Hey thanks for covering this and please please do the other song also called “ከምን ነፃ ልውጣ" i really need that if you don’t mind i know i request too many but i really appreciate you
I do but not that good. There are some covers I did that have some slaps. Check this out where I struggle: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-jeteszwAbuM.html
@@girmaybass68 Music with slapping bassline are a few in our country. I think it is the highest level of bass playing and require a real bassist to play in arrangement.
@@lealemfeleke Fasil Wuhib is outstanding on this. Also there are lots others that are really good. There is a guy who sings and plays bass who does slap too. I know there is a young musician in his early 20s that is kind of like Marcus Miller. Sorry I do not remember the names.
@@girmaybass68 You're right. The bassist and the singer is Zewudu Bekele. I often think that it must be difficult to sing and play bass at the same time, but he does it so well. I always wonder on his talent. The other bassist you mentioned "Young" is Bereket Abebe. He has several releases on the social media, but I'm not certain if he is involved in music arrangement. Above all, I appreciate utmost one like Fasil Wuhib who has made significant contributions in many music arrangement, and I greatly appreciate his efforts. One more question for you. How would you rank your favorite three bassists (Fasil, Henok, and Geovanni)?
I always thought of the trios as unique bassists in their own right because each bassist has different style, sound. I never ranked them. There was a time when I said "sounds like Giovanni" or "Fasil" or "Henock". But if I were to categorize them, Henock is more modern, jazzy, and almost always uses six string bass; whereas Giovanni is more traditional and uses four string bass. But if I was to pick ONLY one bassist to do Ethiopian music record, I would go with Fasil.