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Jamerson's Stupidly Simple Exercise (for Killer Bass Lines) 

BassBuzz
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👉 My full beginner bass course: yeah.bassbuzz.com/jamerson
James Jamerson used THIS exercise as a cheat code to create hit after hit bass line - lemme show you how to use it to write your own bangin’ bass lines in ANY style of music.
Free PDF with the exercise in every key - www.bassbuzz.com/go/jamerson-...
Bonus video with full exercise playthrough - • Jamerson's Stupidly Si...
Learn more about roots and fifths - • Bass Lines *Any Style*...
YOU have heard James Jamerson whether you know it or not - he was a legendary bassist who played on nearly every Motown record, and influenced every modern electric bassist who came later, from Paul McCartney to Robert DeLeo to Geddy Lee.
But Jamerson wasn’t flying blind - he developed an exercise to help him practice his “chromatic approach to bass playing”.
In this lesson, I’ll explain what the hell that means, and the three critical ingredients you need to take this from plain old finger workout to being a cheat code for legit bass lines in any style. You’ll learn how to:
- Make roots and fifths non-boring
- Use notes outside of the scale without creating chaos and destruction
- Play rhythms that sound more funky
- Identify which songs Jamerson played drunk
You read all the way through this video description… you must really like bass lessons. Subscribe so you don’t miss the next one - yeah.bassbuzz.com/subscribe
#JamesJamerson #BassBuzz

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17 ноя 2023

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Комментарии : 606   
@BassBuzz
@BassBuzz 6 месяцев назад
What’s your favorite James Jamerson bass line? I can’t get enough of “For Once in My Life,” plus trying to play it with one finger like Jamerson did is an insane speed workout.
@kennet7837
@kennet7837 6 месяцев назад
That one and "Darling Dear" by The Jackson 5.
@Wombatmetal
@Wombatmetal 6 месяцев назад
There are so many, I like You Can't Hurry Love.
@johng9393
@johng9393 6 месяцев назад
Signed sealed delivered. Wait a minute. Did Bob Babbitt play this track !! Nothing like the real thing
@allgems
@allgems 6 месяцев назад
They're all great! I like Gladys Knight's "Heard it through the Grapevine"
@mztbass
@mztbass 6 месяцев назад
Ain't no Mountain High Enough (Diana Ross's version) and What's Going On.
@BillonBass
@BillonBass 6 месяцев назад
Good lesson! I’d just add one thing. I was actually the touring bassist for The Miracles for some time and actually had Jamerson’s old chair. All of us old timer jazz bassists understood we have the entire chromatic scale available to us at any time over any chord used correctly. But what separated Jamerson indeed was his ability to intertwine his bass line with the melody. His musicality was off the charts. He was also blessed to have drummers like Benny Benjamin and Uriel Jones who gave him the space to play busier bass lines.
@susancallhutchison7986
@susancallhutchison7986 5 месяцев назад
Thank you so much for this insight! And that's an important point about the drummers I hadn't considered.
@stylesb959
@stylesb959 5 месяцев назад
You should have your own channel
@Vesper_Songs
@Vesper_Songs 4 месяца назад
This is awesome and gives me some ideas for writing some new material. Thank you!
@robertbasone3140
@robertbasone3140 4 месяца назад
Thanks for this!
@TheMangoBayBand
@TheMangoBayBand 2 месяца назад
I can so identify. My band leaders have given me such goofy face when I quietly tell them their favorite drummer is really not all that. It has only recently come to me how to work 'around' a drifting or tempo challenged drummer. I used to just ignore them and focus on my lead looking to support them and completely ignore the folly of the guy with the sticks. Now, I also consider what my wildman friend is doing to his skins while supporting my lead. I once, in my early career, had the pleasure of working with a former Motown drummer in the twilight of his career. He'd layback when I was pushing it and lead on when I was laying back. We had such harmony in our delivery of the rhythms. It was at my beginning and gave me such a great send-off into my musical venture....Thanks Ricky.
@__tastye
@__tastye 6 месяцев назад
The amount of work put into one video is so admirable. If only five people care, count me in. Thank you
@alexandraxxo68
@alexandraxxo68 6 месяцев назад
I'm in. this is great
@Brother_Dave
@Brother_Dave 6 месяцев назад
Actually, he said 5 people, and then 20%... So that one person, my friend, is you!
