Well done. if you can watch earlier lessons on here (not the very early ones they are much more complex for jazz) from over the last 4 or 5 years. Also Talking Bass channel is excellent for beginners (its ok to mention it here as Scott and mark from that channel are mates) 👍👍
I started playing bass in January. I signed up to SBL and it was the best decision I ever made. Its been 3 months and I'm jamming with guys that have been playing guitar for 25 years and I'm keeping up with them.
Yeah, it will help - I’ve played guitar for years, but I’ve never learned the fretboard, so I’ve always felt clumsy with it. Two months after receiving my first bass, I’m working an earlier circle-of-5ths exercise from Scott, and find I’m spending far more time playing around on it than I ever have w/ guitar (vs ‘practicing’, ‘learning songs’j - so I’m already expanding on what this basic exercise is revealing. Thing I’d say: DON’T be in a hurry: cramming never works, and you could spoil your appetite…i ‘spect eventually these exercises will turn into new music quite naturally
Been playing for 3 decades, and have always been studious. Taught myself with books, took lessons for several years, played with bands. I will definitely say that I've learned more with the fretboard accelerator course (and I'm less than half way through) than i did with years of lessons and book based practice. The fretboard accelerator course takes the best and most important parts of all my past musical training and combined them all into one program that has transformed how i look at the fretboard, and unlocked my playing. It's hand down the best bass training I've ever seen. Highly recommended for all bassists of all levels!
I have been going through your circle of fifths exercise every single day and suddenly the fretboard has become a friend rather than a foe. I am working on the score for a musical that I am playing with the community theater this summer, so the music is all over the fretboard. Because I wanted the warmest sound possible for some of the songs. I have been working up in zone 8 through 12 quite a bit. After that, zone 1 through 5 is also comfortable but to me sounds more percussive, which is great for certain other songs. And yes this zone is called upon regularly for those lovely deep roots. And then we have zone 5 through 9 which I need in almost all the songs, kind of the workhorse zone. Although I play piano, I couldn't read guitar/bass music 3 months ago. Your fretboard exercise was the breakthrough I needed.
@@stacer1962 Hi Stacer, you are welcome. I was so disheartened at first because I had to sort out each note individually as I went through the score, and I thought it was hopeless because I was so slow. But bit by bit, it started getting better and now I can sight read pretty well - not perfect, not up to tempo, but much better. Slow and steady wins the race. Best of luck to you. It is so worth it.
Scott, now with my 60 years ... I must restart my life from the beginning with you as my teacher. Promise, I will be a much better bassplayer. Thanks for your work
Im turning 60 in a week, Been procrastinating and starting and stopping on bass for so long but Scott has a lot of great material up here and its motivating. Wishing you the best on this journey. Peace.
My bass teacher started me (after the notes of each string) in the 5-9 zone. Learning that first made the other 2 zones just fall into place. It definitely made a difference that I could already read music and play the piano and saxophone. The other thing he made me do from lesson one is use my pinky. The first few months were painful but I’m so grateful!
I've just started bass being part of the sax & piano gang and tbf it's crazy how much I don't know/missed/picked up without understanding so I'm becoming a proper beginner! SBL is fantastic!
I’m weird , I’m super super comfortable with Fret 8-12 , second I’m okay with 1-5, This video actually exposed to me that I’m unaware of frets 5-9 entirely. Thanks Scott !
I've been playing bass for 20 years now, and watching your videos has made me realise I really know bugger all about theory. I never had any lessons, started as a teenager when my mate needed a bass player and I thought go on then and have winged it ever since. You can still be a decent player after 20 years of winging it as you stumble across things and develop an ear from listening to others, but what I didn't know was why I was playing what I was playing and how it could be related to other things. Watching your videos has started to fill those gaps.
Same here. Finally started lessons to fill in those gaps after 30 years of playing lol. My short term goal is to get to a place where I can read the Nashville Number system. I occasionally fill in for other bands and NNS would reduce the time I need to prepare from weeks to days and it would mean I don't have to commit everything I play to memory before I can play which can be tough, especially when I fill for bands doing 3-4 hr sets. I'm only maybe 2 months in and it's already paying off. Sat to learn a song with a lot of walking bass for an upcoming gig and realized what I heard was just a combination of major scale pieces and pentatonic scales. It made learning the song vastly easier. It's been a fun and interesting process for sure.
