I know this video is ancient, but two things: 1) I found it very helpful in justifying when to use raking. 2) The hidden gem in the video is Scott's LEFT hand. I was watching it and it looking like a crawling spider. Then I realized that he was moving toward the next note ahead of time which I'm sure accounts for his ability to play at speed. But the one thing that I noticed in my own playing as I practiced doing this was that the note attacks were much smoother because I wasn't racing the press the strings down so quickly or so hard, leaving the sound of the attacks mostly to my right hand. A huge hidden bonus!
I’ve been playing for 25 years (self taught) and never bothered with rake picking. Watched this and practiced it for an afternoon - it’s hard, but it’s already improved my tone and phrasing with better control of note lengths, and opened up a new world of possibilities in terms of faster stuff. Thank you!
I really love your consistent and consice way of teaching: it really clarifies why my self-taught bad habits keep getting in my way and (more importantly) what to do about it.. Only thing I could wish for: I wish I had known this years earlier!
Your closing remarks really say it all. It's much easier to avoid alternating fingerstyle than to master it, just like it is to avoid practice than to "get to the shed". i have played fingerstyle guitar for > 30 years and still this style is difficult on the bass. However, and as if by magic, i started practicing 1 hour per night (and 3 hours on Tuesdays) strictly on alternating fingerstyle and "pluck, clap, slap" triplets and i am getting better - much better. Thanks for the lessons.
Cor bass players are spoiled with these videos! As a guitar player ive never been able to find anything as thorough or easy to understand as these, i will be taking up bass soon, and will be watching these a lot...
This was something my teacher taught me many years back...it took a long time for me to get comfortable with, but it improves the fluency of your playing by a wide margin. Definitely makes you faster, but so much cleaner as well. Great job with your videos - you make it very easy for the learner to understand!
Thank you for this, my "plucking hand" was my biggest problem. I have not found one video of yours that I didn't learn something. You are by far the best bass instructor that I have seen, keep up the good work.
I started playing bass 6 months ago and you have the best channel out there!!! Easy to follow instruction and GREAT technique!!! Thank you for having a great channel that helps out a lot of people.
I'm so glad I found this video early into learning the bass. I just pucked it up a week or two ago and I couldnt stop wondering if you had to structly altetnate your fingers. Glad I found this early!
Tthanks for the lessons you're a very good and entertaining teacher. I have played guitar for years but I decided to try and play the bass. I'm having a blast so far and it's only been a week.
Merci beaucoup scott pour cette lesson de bass qui vas beaucoup me faire progresser la technique car j'en avais beaucoup besoin pour avancer tu est super .
Great video! For anyone still struggling to maintain the I-M alternation, try just removing your left hand entirely or just muting all the strings with your left hand to focus on just the right hand. Once you get comfortable with it, you can kind of just add on the scale with the left hand as a sort of "layer" afterwards.
For years I used index and the finger next to it as my two main fingers, as most bass players do. When I needed more speed because I was covering a tune in which the bassist used a pick, I practiced using three fingers for the speed, which became very effective. And when I injured a finger while on the road the third finger came in handy. For the last three years or so I changed my main two fingers to my index and my ring finger, and leaving the middle finger as the backup, as the index and third finger are close to the same length. So I get a more even tone.
Just started playing base yesterday. Previously had been playing guitar my whole life. The finger picking is very unnatural and awkward. If a deal breaker exists between me and playing base, it is the finger picking. I am trying to slog through the scales slowly doing the I-M-I-M (not even thinking about descending yet). In my impatience though, I found that the 4/4 part of Pink Floyd’s ‘Money’ is a nice way to get into the I-M-I-M rhythm as a breather from the scales. It is easy and fun and their is less coordination between the left and right hands so I can focus on the picking more in between doing scales. These videos are awesome by the way. Thank you.
I am not giving up guitar by any means but bass is a giving me perspective that I did not get on the guitar for whatever reason. Additionally, its a blast! I'm having a lot of fun and am enjoying your teaching, Thanks so much!
Hey Scott. Just got a bass again after years. I was mostly self taught last time around, but am retraining myself from the beginning largely with your help. Thanks so much man! Question: When you "I am I am" while raking, should you keep the "I" and the "am" consistent to the finger while raking on the descent? That way some of the "am's" and the "I's" would be next to each other. It would make sense that way. Just checking.