@d.t.3958
@d.t.3958 6 месяцев назад
I'm a carer too 😂
@paulsherman9144
@paulsherman9144 5 месяцев назад
Awesome video and part of what makes it so great is your charm and humor. Keep it up.
@macbird-lt8de
@macbird-lt8de 5 месяцев назад
nice backhand you did there lol
@cconsax
@cconsax 6 месяцев назад
No matter what key he was playing in, Jamerson always managed to play open strings, most often in the fills. Ya gotta admire that!
@PepitoMegaChocolato
@PepitoMegaChocolato 6 месяцев назад
He was a double bass player before using electric bass, I think that's where it came from
@thenoodleking
@thenoodleking 6 месяцев назад
Bass teacher in college was adamant about being comfortable doing this instead of just getting stuck in boxed positions.
@cnrbsmth
@cnrbsmth 6 месяцев назад
If you look at the Ron Carter approach to double bass you will see how he uses open strings in scale positions way up the neck, when they aren't at all necessary. It's a good little hack as it's a way to keep your intonation in check relative to the open strings. I'm certain Jameson had a similar approach.
@valesverga9
@valesverga9 6 месяцев назад
That's the one reason why I started playing motown songs, I needed to learn how to use open strings which was hard for me to learn when playing that type of music...
@teamclarkin4754
@teamclarkin4754 6 месяцев назад
I'm self-taught and use open strings as much as possible...before I'd heard of Mr. Jamerson. I'm a native Detroiter and grew up on Motown so I'm sure it leaked into my style. Thanks, Mr. J!
@andrewtjones2516
@andrewtjones2516 2 месяца назад
i liked the use of "only 5 people will care and maybe you are 20% of those 5." I wonder how many people got that!
@muchammadnurwibowowibi4580
@muchammadnurwibowowibi4580 9 дней назад
Only 1 😂
@The_paradox_of_Youth
@The_paradox_of_Youth 6 месяцев назад
One of the best teachers I've had the good fortune and pleasure to learn from in my lifetime. I recommend you to guitarists, pianists, and anyone interested in creating music. You've got a real talent for explaining concepts in such a way that the information isn't dumbed down or truncated, while making it easily understood by someone without prior musical knowledge or very little. What's more, you educate without an ego, being condescending, and root your lessons by putting everything in context and if needed exposition; while still being entertaining and compelling. Respect 👊🏼
@BassBuzz
@BassBuzz 6 месяцев назад
Thanks dude!
@OccamsEraserhead
@OccamsEraserhead 6 месяцев назад
Also the cuts and links are very slick. This stuff takes time to get right, so hope OP realises other educators can see the work that's been put in - esp as so few others bother.
@charlescdt6509
@charlescdt6509 6 месяцев назад
The "Hook" comes from the fact he played with One finger from his upright bass days. Dude was a BEAST.
@jasfan8247
@jasfan8247 6 месяцев назад
And never changed strings.....
@shanetrimble5179
@shanetrimble5179 5 месяцев назад
@@jasfan8247 lol why in the world would you ever change your strings if you don’t play w a pick. I’m 51 and I think I’ve bought maybe five sets of bass strings lmao
@jasfan8247
@jasfan8247 5 месяцев назад
​@@shanetrimble5179Haha, that's a lot! Sometimes cooking the strings is worth it instead of new after the trouble of taking off.
@shanetrimble5179
@shanetrimble5179 5 месяцев назад
@@jasfan8247 I have never cooked any ever. I just play them and never change them lol
@hellaZZZZ
@hellaZZZZ 4 месяца назад
Next time leave "the fact" out. "Came from his past playing of upright bass". 🙏🏾
@bassplayer2011ify
@bassplayer2011ify 4 месяца назад
Ok this blows my mind. Jameson wrote all these bass lines using power chords.
@charlieb8735
@charlieb8735 6 месяцев назад
This content is great. I picked up a good amount of this approach over the years learning stuff from RatM, STP, Zeppelin, Cream, Beatles, Rush and probably more than a few of songs the man himself played. I appreciate getting the history and concept and not just an exercise. After 17 years playing, a lot of covers learned and gigs played it’s a joy to be able to open up YT and have new ways to think about music handed to me
@setonhillstudios
@setonhillstudios 6 месяцев назад
Josh is always providing killer content! I'm waiting on the intermediate level for his course! That would be amazing
@MrMcSlack
@MrMcSlack 6 месяцев назад
Josh, Gotta say you’re by far the best bass instructor on RU-vid. Informative, entertaining, humorous, great production, and most importantly, to the point and without any blathering. I look forward to all your videos, but I’m saving this one at the top of my bass favorites. Keep up the good work.