I have been an intermediate guitar player for years. I caught a bass bug a while back, and got my first one a couple weeks ago. It's so fun! Now I'm learning theory from you I just couldn't force myself to learn on guitar. Thanks for this!
I started out on piano when I was 9. It was hard on the hands, but so easy on the brain: like having one really long bass string. Visually too. I started playing bass when I was 16 in ‘88. Within a few seconds I knew it was my instrument: I always liked bass tones and harmonies (which is what the bass builds in music). But, what was hard was the four (or more) strings and all the positions, opposite of what I knew from the one-string: the piano.
How you describe that is solid dude, shit, never thought about it like pianos, each string is a seperate piano👍 thats helpful, to me, i cant read music, cant work it out, never have, but i can remember sounds and that, but a piano per string. Yep that works for me👍
To be honest when you started this channel I thought how could he possibly make a RUclips channel on bass ? Is there really that much to learn???? Lol was I wrong ! What has it been 12 years ? And I’m still getting lessons from you for free Thank you for all you’re time in doing these vids man .
This is perfect for where I am right now in my career. I’ve been playing a long time but I’m limited by having some blank spots in my knowledge of the fretboard. I know the notes but not like the back of my hand. I haven’t found a good system for really internalizing it all so I can apply it in the moment. I think this might be that system!
Randomly landed here looking for some circle of fifth routines for the bass guitar. This is by far the best lesson I've come across on RUclips. The fretboard positions and the triads make a lot of sense. Thank you. Working on major triads will look out for the accelerator in 2024. Cheers!
I like this breakdown into 3 zones. In addition to the 3 fingering types, I like to play all the notes in the zone from the E to the G. That gets you using your inversions too. For example in the 2nd zone, Ab played on all 4 strings in one position (finger per fret) means pinky on C on the E (1st inversion), Eb on the A, Ab on the D and C and Eb on the G
I started learning songs by ear and by Tab reading. As an iron maiden big fan, i actually am confident from 3rd fret to the 14th at least, but i don't know scales o theory at all. I Just play what i learn, without being able to get beyond that limit. Your lessons are a miracle..... Thanks very much for every lesson or tip you give us.......
I said that because i cannot afford the expense to get even a used one. I have my old 1969/71 Eko made in Recanati Italy, and he needs a big restoration. Then i have an Harley Benton 5 strings, mp 5 ej enhanced lake Blue..... I Always Dream about having a Fender Steve Harris signature, but i'll never afford such price.
believe me when I tell you the fretboard accelerator course is worth every penny/moment you spend on it. I am wrapping it up right now with module 16 which deals with all they keys playing a chord progression 143 flat3 251 over each of the major keys and doing a continuous movement exercise... its AWESOME and as Scott says you will see the fretboard open up to you... very cool
Thank you so much Scott !! I can't believe that I didn't see this before!! Just this lesson will launch my technique to hyperspace!! I'll even try it on my 5 string!! Keep coming with these eye opening lessons!!👍🤘
Scott, I would *LOVE* to take your course, but 2 months in, I can’t use an accelerator yet! To say nothing of merging households, moving & all that - it’s impacting my practice time I hope the thing is a smashing success, and I’ll see you there when I can keep up: by the time I get these ‘C5’ exercises down, I should be ready & available Thanks again for doing what you do - I’ve learned more about the fretboard & how to play in a few weeks w/ you than I have in decades of playing at guitar (I simply had no idea how to learn it or what to do, & no instruction helped). I hope you get enough out of doing it to keep bodies & souls together - in every sense
So, in the beginning of my bass journey, the 1-5 zone was definitely the most simple and the most easy one to remember. As I have gotten more confident in my playing (after about 16 years), I would say that my comfort zone is easily the 5-9 zone. It's easy enough to remember, and it gives me the flexibility when needed to move my hand a bit around. Then again, I've been playing both guitar and bass 50/50 each, and on guitar it's mostly been lead stuff without ever using tabs, so I have been kinda forced into figuring these zones out myself quite early. And since I prefer 5 string basses (just ordered a 6 string for the first time, and I am super excited), I have gotten very used to playing simple chords and using certain patterns and other things that have just decided to stick to my muscle memory.