I figured out..depending what finger you want to use up or down imagine first finger as a root note and count 1 and 1 and..slowly until become a natural..it's a bit tricky for beginners or bad habits..thanks for video I appreciate it
I've been playing for 3-4 months now and I learned alternate picking pretty quickly. Now i'm trying to implement raking which is a bit harder, so thanks for the tips :]]
I landed on this video as a direct result of watching recent videos you've made. I thought to myself, the smooth descending runs are definitely raked. Your plucking hand appeared so still, and when I play it alternate (which I've always done) doesn't have the same smoothness. So I searched Bass Lesson Rake and here you are, haha.
Hi Scott! I've been playing guitar for some years and now have decided to take on the bass. I don't have much trouble with my fretting hand but I'm kind of going crazy with deciding how, when and where to anchor my thumb. And also with how should I angle my fingers. This is pulling me back and I cannot come up with a clearly defined technique that I feel comfortable with. While alternate plucking, should I rest my index and middle fingers on the string below? Should I have them slightly curved or have them straight? And when should I change the anchoring point on my thumb? I mean, while I am playing on the, let's say, second string should i have my thumb resting on the third or the fourth string? Thank you very much and I apologize for bombing you with all those questions.
Albert Ventura there really isn't a proper thumb rest, you can place your thumb on any strings as long as you don't play it, and as long you're comfortable with it. but for me i usually place my thumb on the pick ups, but sometimes i use the 5th string when reaching 2nd and 1st string.
Albert Ventura Most bassists use the middle pick-up as an anchor, especially when playing on the E string. On the higher strings it's preferable not to anchor your thumb, because your hand is less flexible when anchored.
this is an essential drill to free your fingers from the self-imposed prison of always leading with one finger... which finger you lead with should be determined by what is coming up and how finger choice best preps you for executing it. It shouldn't be arbitrary unless you're truly improvising, in which case being able to switch the finger you lead with will be super helpful as well since you're not sure where you'll end up. The raking down is not really optional IMO, the best players (like Scott D) all do it. This is an excellent drill that I wish I had known in the beginning. Free your mind and your fingers will follow.
I agree with you that the plucking is got to be alternate. I would remember here the style of James Jamerson: he play only with "the Hook" (index finger). Sometimes, when we need an even sound this is a great way to obtain it. Filippo (Italy)
Raking makes a load of sense when going down neighboring / consecutive strings eg G>D>A>E (which happens when playing scales) But what if we're going down across strings eg G>A or G>E or D>E? If we rake, how should the skipped string be muted? Of might it be more efficient to just use alternate picking? Noob's question :)
A question please Scott, I have discovered this video after playing for 3 months. I pluck and also include my ring finger, feels quite natural! Should I stamp out this habit? Great videos Steve
Hello, Scott! Your technic is perfect) Your explanation is clear and easy to understand. But! It's really important to explain people, how you keep your index and middle fingers inflexible in a middle and distal phalanges. I think you get what I mean. It is widespread phenomenon when a bass-player has pain in his/her fingers, especially if it's needed to play fast. Why? Cause technic is incorrect! The cause of pain is the distal phalanx is always bending in a joint when a player picks a string. But your joints don't do so. Please, explain how keep fingers in a tonus but without tension. Thank you for reading this :)
Cool vid... the raking thing is new to me. I've added bass to my stable of guitars and from day one knew that alternating fingers was super critical. Especially for that funky Tower of Power or Jaco kind of pulsing drive? But I can seen where this descending raking stuff is really useful. Not easy though... time to get working on it.
guitarist and bassist here. The switch isn't terrible, but the scale (length of fretboard), space between strings, and swapping from picking to fingerpicking is the tough part. If you do a lesser demanding genre like Post Hardcore or Metal where you just follow the root of the rhythm guitar you'll be fine.
damn it.... i dont go i-m-i-m... i go m-i-m-i.... thanks for fixing that for me haha i really enjoyed this lesson and the camera angles -it really helps me out mind pointing out the "must do" basic stuff once in a while?
Hey Scott, first of all.. congratulations for your great tutorials, very useful ones. I need to ask you about this string raking technique. Do you use it for EVERYTHING you play? i mean, scales, runs, arpeggios, grooves... etc.. I've been playing for several years, and now i dediced to switch to this technique cause'it seems is the only way to play fast things like arpeggios...i'm practicing the execersices you propose here and it's going ok.
