Idk how many injuries I have listening to blink 182 while skateboarding down various hills and what not but I can say looking back it was well worth it 👍. Thank you blink for all the memories.
The bass line is incredibly incredibly similar to the guitar part of Always. I don’t know the correct words for what I’m trying to say. I’m a drummer. I don’t even know how to read music. I just hit things with sticks.
The only thing I know is he has used a Fender Precision bass for mostly everything after Dude Ranch. I'm guessing now but I think he uses Ampeg amps. I know he uses Ernie Ball Slinky's. And his sound is heavily compressed, but to get that particular sound you'd have to invest in a high quality rack compressor which really isn't worth the price unless you're recording an album so you can probably get away with an affordable compressor pedal like the MXR M87 or something similar.
Sorry I don't have that one but you can find the entire list of songs and download each track here: blink182chile.com/articulo/especial-descarga-los-masterfiles-de-20-canciones-de-blink-182-44-y-angels-and-airwaves
Mind you, he had cancer and didn’t play for nearly 2 years. So obviously he isn’t going to play exactly like this considering he was rusty at the time.
This is definitely Mark playing. It's just that he never played the song like this again after playing it like this for the studio version. He plays a simpler version of it. I wish he'd play it always like this, and to be honest, it's not that hard to play it and sing at the same time.
There are more cuts in this than all the emo goth teens wrists in the planet....Im surprised he can play anything live at all when can't play 3 notes without needing an edit in the studio
That's true to almost any studio recording. I play bass myself, and in the studio we punch-in a lot of parts, sometimes even copy the ones played - just so it sounds better. Doesn't mean I cannot play my parts live, it's just studio setting where you want everything to sound to the point, with maybe only slight deviations
lmao, listen to you. Mr. Recording Professional. Like you've ever spent time in a professional recording environment. Your little $600 demo that you recorded in some dude's basement studio doesn't count.
@@thumplife792 most of the time it wont even be the artists choice, it Will be the producer editing everything in the end or even the guy mastering ( happened to me) my producer send in a version and the máster guy asked for the other cuts to edit further for whatever reason