Very new to bass but I find myself most comfortable in 8-12 fretting is easier as they are closer and I can remember the notes easier when I count back from the twelfth fret.
Thanks Scott, so clear. The video I liked most is the one about the amazing outro of "Funky monks, I almoust play it despite I'm a guitar player, bass is my second instrument😊
Very useful. I wish someone would have taught me that before (and I've taken plenty of lessons including SBL!). I guess the upside of learning this very late in my learning journey is that I was able to do it right away XD
Im a piano player on the praise team but also the church asked me to also learn bass so i can alternate between so i bought me a bass and am practicing with your videos I do play guitar but only fifths rythm in second rythm form like more of a rock thre finger formation but bass should be easy to pick up with the guitar knowlege and theory in classicle and jazz that i have been exposed to
You'll notice that the "second finger" position for the major chord also maps over the major scale. That's a useful way to find the shapes for major and minor chords, it's just the 1st-3rd-5th-7th etc notes in the scale.
I'd actually say I'm most comfortable with 5 through 9, because I started and still mostly play funk and rock, a lot of chillin in the key of E/A. 1-5 is slightly less familiar just because of the bigger reach. Also with so many bad midi to tab conversions where they threw everything on open fingerings, I've deliberately avoided that out of fear and trauma
I certainly will use the anti-clockwise method. I have not used the circle of fifths in detail. I always learn new terminology from Scott. Apparently anti-clockwise is the same as counter-clockwise that I know.
If I get tight with the triads, I may make enemies with the Yakuza... 😂😂😂 I am solid on 1-5 and 8-12. It was 5-9, especially on the D, G, and C strings that tripped me up. I'm looking forward to getting this exercise under my fingers!
Scott, in getting to grips with the fretboard I found that I learnt the notes on frets 1-5 first then came the notes on frets 5-12 but only on the E and A strings. The notes in frets 5-12 on the D and G strings came/ are coming to familiarity later.
I'm actually more confident in frets 5-9. It's the open strings in the 1-5 that throws me off. And yes open strings aren't technically frets and not included in frets 1-5 but i hope i make sense anyway.
I'm playing mainly on 6 strings bass (sometimes 5) thus I'm finally more familiar with the second zone, I mainly use the 5-9 on the B string instead of 1-5 on the E string...
I like to play on the third fret with my index especially if im in C or G. Or I’m with you on A which is common for female singers. Or like you said, 8th fret for male singers. It just depends on song and vocalist. Best just to know all of it. I do the zone thing though and switching between them is kinda like a key change for me in my mind. Unless I’m soloing and then I try to stick to 2 strings and then do zones based on key. I’m sure that’s confusing but thats what I do
I’m most confident about 5-9 cause the first notes I learnt/memorised on the bass was the A minor scale starting on fret 5 on the E-string. I’m starting to get more comfortable with 1-5 now that I go to a music school though and I’d say I’m least confident about 8-12. I haven’t really thought of it as zones though, I have a couple notes on each string I’m 100% confident with instead. Like on the E-string I’m very confident with E, F, G, A, B, C and on the A-string I’m the most confident with A, B, C, D, E and for the D-string it’s D, G and A and in the G-string it’s probably just G. I know all the notes on all the strings though (of course) but those notes are the ones I would never have to think twice about. And then I check the octave of some notes on the D- and G-string sometimes since I’m most confident with the E- and A-strings
7-10 is straightforward: BC-D EF-G A-BC D-EF. 7th fret is BEAD and 10th is DGCF. I think A natural minor is the best scale to learn the fretboard because it breaks down into symmetrical patterns all over the neck.
Thanks for making these videos, they're super helpful! I've recently started playing bass but have a minor nickel allergy. What kind of gloves do you recommend? (I'm probably changing to steel strings on my personal bass soon, but I also switch instruments with my bassist at practice and his are nickel)
I always played the 5 to 8 zone but that’s probably because i started out with Blues and Ska, my least confident zone is the 8th to 12th because i always made the mistake between the tenth and eleventh frets which is probably one of the most important places to end your lines when doing a warmup going back and forth or to impress a certain person.