What should we do with octaves? When we skip 1 or more strings in ascending? Example, we play ROOT OCTAVE, ROOT ROOT OCTAVE, is that INDEX MIDDLE, INDEX MIDDLE MIDDLE or is it INDEX MIDDLE, INDEX MIDDLE INDEX? (Root - 1st string, octave - 3rd string) Just asking should we alternate when ascend from first to third string anyway, or not (because index is shorter than middle and it is not so comfortable to play Octave Root Octave Root with Index Middle Index Middle) ?
What about thumb placement for your right hand? I noticed that everytime you ascend one string, you place your thumb on the previous string. Should this be a regular practice or is it more of a preference-type thing?
Not only a muting technique though! It is also a great way to reach and maintain higher speeds. Having your thumb right before the string you are playing is really worth trying out
Loving the raking exercise. I've been playing for 7 years this autumn, and my technique got kinda stuck. I've always been progressing, albeit a bit slowly, and while pushing the tempo, I've repeatedly stumbled across my own fingers. This exercise was slow at first, but it feels much more natural than alternate-picking while descending. Gonna be practicing this daily.
i have that exact problem.. i don't alternate "every single time"... and that is an obvious barrier for my playing, even if i don't notice it.. thanks for you time... i'll try to incorporate raking in my arsenal.. see how that goes..
Thanks. Really helpful. What about your Thumb. As you start to ascend your thumb is resting on the pick. If you go down the strings, is your thumb resting on one string above?
Hi Scott, same as some others I played guitar before, so the left hand feels almost comfortable at the fret. But I feel like randomly starting with index or middle. Actually I feel more comfortable by starting with middle (tipping from pinkie to index seems to be our nature ;-) So, here are my questions: a) Should I choose one starting finger and keep it? (if yes - what I think - which one ist better?) b) Should I alternate each note or - like on guitar up/down stroke - do the 1s,2s.. with one finger and the "ands" with the other one? Hope I could explain what I mean :-) Kris, germany
If I ever took up bass alongside guitar, I would come straight to your channel. Speaking of guitar, how do you find (if it's applicable) the swap from bass? Very alien?
Hey scott. It would be aswome if you make a video talking about the plucknig hand when there are rests. and also i would like to know if its ok to start the beat with the second finger if the alteration demands it.
I really appreciate this, video however songs like Master of Puppets demand Strict Alternate picking in certain areas. So now I have to learn bass all over again.
Scott, when you play the G string do you rest your thumb on the D string?, I have a book that applies this, but your technique is solid too. Super informative video bro, thanks!!!
I use a pick when playing but trying to develop my right hand technique. I just never realised how bad I was until I tried this 😂😂 slowly getting. Finding raking with my index finger easier than when I take with my middle lol
I know this video is ancient, but two things: 1) I found it very helpful in justifying when to use raking. 2) The hidden gem in the video is Scott's LEFT hand. I was watching it and it looking like a crawling spider. Then I realized that he was moving toward the next note ahead of time which I'm sure accounts for his ability to play at speed. But the one thing that I noticed in my own playing as I practiced doing this was that the note attacks were much smoother because I wasn't racing the press the strings down so quickly or so hard, leaving the sound of the attacks mostly to my right hand. A huge hidden bonus!
I’ve been playing for 25 years (self taught) and never bothered with rake picking. Watched this and practiced it for an afternoon - it’s hard, but it’s already improved my tone and phrasing with better control of note lengths, and opened up a new world of possibilities in terms of faster stuff. Thank you!
I really love your consistent and consice way of teaching: it really clarifies why my self-taught bad habits keep getting in my way and (more importantly) what to do about it.. Only thing I could wish for: I wish I had known this years earlier!
🙏🏼🙏🏼🙏🏼red
🙋🏻♀️self taught with 30 years of bad habits 🙄…I hear you, Canyon!
for some reason i was doing this raking thing while practicing the right hand on my own. good to know its not a bad habit. thanks for your videos
Its like you're walking up the bass and moon walking back down
I was avoiding this video because I thought it would be to advanced for a beginner, but this is exactly what I needed to see. Thanks Scott!
Your closing remarks really say it all. It's much easier to avoid alternating fingerstyle than to master it, just like it is to avoid practice than to "get to the shed". i have played fingerstyle guitar for > 30 years and still this style is difficult on the bass. However, and as if by magic, i started practicing 1 hour per night (and 3 hours on Tuesdays) strictly on alternating fingerstyle and "pluck, clap, slap" triplets and i am getting better - much better. Thanks for the lessons.