@KeithCopeland778
@KeithCopeland778 4 месяца назад
Jamerson was a GENIUS who transferred his prowess on upright bass and changed the way the electric bass was played, recorded, and mixed, and is EASILY one of the most influential and legendary bassists in history!!! Thank you for another great and informative video!!!
@lewissennet7832
@lewissennet7832 6 месяцев назад
Your videos have taken me from being a complete beginner without being able to pluck properly to someone who can play and write his own basslines in 2 month. I am currently working on keeping locked in with the drummer, learning the fret notes and working on this exercise now aswell. Thank you. Without you I would be nothing. (sounds like a line from a romance but... Maybe it is)
@HCivicFg2
@HCivicFg2 3 месяца назад
How.... I've been RU-vid learning for years and I still feel like I'm stuck a step one...
@lewissennet7832
@lewissennet7832 3 месяца назад
@@HCivicFg2 I started with the basics. Making sure that I understand the instrument (not learning songs, instead learning techniques and theory) and then tried to write basic basslines. I then studied formulas and the such. I will reccomend you deliberately learn with a structure "today I will find videos that help me learn a funk formula - I will then write my own song using this funk formula" and so on. For example if you practice 3 times a week find a 5 minute practice routine video (watch a few and make your own) and then use that. RU-vid learning is not easy but I think you need to make it your own.
@lewissennet7832
@lewissennet7832 3 месяца назад
@@HCivicFg2 start with basics. Josh has a few good ordered beginner lessons. Then think "what I want to learn today". Don't forget to learn theory. Theory is important - learn your scales and how songs fit into scales - learn many different scales - the bluestone bass man is good for this- and then just practice
@richmondoffei4689
@richmondoffei4689 Месяц назад
I like your teaching but you talk too much in your videos
@lewissennet7832
@lewissennet7832 Месяц назад
@@richmondoffei4689 ??
@lilmelvin11
@lilmelvin11 6 месяцев назад
Thank you for paying homage to Jamie Jamerson! He had the perfect blend of feel/instinct and melody. I grew up with the Motown sound on the radio as a kid, and even after different journeys with different bands, I always come back to Jamie's Bass lines... Truly a Master. Thank you for explaining and elucidation.
@zombielynx21
@zombielynx21 6 месяцев назад
Drawing a line between Jamerson's stuff and Plush is helping me understand my taste better than I did previously. Thanks for wrinkling my brain.
@shaunmatthews4601
@shaunmatthews4601 4 месяца назад
As I was watching this lesson, I started hearing John Paul Jones playing “Ramble On” in my head :)
@jeremiahcillessen7666
@jeremiahcillessen7666 5 месяцев назад
I'm obsessed with Jamerson! What a genius. It's amazing he only used "the hook", index finger, most of the time. Your videos are outstanding. Your teaching style rocks, man. Seriously. Thanks for including the charts for the exercise.
@fuTuRoMix1
@fuTuRoMix1 6 месяцев назад
“For once in my life” is a symphony in itself from the absolute biggest influence to my playing. Well done for choosing it and recognising the pure genius of it. Subbed!
@MS-xf2zd
@MS-xf2zd 6 месяцев назад
I have to thank you, Josh, for MAKING IT FUN and so much more. Your friendliness and camaraderie inspire trust, and the little “CUT to HUMOR” breaks for just long enough after a moment of deep information are exactly what a brain needs in order to stay alert, (not glaze over in overwhelm), REST a moment, REFRESH and properly absorb that information. Superlearning, optimally paced, moving right along and leaving one brightened and encouraged with an appetite for more. I have only once or twice experienced a teacher like you. Perfect content, but most important of all, perfect delivery. Five stars, subscribed, liked and looking forward to more. Again, my deepest thanks for your thoughtful, diligent work.
@scottb5007
@scottb5007 6 месяцев назад
I've always been amazed by Jamerson's playing. Thanks for breaking down his formula!
