. i play rtth's gallopping with three fingers always starting with ringfinger and the fast quadrupel part i play even with four fingers, which took me long to practise, but it sounds better than ripping through with two.. i also never start with the indexfinger, i play my fingers right to left..
@buckemptier9 ай бұрын
Hey, so do I. I never realized it was unusual. I don't play with 3 fingers though, never tried it.
@cosmicpanda70439 ай бұрын
While I do agree that raking can become a crutch, if you develop good finger independence and control you can circumvent the problem of messing up the accents. It shouldn't be used all the time, but it's still an important technique to have; especially on fast descending lines
@iFunktion9 ай бұрын
This is a game changer of a post, thank you very much.
@SuperLuckyCat77 ай бұрын
More and more impressed by Yr work over the years 🏆 Keep 'em comin' 🍀
@SevenStarBricks9 ай бұрын
My favorite Flea bassline ever is "Soul to Squeeze." Such a great song, and the bass just carries it the whole way. And, it's almost all fingered.Got to see him play it live a few years ago, third row back right in front of him in Charlotte, NC. So good.
@DenverStarkey9 ай бұрын
i do gallops startinf with my middle finger , usually the harris gallops starts with an 8th note then goes into 16th note tripplets , so starting on the middle finger , it jsut falls into a natural gallop for me. on rare occasions haris has a gallow that has not 8th note start up note , it just goes into triplets , in these instances i'll start with my index finger. from time to time when i ahven't played in a while , i'll revert back to doing timed three finger triplets like i did when i first srtated learning bass. honestly you only need to fix bad habbits with a finger style you don't have to play your hand like a text book example of playing what maters mroe than any thing is if the music sound right when you pay it. if it doesn't sound right ... then there's something you got to work on.
@BenjaminSchiltzVlogs6 ай бұрын
I was just about to upgrade the patreon but when someone says something is free and it really isn't I tend to not give my money to dishonest people. Love your stuff and I should upgrade regardless, but for me it always comes down to the principle.
@BassCampOfficial6 ай бұрын
Hi Benjamin - just want to make sure that you could see the free trial option on the Patreon page? You can get a 7-day free trial of the Patreon gold membership which will allow you to download the exercise I was referring to for free. I mentioned it a couple of times later in the video but I can see why there might have been a misunderstanding.
@JasonLuther19 ай бұрын
Perfect exercise. Thanks Charles
@berniespy9 ай бұрын
I’m so keen to learn these!
@MotoMarios5 ай бұрын
Disco Ulysses by Vulfpeck You To Me Are Everything by The Real Thing Lessons To Love by Level 42 Love Foolosophy by jamiroquai This is my "nightmare" exercise song list
@RitchieRosson6 ай бұрын
I like that you seem less full of yourself now. Great video.
@ironsteve6669 ай бұрын
Great Steve Harris! I wait so for this on your Channel! Thank u!
@Dark-Sky-Park27 күн бұрын
Great choices! I can also recommend the torture that is Hit Me With Your Rhythm Stick.
@rafalzubek27889 ай бұрын
I play RTH gallop with three fingers😎and it works perfect.cheers Up the Irons😎
@raymondsurinck73027 ай бұрын
I’ve got one for you: the inimitable John Paul Jones, and his bassline for “Reptiles”, by Them Crooked Vultures. Excellent finger work on that song!
@joshl.89509 ай бұрын
One thing that helped me... more volume... less forcing. I have always had to play bass in tiny upstairs apartments and could never play loud so I couldn't hear myself. I had to pick harder to compensate. Once I could play with volume later in life, I instantly had no problem finger picking runs like the middle of Number of the Beast for example. I think headphones could also be an alternative to volume if that's an option you have. This is just what I noticed for me personally, not something I am saying will help you. ;) TLDR Being able to hear the bass helps
@jonthecomposer9 ай бұрын
I'm old, diabetic, have finger tip feeling loss, get occasional musician's cramp, and have carpal tunnel, but have played for over 30 years. Any more, if I have to go really fast, I just switch to picking with my thumb (like the 16ths under the solo of Crazy Train). Granted, I know this is for helping those who are healthy, and it's great advice! I only wish I could get the days back when I didn't feel like my hands were made of concrete! lol At least I can sequence if I absolutely just can't play the line. However, I think I'm going to start trying these exercises so I can get a bit more of a stable practice routine going again. I used to be really into Flea, Jaco, and basically anything cool and/or funky. And if all else fails, I do know a LOT about theory, music writing, songwriting, and what all goes into effective music (from production to playing and 'space," etc.). So that's cool to be able to fall back on. Regardless, I really love how you present things, your playing abilities AND your musical/interpretive abilities. You're a great resource for those of us who appreciate virtuosity and practical approach!!!
@RealGengarTV9 ай бұрын
Carpal tunnels a bitch man 😩 my sympathies my dude
@bukman669 ай бұрын
It's cool that you employed the greatest bassist of our modern era. I hope you're paying Charles as much as he deserves.
@exnikos9 ай бұрын
Thanks for the video
@webpano03697 ай бұрын
Tubes l'un des meilleurs bassistes dans le monde je ne comprends pas l'anglais mais tes vidéo sont fantastiques depuis l'Afrique
@davidgiloliva64639 ай бұрын
Nice lesson. Thank you! Nevertheless, I don't agree with what you say about raking. Maybe is not for every situation, but it's definitely not a crutch.
@glaciore9 ай бұрын
Thanks for video ❤👍
@4767Seeker7 ай бұрын
Usually I play Harris with three fingers..😳 But what was really hard when I started playing was "LA Woman" by the Doors. Give it a try...!!
@JavelinGuitars9 ай бұрын
i just ring-middle-index'ed my way through iron maiden
@riffgroove9 ай бұрын
Right? The three finger gallop is the ONLY way to play Maiden songs.
@jezarnold11069 ай бұрын
Same here, John Entwistle style👍
@MrClassicmetal9 ай бұрын
@@riffgroove Not for Harris though...🙂
@robertpotter83639 ай бұрын
Nor me.
@pauloviniciosappelt97899 ай бұрын
@@riffgroove Steve Harris surely disagrees with you, as he plays it with 2 fingers
@jessejordache18697 ай бұрын
I was raised playing Steve Harris basslines, and I reached adulthood with really fast fingers and really good endurance. But I didn't understand that the bass is basically a rhythm instrument, and as far as basic things like sliding, it took forEVER for it to fit into my bag of tricks. It took forever for me to have a bag of tricks at all. But yeah, for people learning the bass in the other order, Harris is great for building up your speed/stamina.
@brentsnoddy19518 ай бұрын
As a former live cover band in the 80's, yep we did a lot of Maiden covers and I am ashamed to admit that I found the "gallop" bass using three fingers. mi-ba I guess I fall into the realm of cheaters or just bad players. Thanks for the coverage of that technique. I guess I will have a harder time with teaching an old dog a new trick but I will give it at try. Thanks again!