I'm slowly becoming a better bass player. Thank you so much Scott.
Cor bass players are spoiled with these videos! As a guitar player ive never been able to find anything as thorough or easy to understand as these, i will be taking up bass soon, and will be watching these a lot...
try justinguitar - This maybe a bit late!
Im already better as a player, sadly, its the higher end stuff that i can never find.
Try Chris Zoupa.
Yeah, Justinguitar is a good option. Anyonecanplayguitaruk isn't bad either.
I love how you talk to yourself. I salute you.
This was something my teacher taught me many years back...it took a long time for me to get comfortable with, but it improves the fluency of your playing by a wide margin. Definitely makes you faster, but so much cleaner as well.
Great job with your videos - you make it very easy for the learner to understand!
Thank you for this, my "plucking hand" was my biggest problem. I have not found one video of yours that I didn't learn something. You are by far the best bass instructor that I have seen, keep up the good work.
Finally someone cover and explain this basic but mystical technique clearly! Thanks a lot!
I started playing bass 6 months ago and you have the best channel out there!!! Easy to follow instruction and GREAT technique!!! Thank you for having a great channel that helps out a lot of people.
This, 12years old video CLEARED my hesitation about fingering order. Thank you so much.
This is the best right-hand technique video on the internet.
Invaluable information - thank you so much Scott!!
I'm so glad I found this video early into learning the bass. I just pucked it up a week or two ago and I couldnt stop wondering if you had to structly altetnate your fingers. Glad I found this early!
Best bass teacher on RUclips. No lie.
Tthanks for the lessons you're a very good and entertaining teacher. I have played guitar for years but I decided to try and play the bass. I'm having a blast so far and it's only been a week.
It took me a day of consant raking to feel confortable with it...and it works!!! this guy is amazing!
Scott, I just want to thank you for sharing your knowledge with other people, I have learn a lot from you. God bless you... BRO.. :)
been fumbling for 26 years ... mainly cos of poor rh technique - thanks for sharing - this is your best lesson for me - loving them all!
Merci beaucoup scott pour cette lesson de bass qui vas beaucoup me faire progresser la technique car j'en avais beaucoup besoin pour avancer tu est super .
I've never had bass lessons BUT have been playing for five years. This is awesome material and greatly appreciate what you are doing!
Great video! For anyone still struggling to maintain the I-M alternation, try just removing your left hand entirely or just muting all the strings with your left hand to focus on just the right hand. Once you get comfortable with it, you can kind of just add on the scale with the left hand as a sort of "layer" afterwards.
This is really helpful! I'm self taught and i do a mix of alternate plucking with raking and i never noticed that. Many thanks for this lesson Scott!!
This technique is the secret for basslines like YYZ. Tis why I'm here.
Love from South Africa! WOW
Excellent video Scott. Many thanks.
Love the studio setup.
For years I used index and the finger next to it as my two main fingers, as most bass players do. When I needed more speed because I was covering a tune in which the bassist used a pick, I practiced using three fingers for the speed, which became very effective. And when I injured a finger while on the road the third finger came in handy. For the last three years or so I changed my main two fingers to my index and my ring finger, and leaving the middle finger as the backup, as the index and third finger are close to the same length. So I get a more even tone.
Just started playing base yesterday. Previously had been playing guitar my whole life. The finger picking is very unnatural and awkward. If a deal breaker exists between me and playing base, it is the finger picking. I am trying to slog through the scales slowly doing the I-M-I-M (not even thinking about descending yet). In my impatience though, I found that the 4/4 part of Pink Floyd’s ‘Money’ is a nice way to get into the I-M-I-M rhythm as a breather from the scales. It is easy and fun and their is less coordination between the left and right hands so I can focus on the picking more in between doing scales. These videos are awesome by the way. Thank you.
Most bass lessons on youtube really insult my intelligence. Your lessons are always extremely informing and substantive. I can't thank you enough.
I am not giving up guitar by any means but bass is a giving me perspective that I did not get on the guitar for whatever reason. Additionally, its a blast! I'm having a lot of fun and am enjoying your teaching, Thanks so much!
Hey Scott! Thx so so so much for all the free material. Your explanations are crystal clear! Awesome work there.
Thank you for this! Im a guitarist but i will be filling in on bass for a band next minth and im trying to sort my technique. This is huge!
this was SUPER helpful! Just made a world of a difference for me. You are a great player. Thank you!
you're a great teacher!, i'm starting to play bass guitar and this is very usefull to me, thank you!