@mp9228
@mp9228 Месяц назад
His line on Can’t Get Next To You is one of the best 1/2 chord vamps ever. In the book it says he wrote some of the basslines with just the vocal tracks down, and that he and I think Uriel Jones played for a body dancer at the time. This might have contributed to how prolific he was with melody and syncopation. The guy always had a bass in his hand, and it’s a shame his life was cut short from alcohol abuse. The medicine he was taking really messed with his ability to play, but he was writing some insane lines before he passed.
@menomossomusic
@menomossomusic Месяц назад
Igor’s Chromatic Exercise- Nice! I played through the entire book on RU-vid 5 years ago. I think it might be overpromising to say that this exercise will make you sound like Jamerson. The truth is that he was a jazz upright bassist at his core. He took his deep knowledge of American jazz music and brought it to the Fender bass, innovating the way it could be played. In contrast, Ron Carter would not make that transition. Carter was a purist of the double bass while Jamerson took the possibilities of this new instrument and revolutionized both instrument and genre. If Jamerson could describe what he did in that article you bought, I am willing to bet that’s what he would have said.
@StefanGBucher
@StefanGBucher 6 месяцев назад
Your lessons are so well thought out and presented! This is massively helpful! Thank you!
@pascalbedoire1244
@pascalbedoire1244 6 месяцев назад
You are an amazing teacher! I love how you explain everything with help from simple props, effects and edits!! It really helps me focus and understand
@charlesdigennaro4981
@charlesdigennaro4981 6 месяцев назад
James was the man! Loved his use of open string notes in his runs. Great lesson!!!
@derekseed
@derekseed 6 месяцев назад
Josh, your videos are among my favourite instructional videos on YT. I love what you are doing. Keep up the great work!
@jimjamjul
@jimjamjul 6 месяцев назад
Thanks for all the great videos Josh! I really appreciate everything you've done to help my bass progress in rhe past year. From the B2B course and all your youtube videos (including your older stuff on your other channel), it's really made me take off and start on the right foot 😀
@EpicBassTime_
@EpicBassTime_ 6 месяцев назад
Looking forward to this, I love BassBuzz so much we’re so lucky to have so great teachers like this and talking bass ❤️❤️❤️
@user-fu8mt2pd6e
@user-fu8mt2pd6e 6 месяцев назад
Welcome back Josh! I picked up your online courses start of the pandemic back in 2020 and thanks to you I found my passion playing bass and it has become one of my fav hobbies. Please keep the videos coming!@
@danielpeart6726
@danielpeart6726 6 месяцев назад
This information is great and all (more than appreciated), but can we appreciate the work that went into this video’s editing? The presentation is so satisfying.
@rockcatinc.4814
@rockcatinc.4814 2 месяца назад
I just wanted to say thanks for all these lessons and for giving us materials in a pdf format as well. Your comedic and sincere approach makes these vids fun, resourceful and very entertaining. I have been playing for years, but I am still always learning something from watching you. Thanks again!
@marshwetland3808
@marshwetland3808 6 месяцев назад
Thanks so much for this! I knew about the chromatic walking to root, but now adding in the 5th and your excellent graphic showing how 1, 5, and 1 really dominate and create the framework, I'm pretty sure I can learn to do this and play around all the chord progressions, eventually.
@peosea
@peosea 6 месяцев назад
Josh man I wish I had your vids when I started to play bass 30 years ago. You are a Godsend for all new bass players. Great job
@losriosprofundos2113
@losriosprofundos2113 4 месяца назад
This is one of the best bass lessons I've ever come across. It's a lot to digest, but thorough and well explained.
@ServingMyJesus
@ServingMyJesus 6 месяцев назад
Thank you for this lesson. I am a beginner bass player and found this very useful. In fact, the majority of my recent bass lessons are from your videos. I appreciate the fact that you do not bombard your site with contents just for the sake of content.
@ctodd122
@ctodd122 6 месяцев назад
🙏 Thank you Josh! I'm so happy you provided this etude in 12 keys! Just last night I was scouring the interweb for bass etudes. This one looks great!