Sincerely, this make no sense for me. Actually, fretboard marks never made any sense for me, I realised that when I learned to play the cello and the classical guitar. I will not say it's a rule, but for me, learning the cello scales, arpeggios and some good chord progressions/voice leading from the repertorie just made everything clear about it. Plus, the cello tuning in fifths just seems to make everything more fluid and expanded. Good thing is I took some of the left hand techniques from the cello and classical guitar to the bass - e.g. make use of the same string the most I can on phrases to conserve tone. also, avoid open strings in the middle of a prhase form the same reason. Finally, I believe studying other string instruments and their respective techniques + some valuable repertorie can be a great complement to the standard bass technique.😉
Finally an independent comment. While the zones can make learning notes easier by compartmentalizing it reduces the fluidity and restricts one's playing. Plus, there are many patterns that cross over two patterns. I don't like "rules" that reduce playing efficiency. Seems like people just don't want to put in the hard work to see all patterns available up and down the entire fingerboard - as one soundboard. I've learned a lot from Scott's teaching but am growing weary of the clickbaity facial expressions and headlines: "best ever!", "If you don't do this ... ", or "the secret __ ", etc.
1st let's just acknowledge what a beaut that F bass is! 2nd let's just thank Scott for all this great,high quality free lessons!👍🏻👍🏻
Nice 5 string banana
YOU ARE HELPING ME AFTER PUTTING THE BASS DOWN FOR 25 YRS
Just bought my first bass and I have no idea about how to play that thing:) This is gonna help, thanks!!!
Well done. if you can watch earlier lessons on here (not the very early ones they are much more complex for jazz) from over the last 4 or 5 years. Also Talking Bass channel is excellent for beginners (its ok to mention it here as Scott and mark from that channel are mates) 👍👍
I started playing bass in January. I signed up to SBL and it was the best decision I ever made. Its been 3 months and I'm jamming with guys that have been playing guitar for 25 years and I'm keeping up with them.
Good luck new comers!
Yeah, it will help - I’ve played guitar for years, but I’ve never learned the fretboard, so I’ve always felt clumsy with it. Two months after receiving my first bass, I’m working an earlier circle-of-5ths exercise from Scott, and find I’m spending far more time playing around on it than I ever have w/ guitar (vs ‘practicing’, ‘learning songs’j - so I’m already expanding on what this basic exercise is revealing.
Thing I’d say: DON’T be in a hurry: cramming never works, and you could spoil your appetite…i ‘spect eventually these exercises will turn into new music quite naturally
1. Use the fingers of one hand to push a string down to the neck.
2. Use fingers, thumb or a pick to strike the strings with the other hand.
Best bass teacher on the Internet - period. Scott, your stuff is so freakin' good mate.
Been playing for 3 decades, and have always been studious. Taught myself with books, took lessons for several years, played with bands. I will definitely say that I've learned more with the fretboard accelerator course (and I'm less than half way through) than i did with years of lessons and book based practice.
The fretboard accelerator course takes the best and most important parts of all my past musical training and combined them all into one program that has transformed how i look at the fretboard, and unlocked my playing. It's hand down the best bass training I've ever seen. Highly recommended for all bassists of all levels!
Wow, your journey is inspiring! We're thrilled to hear the Fretboard Accelerator is making such a positive impact on your playing 🙌🏻🎸🚀
I have been going through your circle of fifths exercise every single day and suddenly the fretboard has become a friend rather than a foe.
I am working on the score for a musical that I am playing with the community theater this summer, so the music is all over the fretboard.
Because I wanted the warmest sound possible for some of the songs. I have been working up in zone 8 through 12 quite a bit.
After that, zone 1 through 5 is also comfortable but to me sounds more percussive, which is great for certain other songs. And yes this zone is called upon regularly for those lovely deep roots.
And then we have zone 5 through 9 which I need in almost all the songs, kind of the workhorse zone.
Although I play piano, I couldn't read guitar/bass music 3 months ago. Your fretboard exercise was the breakthrough I needed.
@@stacer1962 Hi Stacer, you are welcome. I was so disheartened at first because I had to sort out each note individually as I went through the score, and I thought it was hopeless because I was so slow. But bit by bit, it started getting better and now I can sight read pretty well - not perfect, not up to tempo, but much better. Slow and steady wins the race. Best of luck to you. It is so worth it.
