00:00 World a Music - Ini Kamoze 00:14 Revolution - Dennis Brown 00:26 Sitting and watching - Dennis Brown 00:37 General Penitentiary - Black Uhuru 00:48 Guess who´s coming to dinner - Black Uhuru 01:03 Merry go round - Junior Delgado 01:16 Hold on to what you´ve got - Dennis Brown 01:29 Love and devotion - Jimmy Riley 01:41 Go away dream -The Tamlins ?¿ 02:03 In and out of love - Bitty McLean 02:28 Hail mi Idren - Ini Kamoze 02:53 Wailing Souls - Sweet Sugar Plum Plum 03:07 African Free Up- Linval Thompson 03:22 Roots Dub - Sly & Roobie 03:47 Bitter Blood - The Revolutionaries 04:07 Rock music - Sly & Robbie 04:21 Baltimore - The Tamlins
This is one of my fave Robbie basslines: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-CxUpb7OjEog.html I do my best with it, singing it while playing it. Both his line for the verse and the chorus are WIKKED!
Brilliant list. Dont forget Bob Marleys concrete jungle, stir it up and punky reggae party. All played when the regular bassist, Aston familyman Barrett (Robbie's teacher and mentor), was away.
This is cool,i remember listening to your bass covers 10 years ago and thinking,man this is the greatest thing.Now am here,playing bass,my favourite is the reggae basslines.Thanks to Family man,and you!
A list of great Robbie Shakespeare bass lines would be inexhaustible and strictly sujective.. The track tevolution from Dennis Brown and the 2 others from Black Uhuru are the one's i grew up listening to in the 80s and they're still so much more...Thanks for the vid👍
Robbie almost always uses one bassline for the verse and another for the chorus. He also often adds still another bassline for the intro. Mistah Shakespeare naw easy!
Indeed..Creative. Sort of reminds me of Ronnie Stepper McQueen' various basslines on the Steel Pulse track " Biko's Kindred Lament" on their 1979 album Tribute to the Martyrs.
Maximum respect teacher, I could play the bass lines of the 2 songs from the iconic Eart & Stone production, Dont Let Them Fool You and Thats The Way You Feel.
I have a friend who has been playing drums all his life, and I tried to introduce him to roots reggae drum styles, and he can't even get it at all. He tried playing along but he results back to that American style rhythm.
Ne pas oublier:Crystal ball,poor man feel it...(peter tosh);tell you're sorry,sad to know...(Gregory isaac)& more...Thanks Robby,RIP,God bless you...New caledonia vibes
Fabulous: hope we get a LLoyd Parks collection one day, some great albums there from producer Prince Tony Robinson Dread locks Dread ect, Then there is of course Two seven Clash album by Culture
Nice to see you again ! I learned many reggae songs on bass because of you. Do you play always through ampeg amps ? Thank you for sharing your passion with us ! ;-)
Obviously not the original, but there is a dub version by Scientist, called "Coxsone feel this one" ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-YPFpDOhpe4M.html EDIT: Baltimore - The Tamlins (see complete list below)
Bonjour Alain,merci beaucoup pour ton contenu ! Serait il possible de discuter en privé par mail ? je cherche des renseignements sur la basse reggae (réglages basse,réglages ampli etc...) ancien guitariste dans le reggae,je prends la place du bassiste pour un futur projet,cette période de confinement me permet de bosser 😊 Je joue sur une fender jazz bass mexico 4 cordes(pas encore de filets plats,elles sont chez mon luthier ),micros Crel,un ampli combo fender rumble 100w en attendant mieux. Merci,musicalement Arthur
Bonjour, merci! Réglage c'est toujours un peu chercher, il faut un bonne balance entre les basses, mid et aigus. En general, augmenter les basses et diminuer les aigus. Chaque basse est différent, donc il n'y a pas de réglage fixe.
@@ALIONBASS Oui c'est ce que je me dis aussi,il y a de nombreux paramètres ... Je me sers uniquement du micro manche,l'autre est coupé. Tu laisse la tonalité ouverte ou fermée ? Merci 👍
@@privatarthur7907 Ca depend, pour enregistrer je laisse la tonalité ouverte. En live je la mets au milieu, mais jamais completement fermee. Mais c'est une preference personnel.
Alain il y'a un truc bizarre a 1:41, la ligne de basse ça a l'air effectivement d'être The Tamlins mais le reste c'est "Games With Love" de Bitty McLean. Sinon super liste !
I think a 4-string is best to start with. 5-string is good for songs in keys below E, or to have more flexibility on your left hand playing position, or just to have extra (low) notes available in any key you're playing in.
Hi strictlyUnderg0und, ive played in a few bands and groups, mainly reggae. I only play 4 string, tried 5 and sold it after about 5 months as spent most of my time with my thumb resting o the B and not really playing it. The neck on a 5 is wider and generally 5’s are slightly heavier. Ive never been questioned about playing 4 instead of 5, and depending what Front of house speakers are being used have found that the low B can get lost in the mix. Try a 4, try a 5 and see what you like but more important that you work on your timing and swing than whether you play 4 or 5. 👍🏻
Great job. One of the greatest bass slides of all time right here ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-y8WezI_UlFY.html courtesy of Mr. Shakespeare