@bane9832
@bane9832 6 месяцев назад
Man josh helped me so much trhough these 2 years ive progressed so far, started from not being able to play the first lesson video to playing anesthesia note for note live on stage at a year and a half of playing, no i didnt buy the beginner to badass course the youtube vids are just so good, im now in a band composing my own music and ive already played a bass session for a kinda atmospheric trap kinda single, man music is so fun
@johnjperricone7856
@johnjperricone7856 5 дней назад
Dude, I think you just broke my brain. I am all-in on this.
@shawnsims4966
@shawnsims4966 6 месяцев назад
I haven't gotten that far in the Beginner to BadA** course yet to understand roots and fifths. But I saved this video anyway to help me understand it when I get there. Thanks for this.
@BassBuzz
@BassBuzz 6 месяцев назад
You'll get there in Module 11!
@michaeloberly6129
@michaeloberly6129 6 месяцев назад
This was amazing, Josh. Jamerson was incredible (probably my favorite bass player), but even so, he, like most great musicians I know or know of, clearly had his own sort of personal bag of tricks that he would rely on again and gain. Thanks for putting the spotlight on some of these things.
@nofrets5
@nofrets5 6 месяцев назад
This is fantastic Josh, wonderful of you to breakdown and share, thank you!
@joanneabouttowntwo
@joanneabouttowntwo 5 месяцев назад
thank you for your caring attention to detail and the free content! 🙏🏾
@anklem4322
@anklem4322 6 месяцев назад
I know Syncopation from my drum exercises. But all the stuff you just have said in this video covers my latest bass lessons, it is all so clear now. Thanks!
@academyofbass
@academyofbass 6 месяцев назад
Really informative lesson. Jamerson is the don of bass players, but there's so little formal detail available from him. Great work Josh
@CharlieMessing
@CharlieMessing 6 месяцев назад
Read that book - you won't believe the CD included - all your favorite bass players doing one Jamerson tune each - with the tune in one speaker and bass in the other. [It's possible that by now it's only a download - but you will love it.]
@academyofbass
@academyofbass 6 месяцев назад
@@CharlieMessing thanks for the steer👍
@DonSambrook
@DonSambrook 6 месяцев назад
My bass journey with Josh has been one of the most rewarding experiences of my life - and I've lived a pretty exciting life :)
@thescatman5029
@thescatman5029 6 месяцев назад
That "normal straight eighth-notes" at 6:46......That's sounds like an early Motown Can't Help Myself, Nowhere to Run, Going to a Go-Go and Uptight rhythm! Looks like we can get a not-so-normal Jamerson lesson on that, too! (LOL!) Great lesson!
@UkeofCarl
@UkeofCarl 6 месяцев назад
I must listen to Jamerson every week. He’s awesome.
@nothingtoseehere........
@nothingtoseehere........ Месяц назад
Fine production, pace and humor. Five Stars ☆☆☆☆☆
@mateusamasu1562
@mateusamasu1562 6 месяцев назад
One of the best video lesson i ever seen in my life. Thank you.
@CharlieMessing
@CharlieMessing 6 месяцев назад
First helpful video I've seen on Jamerson's work and his influences! Good sense of humor and it hardly gets in the way. Thank you! [Yes, I've read the book - gave it to my son, a bass player (I play guitar) back when the book came with two cassettes - no doubt it comes with a CD now. Great book!]
@adamwoolf9993
@adamwoolf9993 2 месяца назад
Awesome! Love the way you show how to apply the stuff in music. Not just technique. Great teaching.
@Loopspin
@Loopspin 6 месяцев назад
God Bless You Josh ! You give soo much and make it seem easy !!
@vampangel2754
@vampangel2754 2 месяца назад
SUPER info, Bro! I appreciate this WAY beyond words! TY, TY, TY!!! I have been in love with these Motown bass lines for my ENTIRE life! Mr. Jamerson’s bass lines are extremely catchy & leave you no choice but to be captivated by them as they PUSH the song along and give the listener such a sense of satisfaction with every resolve! They are a quintessential part of the rhythm section without being the least bit overbearing & are no doubt a HUGE contribution to making all these songs timeless, classic, SMASH Hits!!! TY again!!! :-)
@neillajkiewicz3767
@neillajkiewicz3767 6 месяцев назад
Killer video! “You’re all I need to get by” was my first Jamerson bass line that I learned. Good use of open strings and syncopation. My favorite bass line has to be “what’s going on”. Thanks Josh
@wmkennard
@wmkennard 5 месяцев назад
Some of his ol drummers probably talked about his style. What a legendary Bass player whose time unfortunately was cut short. Ty great lesson ❤
@SuperDuce74
@SuperDuce74 6 месяцев назад
Amazing lesson. Thank you!