Scott, now with my 60 years ... I must restart my life from the beginning with you as my teacher. Promise, I will be a much better bassplayer. Thanks for your work
I hear ya - well into my 70s, & a bass player for…8 weeks….
good luck to you, Papa, make great music!
@@charliemoody7168 thanks for your friendly words
Im turning 60 in a week, Been procrastinating and starting and stopping on bass for so long but Scott has a lot of great material up here and its motivating. Wishing you the best on this journey. Peace.
The clearest and smartest bass guitar teacher on the web.
My bass teacher started me (after the notes of each string) in the 5-9 zone. Learning that first made the other 2 zones just fall into place. It definitely made a difference that I could already read music and play the piano and saxophone. The other thing he made me do from lesson one is use my pinky. The first few months were painful but I’m so grateful!
That's a great comment, Rebecca. As a beginner bass student, I should follow your teachers advice and start in the 5-9 zone. 🙏
I've just started bass being part of the sax & piano gang and tbf it's crazy how much I don't know/missed/picked up without understanding so I'm becoming a proper beginner! SBL is fantastic!
I’m weird , I’m super super comfortable with Fret 8-12 , second I’m okay with 1-5, This video actually exposed to me that I’m unaware of frets 5-9 entirely. Thanks Scott !
It’s been a week…. My neck is so unlocked now 💪🏾💪🏾💪🏾
Im glad the lessons are still going on❤❤❤
Thanks to all the metal I've learned in my life, I have always been more comfortable in frets 5-9😋
I've been playing bass for 20 years now, and watching your videos has made me realise I really know bugger all about theory. I never had any lessons, started as a teenager when my mate needed a bass player and I thought go on then and have winged it ever since. You can still be a decent player after 20 years of winging it as you stumble across things and develop an ear from listening to others, but what I didn't know was why I was playing what I was playing and how it could be related to other things. Watching your videos has started to fill those gaps.
What he said... Been winging it for 35 years LOL.
Same here. Finally started lessons to fill in those gaps after 30 years of playing lol. My short term goal is to get to a place where I can read the Nashville Number system. I occasionally fill in for other bands and NNS would reduce the time I need to prepare from weeks to days and it would mean I don't have to commit everything I play to memory before I can play which can be tough, especially when I fill for bands doing 3-4 hr sets. I'm only maybe 2 months in and it's already paying off. Sat to learn a song with a lot of walking bass for an upcoming gig and realized what I heard was just a combination of major scale pieces and pentatonic scales. It made learning the song vastly easier. It's been a fun and interesting process for sure.
I have been an intermediate guitar player for years. I caught a bass bug a while back, and got my first one a couple weeks ago. It's so fun! Now I'm learning theory from you I just couldn't force myself to learn on guitar. Thanks for this!
come back to the shallow waters !!! my best and much success !!! 🎉🎉❤😊
I started out on piano when I was 9.
It was hard on the hands, but so easy on the brain: like having one really long bass string. Visually too.
I started playing bass when I was 16 in ‘88.
Within a few seconds I knew it was my instrument: I always liked bass tones and harmonies (which is what the bass builds in music).
But, what was hard was the four (or more) strings and all the positions, opposite of what I knew from the one-string: the piano.
How you describe that is solid dude, shit, never thought about it like pianos, each string is a seperate piano👍 thats helpful, to me, i cant read music, cant work it out, never have, but i can remember sounds and that, but a piano per string. Yep that works for me👍
At last! After years of searching for the right video! I find you here with the bassists.
To be honest when you started this channel I thought how could he possibly make a RUclips channel on bass ? Is there really that much to learn???? Lol was I wrong ! What has it been 12 years ? And I’m still getting lessons from you for free
Thank you for all you’re time in doing these vids man .
This is exercising parts of my brain I didn't know I had. Can't thank you enough for the content.
This is perfect for where I am right now in my career. I’ve been playing a long time but I’m limited by having some blank spots in my knowledge of the fretboard. I know the notes but not like the back of my hand. I haven’t found a good system for really internalizing it all so I can apply it in the moment. I think this might be that system!
Randomly landed here looking for some circle of fifth routines for the bass guitar. This is by far the best lesson I've come across on RUclips. The fretboard positions and the triads make a lot of sense. Thank you. Working on major triads will look out for the accelerator in 2024. Cheers!