@roccckkerrr I played guitar before so swapping over is fine. Thanks for checking out the vid! S
You are an excellent teacher, sir. thank you for your lessons!
This is great and concise and has answered my previous question. Thanks
Thank you for that! I've been playing years without realizing what I was doing wrong! Love your videos, God bless!
Thank you Scott keep the videos comeing I really enjoy them
Jeff
Wow great lesson 👍
Very well explained.
Interesting and useful information I didn't know.
Thanks Scott! ☺️
Hey Scott. Just got a bass again after years. I was mostly self taught last time around, but am retraining myself from the beginning largely with your help. Thanks so much man!
Question: When you "I am I am" while raking, should you keep the "I" and the "am" consistent to the finger while raking on the descent? That way some of the "am's" and the "I's" would be next to each other. It would make sense that way. Just checking.
I figured out..depending what finger you want to use up or down imagine first finger as a root note and count 1 and 1 and..slowly until become a natural..it's a bit tricky for beginners or bad habits..thanks for video I appreciate it
Nice tip, dude. I use to rake strings when playing but with no order or control. It's time to clean my plucking technique!! Thanks Scott.
Thats what i was looking for Thank you!
I've been playing for 3-4 months now and I learned alternate picking pretty quickly.
Now i'm trying to implement raking which is a bit harder, so thanks for the tips :]]
I landed on this video as a direct result of watching recent videos you've made. I thought to myself, the smooth descending runs are definitely raked. Your plucking hand appeared so still, and when I play it alternate (which I've always done) doesn't have the same smoothness. So I searched Bass Lesson Rake and here you are, haha.
I had to stop practicing this technique because my wife says I'm too self centered. All she ever hears from me is "I am, I am, I am, ..."
Minh Pham hahahaha😂😂
🤣
Lmao
Start with the middle finger and it's much more humble
Same here with singing.. memememememem
Spot on Scott.
Hi Scott!
I've been playing guitar for some years and now have decided to take on the bass. I don't have much trouble with my fretting hand but I'm kind of going crazy with deciding how, when and where to anchor my thumb. And also with how should I angle my fingers. This is pulling me back and I cannot come up with a clearly defined technique that I feel comfortable with.
While alternate plucking, should I rest my index and middle fingers on the string below?
Should I have them slightly curved or have them straight?
And when should I change the anchoring point on my thumb? I mean, while I am playing on the, let's say, second string should i have my thumb resting on the third or the fourth string?
Thank you very much and I apologize for bombing you with all those questions.
Albert Ventura there really isn't a proper thumb rest, you can place your thumb on any strings as long as you don't play it, and as long you're comfortable with it.
but for me i usually place my thumb on the pick ups, but sometimes i use the 5th string when reaching 2nd and 1st string.
Albert Ventura
Most bassists use the middle pick-up as an anchor, especially when playing on the E string.
On the higher strings it's preferable not to anchor your thumb, because your hand is less flexible when anchored.
Yeah, this is driving me crazy too. And changing anchors in the middle of playing feels really weird and uncomfortable for me.
Thanks a lot bro ! It helped me a lot !
this is an essential drill to free your fingers from the self-imposed prison of always leading with one finger... which finger you lead with should be determined by what is coming up and how finger choice best preps you for executing it. It shouldn't be arbitrary unless you're truly improvising, in which case being able to switch the finger you lead with will be super helpful as well since you're not sure where you'll end up. The raking down is not really optional IMO, the best players (like Scott D) all do it. This is an excellent drill that I wish I had known in the beginning. Free your mind and your fingers will follow.
really need to just add this to the flying fingers drill and it becomes the most important drill of all, IMO
what material is that glove made from? what are the benefits? Thanks for taking the time to teach this stuff man \m/
I rake like crazy when I descend and was recently told that was wrong. Found it hard to believe after 28 years of playing. Feeling validated!
This is exactly the hsit I need. Never learnt any good technique on guitar or bass. ty for the vids. :)
Great lesson. Subscribed.
I agree with you that the plucking is got to be alternate. I would remember here the style of James Jamerson: he play only with "the Hook" (index finger). Sometimes, when we need an even sound this is a great way to obtain it.
Filippo (Italy)
Fantastic exercise, mate! Bookmarked until I can get it under ma fingers. Many thanks!