@jonratliff4540
@jonratliff4540 6 месяцев назад
You did it again. Great lesson. Thank you!
@taramilton8695
@taramilton8695 Месяц назад
My favourite has got to be What's Going On... It's so intrinsic to the song, owns it without getting in the way... it's just beautiful, thank you James!
@kjguitarman
@kjguitarman 2 месяца назад
Your videos are well crafted. Really enjoy the deep dives.
@TomFrichek
@TomFrichek 6 месяцев назад
Unapologetic Professional Jamerson Copycat here. Thank you SO MUCH all of this! 10/10 fricheks
@aprilharper2687
@aprilharper2687 2 месяца назад
I just started guitar last year and have now picked up a bass and am so in love. Thank you for all your hard work and generosity. ❤❤❤❤❤❤
@topfloorstudio2684
@topfloorstudio2684 5 месяцев назад
I bought the Standing In The Shadows Of MoTown book because of this vid and it's a great addition to my extensive guitar/bass music book collection. There's not one transposition in *TAB* but that just forces us to not be lazy! I love it!
@poetik1ofthedark
@poetik1ofthedark 6 месяцев назад
Another great video. Thanks so much for your time and knowledge.
@negroju
@negroju 6 месяцев назад
Excelente: bien explicado y divertido. Un James Jamerson Básico para que lo entienda todo el mundo.
@tjsmith3741
@tjsmith3741 6 месяцев назад
Great video. Covers the important elements of Jamerson’s work
@alexfeatherstone8854
@alexfeatherstone8854 6 месяцев назад
You really nailed it on this one Josh, thank you.
@oxouk
@oxouk 6 месяцев назад
Probably one of the most useful and informative tutorials out there. Also very entertaining as always. Great hair by the way.
@michaeltlewis3481
@michaeltlewis3481 6 месяцев назад
Wow, so much fantastic, applicable content! This is like a one-video masterclass … thank you, thank you!
@omg_wtf
@omg_wtf 6 месяцев назад
Really high quality video man. Great to see how far youve come from the early days!
@musickf
@musickf 6 месяцев назад
I'm glad to finally have a name for my playing style. Lots of my bass influences come from Jazz and Ska, I love walking the bass. I didn't know he was the inventory of the style. That's awesome!
@barrysallows1777
@barrysallows1777 6 месяцев назад
THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR YOUR JAMERSON STYLE VIDEO!!!!
@bassbyrdtx
@bassbyrdtx 6 месяцев назад
Well done! Lots of great information in this video.
@patrickmunkholm4404
@patrickmunkholm4404 2 месяца назад
I am self taught and I never could get my head around what I called the "Jamerson Funk" I had most of the ingredients but you put it all together in a way I can grasp. The exercise is worth its weight in funk. Thanks brother man.
@alshob
@alshob Месяц назад
great content & thank you for the PDF too
@humanidrome
@humanidrome 6 месяцев назад
Josh, thank you very much for the PDF ❤
@lawrencetaylor4101
@lawrencetaylor4101 6 месяцев назад
Nice video. I might be preaching to the choir, and full disclosure. I am someone who was born with two left ears, but that all changed last year when I bought a piano. I quit learning seventh chords and jazz improv cuz I suck, and haven't learned my triads. I'm studying a lot of baroque, and they use figured bass...which seems to be in your wheelhouse. And James seems to have tapped into something old, that has worked for centuries. My left hand applauds this video, leaving my right hand free to hit the like button.
@benwilliams8742
@benwilliams8742 5 месяцев назад
It did take some effort to become fluid with this exercise at tempo and through all the keys *AS WRITTEN* but wow - it has integrated into my playing pretty much immediately! I find myself using this chromatic approach in almost all my lines now, one way or another, subtle to inyoface - and turning stuff I've been doing for years into newly-KILLER BASS LINES, as advertised. Bravo!!