I like this breakdown into 3 zones. In addition to the 3 fingering types, I like to play all the notes in the zone from the E to the G. That gets you using your inversions too. For example in the 2nd zone, Ab played on all 4 strings in one position (finger per fret) means pinky on C on the E (1st inversion), Eb on the A, Ab on the D and C and Eb on the G
You're the best online Teacher with your tips & tricks on RUclips. Greetings from Switzerland. Your passion is coming out of the videos
This is a really interesting exercise, never thought about doing this this way!
Talk about that bass your playing sometime soon, see you playing it a lot love to hear you talk a bit about it
I've mostly been learning Sabbath tracks, so 5-9 is my comfort zone
I started learning songs by ear and by Tab reading. As an iron maiden big fan, i actually am confident from 3rd fret to the 14th at least, but i don't know scales o theory at all. I Just play what i learn, without being able to get beyond that limit.
Your lessons are a miracle..... Thanks very much for every lesson or tip you give us.......
Now i'm waiting for next giveaway, hoping to get one of those wonderful basses you put in.....
I said that because i cannot afford the expense to get even a used one.
I have my old 1969/71 Eko made in Recanati Italy, and he needs a big restoration. Then i have an Harley Benton 5 strings, mp 5 ej enhanced lake Blue.....
I Always Dream about having a Fender Steve Harris signature, but i'll never afford such price.
Absolutely spot on. This is the real secret behind your fretboard dexterity. Great 👍
believe me when I tell you the fretboard accelerator course is worth every penny/moment you spend on it. I am wrapping it up right now with module 16 which deals with all they keys playing a chord progression 143 flat3 251 over each of the major keys and doing a continuous movement exercise... its AWESOME and as Scott says you will see the fretboard open up to you... very cool
That was really good! It really helped me to visualize the necessity of learning the circle of fifths and the role it plays in fretboard mastery.
Thank you so much Scott !! I can't believe that I didn't see this before!! Just this lesson will launch my technique to hyperspace!! I'll even try it on my 5 string!! Keep coming with these eye opening lessons!!👍🤘
I started off dubious about this but, damn, Scott has convinced me! Great video!
Scott, I would *LOVE* to take your course, but 2 months in, I can’t use an accelerator yet!
To say nothing of merging households, moving & all that - it’s impacting my practice time
I hope the thing is a smashing success, and I’ll see you there when I can keep up: by the time I get these ‘C5’ exercises down, I should be ready & available
Thanks again for doing what you do - I’ve learned more about the fretboard & how to play in a few weeks w/ you than I have in decades of playing at guitar (I simply had no idea how to learn it or what to do, & no instruction helped). I hope you get enough out of doing it to keep bodies & souls together - in every sense
Thank you so much for these precious informations and exercises.
This is a wonderful lesson, which opened my eyes... I am learning bass at the moment and this video is really priceless for me. 🙏
Amazing lesson! Thanks! Hugs fron Brazil!
This is a great way to learn any stringed instrument, especially if you play in different tunings or banjo, steel, etc. Thanks for a wonderful lesson!
So, in the beginning of my bass journey, the 1-5 zone was definitely the most simple and the most easy one to remember.
As I have gotten more confident in my playing (after about 16 years), I would say that my comfort zone is easily the 5-9 zone. It's easy enough to remember, and it gives me the flexibility when needed to move my hand a bit around.
Then again, I've been playing both guitar and bass 50/50 each, and on guitar it's mostly been lead stuff without ever using tabs, so I have been kinda forced into figuring these zones out myself quite early.
And since I prefer 5 string basses (just ordered a 6 string for the first time, and I am super excited), I have gotten very used to playing simple chords and using certain patterns and other things that have just decided to stick to my muscle memory.
Thanks, Scott. I appreciate all of your knowledge that you share.
Scott I think you are great. Thanks for sharing.
Most confident: 3-9 Least confident: 20-24
Very new to bass but I find myself most comfortable in 8-12 fretting is easier as they are closer and I can remember the notes easier when I count back from the twelfth fret.
A very good lesson ,presented in a very easy to digest way !!
