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basstitution channel
Добавлен 11 янв 2016
Видео
Ray Brown - Chunk #1
Просмотров 9349 лет назад
Ray Brown telling about Blues bass lines and playing Cherokee with the student.
Ray Brown | Old upright bass technique
Просмотров 24 тыс.9 лет назад
Ray Brown talked about old bass technique in his class. Subscribe for more lesson.
Gary Willis fretless bass solo
Просмотров 55 тыс.9 лет назад
Garry Willis playing solo on his fretless bass.
3:00 ~ 3:16 você tá maluko, tem horas que não sei dizer quem tem o melhor fraseado , se ele ou o Scott, deuses, só as melhores notas sempre.
Love you Ray " Bass God " Brown may you RIP
I'm hearing double time cymbal but not seeing the drummer doing that. Odd
Truly a MASTER! Wished I had him as a teacher! I see why Christian McBride respected him. 😌🎶👍🏾
Gary God will's
Gary is a beast
Fantastic ride symbol work. Gary Willis knocks it out of the ballpark. 🧙
After seeing him play w/the Dizzy Gillespie big band, on a classic video from the mid 1940s, when he(Brown)was either 17 or 18, displaying his skills at that point, and considering all of the bass players in jazz who came afterwards, I called him for years afterwards, the "FATHER OF MODERN JAZZ BASS PLAYING"-and then I found out about Jimmy Blanton(another genius on the upright bass), who preceded Ray Brown by about 5 to 7 years...in any case they are both, in my opinion, to be regarded as the fathers of modern jazz bass playing. And dig his slapping ability-wow! It's truly phenomenal!(+ see below) The closest I've seen of anyone in modern times that would come close, would've been Stanley Clarke, when he played the upright bass, at a concert in about 2005 or so, and he didn't play it with the finesse that Brown displays here in this video. And it was also after so many years of not playing in that manner, that he(Clarke)finally learned to play like that(slapping style). It reminded me of funk great/phenomenon Louis Johnson, who when first seeing him in the early 1980s, said I(or anyone else of our generation apparently)had never seen anyone play a bass(guitar)like that-and now I see that he(Johnson), may have somehow gotten his technique, from these great masters(Blanton, Brown and Braud) who preceded him by decades. On the other hand, Johnson may not have gotten his phenomenal technique from these masters(and did Stanley get his technique from Johnson, or go back and get it from these pioneering masters?), because Johnson once said he got his style to a degree from watching the Spanish flamenco guitarists of the L.A. region, I guess-but if Johnson did get his style from the early upright masters, they had a considerable amount of influence on his playing style. (+)If you think I don't know what I'm talking about, I started playing electric bass guitar about 45 years ago, and then the upright about 23 years ago-and I've never seen anyone play an upright the way Ray Brown did here, at between 2:20 and 2:27 of this video-I've seen others play the slapping style on the upright, but it's all lame, compared to what he does here in this video; I've never seen anything like it, not to this day-not on the upright, and didn't know he was capable of playing in such manner until I saw this video today; he truly was a gifted and phenomenal bass player! 2-9-23. UPDATE: It is now over a year and a half later, and I find no one has responded to what I've had to say in the above comments; is it because you are not familiar with the great Louis Johnson-what about the phenomenal technique that Ray Brown displays here, between 2:20 and 2:27, of this video-and to hear that he learned it from Wellman Braud, who I understand was before they were able to capture him(Braud), playing on any type motion picture camera or video device? And as one that has his roots in funk, I find that cats have gotten away from playing even the way we use to; no one's bringing it like that anymore-maybe it's because we're getting older and some of us are dead and gone, and also, maybe it's another classic case of "been there, done that"...and I wish I had have learned to slap the bass like Ray Brown does in this video, but then again, I've never to this day, seen another upright(or any other type of bass player)play the bass like Brown does in this video, and I've been playing bass since 1978! 8-22-24.
Bottesini?
Ray Brown was very consistent in his teachings. Sustain the tone, give it the full value by holding the fingers in place. His left hand does not deviate from this rule whether he is plucking the strings or using the bow.
We now call that slapping the bass.
Where can I see the full?
Garry Willis bass lesson.look for it on yt
@@EPICSOUNDTRAX progressive basics
I met Ray Brown at a gig in Seattle. Amazing musician and a true gentleman.
Huge music vocabulary. Technique Timing and Tone!!! 👍
Bonjour. Le jeu de la guitare basse est extrêmement intelligent et fait penser à Mr Jaco Pastorius .J' ai eu beaucoup de plaisir à découvrir cette prestation. Bravo à l' ensemble des musiciens.
The part from 0:39-1:05 is seriously some of the most high level shit.
MASTER!!! You don't have to play loud to swing!!! The amazing sound of Ray brown
right up there with jaco's havona solo on heavy weather....DAMN!!!
RMB
I'm too stupid to learn how to use Gary's right-hand technique
Getting that 3rd ring finger involved takes a lot of muscle memory that you and I do not have, unless, like Gary, you started playing bass that way to begin with. Next best thing is to start now lol.
That's the worst song I've ever heard...
Drag you feel that way man !Willis is hands - down THE greatest post Jaco inspired and also is a pioneer. ** In addition to all that -Willis does not take himself that serious. He’s about as chill as they come. Very pointed intelligent and generous. Hilarious and funny. Willis is one of the greats on a very short list. I think he wrote this song when he was 25 years old. Roughly. Take a good guess open. Bet he doesn’t think it’s a very great song either Last. HEY WILLIS !!!
Ok go listen to Justin Biber you are in the wrong group.
It is not called a song it is a musical composition.
Gary is genius
A tour de force
The hallmark of a great bass solo....I can listen to this 30 years later and its still one of the most badass things ever played on the instrument. Willis is a beast.
Mr Willis God of bass
1:40
What the f$&@. I’m going to chop my fingers now
Amazing, and the overall sound is like a reincarnation of Weather Report
@3:43
Where are the knobs?
Wow, that sounded like Oscars Trio!!
Kinda reminded me of Vince Guaraldi’s band.
We need players like Gary Willis. The fretless bass guitar deserves much more attention than it gets. God he is so incredible.
One of the best, if not THE best. If you haven't seen this one check it out. Ray Brown the Master bass Man. ruclips.net/video/NTJhHn-TuDY/видео.html
Incredible feel from both of them, so musical
Yah, but can he play "Brown-Eyed Girl"?
Yes
Hhhhhhhhhh, this made me laugh!!
He's not playing solo, there's a drummer and keyboardist too!
Yeah but he's soloing.
This is "Self defense", composition from Nomad album.
technical level over 9000 only few will understand.
So awesome. His playing puts me in another zone.
Stunning.
the best of the universe
Ibanez
whoz the drummer?
+musakaOverlord Kirk Covington?