@garryyoung8945
@garryyoung8945 22 дня назад
A very interesting lesson. Thank you
@alisonderrick1067
@alisonderrick1067 6 месяцев назад
You’re an amazing teacher. You’re hilarious. Thank you 😂 I love the inner dialogue spoken out loud, Josh! 🥰 bonus video with 12 keys thank you 🙏
@bevo65
@bevo65 6 месяцев назад
Fantastic and insightful lesson!
@ricotax99
@ricotax99 6 месяцев назад
Love these type of videos, I learn so much from them! Thanks
@luisonbass
@luisonbass 17 дней назад
Great video, thanks Josh 👏🏼
@charlesmcgehee3227
@charlesmcgehee3227 3 месяца назад
Nice little production. Thanks.
@paulk4526
@paulk4526 3 месяца назад
Jamerson was indeed the GOAT of bassists. Don’t forget the rehearsal of “you’re my everything” featured on the bonus disc from SITSOM. Just Eddie and David working out the vocal trade offs with James soloing. Unreal…
@reggielillie4551
@reggielillie4551 5 месяцев назад
What a great sense of humor! And lesson.
@michaeloberly6129
@michaeloberly6129 6 месяцев назад
“For once in my Life” might be my favorite as well. Fantastic record, but when I think of it, I always think of the bass part first. “Darling Dear” is great, too, and so many others.
@MrNathan791
@MrNathan791 6 месяцев назад
Jameson was a big influencer on my bass playing also. As a kid back in the 70’s I was really into the Jackson 5ive. Watching Jermaine playing his bass on all of those variety shows back in the day got me interested in playing bass. And the “Darling Dear” song was a big favorite of mine. I thought it was Jermaine playing not just this song, but all of their songs. So finding out several years later was a little disappointing, but it was a good thing too. Anyway I just wanted to share my introduction to Jameson. What great bassist he was. Thanks for the lesson I’ll be checking out your tutorial videos.
@theyoungupstarts1243
@theyoungupstarts1243 4 месяца назад
Random video on my timeline yet i watched the full 17 hours and 72 seconds of it! I got thrown into playing bass waay back in the 1900’s when we were covering some Ska like The Specials. Easy to fall into that groove and so fun. Never heard of Jameson, but i’m feeling that i got his influence indirectly now. 🤙
@charleskleesattel6477
@charleskleesattel6477 6 месяцев назад
Good list. Anyone of the 17 could be (and should be) a full lesson, but as you present it, it's a great reality check.
@kevinmkraft
@kevinmkraft 4 месяца назад
This was really great! Thanks for making this.
@maestro2033
@maestro2033 6 месяцев назад
I am a singer who just so happens to play the piano and I was looking to tighten up my soul, funk bass hand on the keys and I’m starting bass soon. This is perfect thanks your vids are doing good in the world.
@ashenlikelove
@ashenlikelove 2 месяца назад
Great lesson, thanks Josh you da best!!!
@eaglepass5170
@eaglepass5170 6 месяцев назад
Excellent video as always!!! Let me add my voice to the many asking you to release a follow up new bass course to your great Beginner to Badass course!!!
@s.d.d.6063
@s.d.d.6063 6 месяцев назад
For once in my life is just an incredible bassline. It’s my #1 Jamerson’s bassline of the so many incredible basslines he played
@omg_wtf
@omg_wtf 6 месяцев назад
Apparently he just rocked up and played it..dude wasn't even trying. If he played that ten times they'd all be different. Crazy level of mastery
@Milopaw
@Milopaw 6 месяцев назад
Excellent lesson keep up the good work. Much appreciated 👌
6 месяцев назад
Great video as always! Thank you for the PDFs they are really being useful to practise! And hoping for some black friday deals on Beginner to Badass!
@mikevajda945
@mikevajda945 2 месяца назад
that was very helpful...pulled a lot together for me...thank you
@tonylaquintano1710
@tonylaquintano1710 5 месяцев назад
This is such a great video. I haven’t played since my son was born, 12 years ago ha ha it’s things like this video that want me to really pick up the bass again.
@RackwitzG
@RackwitzG 6 месяцев назад
I have the book he shows here. It's not only an example of what he played but is also a biography.
@CharlieMessing
@CharlieMessing 6 месяцев назад
Great book!
@michaelanthony9068
@michaelanthony9068 Месяц назад
EXCELLENT VIDEO JOSH ! Really funny. Great lesson !
@firstlast5350
@firstlast5350 6 месяцев назад
Fascinating and informative.
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