For double bass, it's quite important to learn 0 to 4 aswell. (applies for electric too prob)
Oh yeah I Def need this!! That's Y I singed up for the Fretboard Accelerator!
Brilliant exercises. Really challenging. Thank you.
Thanks Scott, so clear. The video I liked most is the one about the amazing outro of "Funky monks, I almoust play it despite I'm a guitar player, bass is my second instrument😊
Very useful. I wish someone would have taught me that before (and I've taken plenty of lessons including SBL!). I guess the upside of learning this very late in my learning journey is that I was able to do it right away XD
Im a piano player on the praise team but also the church asked me to also learn bass so i can alternate between so i bought me a bass and am practicing with your videos
I do play guitar but only fifths rythm in second rythm form like more of a rock thre finger formation but bass should be easy to pick up with the guitar knowlege and theory in classicle and jazz that i have been exposed to
love this lesson,
Thanks SBL
Thank you! This is very helpful!
The very best exercise ever!
You'll notice that the "second finger" position for the major chord also maps over the major scale. That's a useful way to find the shapes for major and minor chords, it's just the 1st-3rd-5th-7th etc notes in the scale.
Awsome theory...thank you sir
Dude how is this free?! Thanks so much!!!
I'd actually say I'm most comfortable with 5 through 9, because I started and still mostly play funk and rock, a lot of chillin in the key of E/A. 1-5 is slightly less familiar just because of the bigger reach. Also with so many bad midi to tab conversions where they threw everything on open fingerings, I've deliberately avoided that out of fear and trauma
This was very helpful, Scott. Thanks!
Hey Scot! I just read from a interview that Nikki Sixx used your lessons through these last years! How awesome is that?!
I play Rocksmith. The songs on bass regularly go to the 14th fret to the 21st fret!
That opening riff sounded like the guitar riff to "You Can Stay But The Noise Must Go" by Walter Wolfman Washington!
Don’t often see you playing a five stringer Scott! As always great info. Thanks for all your efforts man.
He also had a few videos using the 6 string.
I certainly will use the anti-clockwise method. I have not used the circle of fifths in detail. I always learn new terminology from Scott. Apparently anti-clockwise is the same as counter-clockwise that I know.
Scott is Bri'ish
Thank you!!!😀
8-12 is my comfiest, followed by 1-5. 5-9 is still a little slow for me to remember, but they're all getting better!
Ast learn E and A then all you have to do is imagaine the nut is on the second fret on the D and G....as they are just a tone higher.....
I love the methodology
I've been doing this (on guitar) for the past couple of months, funny how I ended up dividing the fretboard in the same exact zones😅
If I get tight with the triads, I may make enemies with the Yakuza... 😂😂😂 I am solid on 1-5 and 8-12. It was 5-9, especially on the D, G, and C strings that tripped me up. I'm looking forward to getting this exercise under my fingers!
Great lesson..
🙌🏻🙌🏻🙌🏻
You should do a video on the bassline for Fine China by Chris Brown. Once you hear that basslines, it's almost impossible to forget.
Scott, in getting to grips with the fretboard I found that I learnt the notes on frets 1-5 first then came the notes on frets 5-12 but only on the E and A strings. The notes in frets 5-12 on the D and G strings came/ are coming to familiarity later.
Really great video, keep up the great content! At some point it would be great to see Ian and Scott look at some of Casiopea's basslines!
I'm actually more confident in frets 5-9. It's the open strings in the 1-5 that throws me off. And yes open strings aren't technically frets and not included in frets 1-5 but i hope i make sense anyway.
I have a zerofret. So yes, the open String is a fret :D
Loving the Fedora! But hey Scott, you're scaring the newbies with that 5th string. Makes my head hurt just looking at it. :)
I'm playing mainly on 6 strings bass (sometimes 5) thus I'm finally more familiar with the second zone, I mainly use the 5-9 on the B string instead of 1-5 on the E string...
Thanks man😎
I like to play on the third fret with my index especially if im in C or G. Or I’m with you on A which is common for female singers. Or like you said, 8th fret for male singers. It just depends on song and vocalist. Best just to know all of it. I do the zone thing though and switching between them is kinda like a key change for me in my mind. Unless I’m soloing and then I try to stick to 2 strings and then do zones based on key. I’m sure that’s confusing but thats what I do
You're the Man Scott !!!
I’m most confident about 5-9 cause the first notes I learnt/memorised on the bass was the A minor scale starting on fret 5 on the E-string. I’m starting to get more comfortable with 1-5 now that I go to a music school though and I’d say I’m least confident about 8-12. I haven’t really thought of it as zones though, I have a couple notes on each string I’m 100% confident with instead. Like on the E-string I’m very confident with E, F, G, A, B, C and on the A-string I’m the most confident with A, B, C, D, E and for the D-string it’s D, G and A and in the G-string it’s probably just G. I know all the notes on all the strings though (of course) but those notes are the ones I would never have to think twice about. And then I check the octave of some notes on the D- and G-string sometimes since I’m most confident with the E- and A-strings
7-10 is straightforward: BC-D EF-G A-BC D-EF. 7th fret is BEAD and 10th is DGCF.
I think A natural minor is the best scale to learn the fretboard because it breaks down into symmetrical patterns all over the neck.
Thanks for making these videos, they're super helpful! I've recently started playing bass but have a minor nickel allergy. What kind of gloves do you recommend? (I'm probably changing to steel strings on my personal bass soon, but I also switch instruments with my bassist at practice and his are nickel)
I always played the 5 to 8 zone but that’s probably because i started out with Blues and Ska, my least confident zone is the 8th to 12th because i always made the mistake between the tenth and eleventh frets which is probably one of the most important places to end your lines when doing a warmup going back and forth or to impress a certain person.
Your face photo things cool👍
Thanks
I find myself really confident in the middle to the 12th fret but the first 5 are big jumps that I need to practice better.
Love that Fodera. See you in the shed.
Hey Scott, can I just have that amazing yellow F bass?
5-9 is the best! Smash that open E, slide up to the 7th fret on the A String and start Riffin!
Another great and interesting video Scott! But also the sound of that bass is great! How do you get that sound out of that bass?
That's just F-Bass BN5 - Amp - DI!
Is anti-clockwise the same as counterclockwise? 🤔 Asking for a friend.
Yes it is! :)
I play in zone 5 through 8 mostly. I play five and six string basses and rely on my low b string for all things E through A.
Oooooohhhhh! Let’s name the zones the zones the zones!
Do a free download on "harmonic layering" . Similar to the one about harmonic minors over a dominant chord.PLEASE!
Melodic minor over dominant 7.Do a harmonic layering primer free download
Melodic minor over dominant 7.Do a harmonic layering primer free download
Definitely 1 to 5. I’m new to your channel. Great lessons, why do you wear the glove?
5 String G&L tribute is my instrument.
One to Five for sure ! The other two forgetabout it lol!
playing my carvin lb76. ALL maple. with jazz pickups. real simple ,real bad ass.
I play in Zone 1. The other zones are where I grip to pick up my bass.
Sincerely, this make no sense for me. Actually, fretboard marks never made any sense for me, I realised that when I learned to play the cello and the classical guitar.
I will not say it's a rule, but for me, learning the cello scales, arpeggios and some good chord progressions/voice leading from the repertorie just made everything clear about it.
Plus, the cello tuning in fifths just seems to make everything more fluid and expanded.
Good thing is I took some of the left hand techniques from the cello and classical guitar to the bass - e.g. make use of the same string the most I can on phrases to conserve tone. also, avoid open strings in the middle of a prhase form the same reason.
Finally, I believe studying other string instruments and their respective techniques + some valuable repertorie can be a great complement to the standard bass technique.😉
Finally an independent comment. While the zones can make learning notes easier by compartmentalizing it reduces the fluidity and restricts one's playing. Plus, there are many patterns that cross over two patterns. I don't like "rules" that reduce playing efficiency. Seems like people just don't want to put in the hard work to see all patterns available up and down the entire fingerboard - as one soundboard. I've learned a lot from Scott's teaching but am growing weary of the clickbaity facial expressions and headlines: "best ever!", "If you don't do this ... ", or "the secret __ ", etc.
Not a bass player, but this is great for my left hand.
🎉i am unfamiliar with:8 to 12 frets. Tx J.p.
Great video Scott!
Is there a reason playing triads instead of playing the whole major/minor scale for each key in the circle?