I forgot that James McAvoy was giving bass lessons on youtube. :)
top (même si je ne maîtrise pas bien la langue de Shakespeare) j'apprends de très bonnes choses avec vos vidéos) Thanks !!!!
Great video, helped me to gain speed with accuracy overall different licks and riffs. :)
the glove: a riddle wrapped in a mystery inside the enigma of another great lesson.
He has a neurological condition and the glove allows him to play. www.scottsbasslessons.com/odds-and-sods/the-gloves
Immediately went from this vid to learning One Drop. How fortuitous 🤘
Raking makes a load of sense when going down neighboring / consecutive strings eg G>D>A>E (which happens when playing scales) But what if we're going down across strings eg G>A or G>E or D>E? If we rake, how should the skipped string be muted? Of might it be more efficient to just use alternate picking? Noob's question :)
You are amazing! This is really helpful
A question please Scott, I have discovered this video after playing for 3 months.
I pluck and also include my ring finger, feels quite natural!
Should I stamp out this habit?
Great videos
Steve
Thank u!! Had just begun on bass and this really helps!!
Hello, Scott!
Your technic is perfect) Your explanation is clear and easy to understand.
But! It's really important to explain people, how you keep your index and middle fingers inflexible in a middle and distal phalanges. I think you get what I mean. It is widespread phenomenon when a bass-player has pain in his/her fingers, especially if it's needed to play fast. Why? Cause technic is incorrect! The cause of pain is the distal phalanx is always bending in a joint when a player picks a string. But your joints don't do so.
Please, explain how keep fingers in a tonus but without tension.
Thank you for reading this :)
2:40 me asking my dog "who's a good boy?"
🤣🤣🤣
Cool vid... the raking thing is new to me. I've added bass to my stable of guitars and from day one knew that alternating fingers was super critical. Especially for that funky Tower of Power or Jaco kind of pulsing drive? But I can seen where this descending raking stuff is really useful. Not easy though... time to get working on it.
Thanks! This was very helpful
guitarist and bassist here. The switch isn't terrible, but the scale (length of fretboard), space between strings, and swapping from picking to fingerpicking is the tough part. If you do a lesser demanding genre like Post Hardcore or Metal where you just follow the root of the rhythm guitar you'll be fine.
Scott, Love you man, Jamerson the great did it all with ONE hook. What about that?
Scott this video is great!, but where can i find more excersices about raking?
The descending raking looks like the moonwalk! ;)
Thanks Scott, I owe you another one ;)
damn it.... i dont go i-m-i-m... i go m-i-m-i.... thanks for fixing that for me haha
i really enjoyed this lesson and the camera angles -it really helps me out
mind pointing out the "must do" basic stuff once in a while?
Hey Scott, first of all.. congratulations for your great tutorials, very useful ones. I need to ask you about this string raking technique. Do you use it for EVERYTHING you play? i mean, scales, runs, arpeggios, grooves... etc.. I've been playing for several years, and now i dediced to switch to this technique cause'it seems is the only way to play fast things like arpeggios...i'm practicing the execersices you propose here and it's going ok.
What should we do with octaves? When we skip 1 or more strings in ascending?
Example, we play ROOT OCTAVE, ROOT ROOT OCTAVE, is that INDEX MIDDLE, INDEX MIDDLE MIDDLE or is it INDEX MIDDLE, INDEX MIDDLE INDEX? (Root - 1st string, octave - 3rd string)
Just asking should we alternate when ascend from first to third string anyway, or not (because index is shorter than middle and it is not so comfortable to play Octave Root Octave Root with Index Middle Index Middle) ?
Great question! Did You figured it out? :) Same problem here...
What about thumb placement for your right hand? I noticed that everytime you ascend one string, you place your thumb on the previous string. Should this be a regular practice or is it more of a preference-type thing?
Not only a muting technique though! It is also a great way to reach and maintain higher speeds. Having your thumb right before the string you are playing is really worth trying out
Thanks--about time I worked on my non-glove hand
Loving the raking exercise. I've been playing for 7 years this autumn, and my technique got kinda stuck. I've always been progressing, albeit a bit slowly, and while pushing the tempo, I've repeatedly stumbled across my own fingers. This exercise was slow at first, but it feels much more natural than alternate-picking while descending.
Gonna be practicing this daily.
i have that exact problem.. i don't alternate "every single time"... and that is an obvious barrier for my playing, even if i don't notice it.. thanks for you time... i'll try to incorporate raking in my arsenal.. see how that goes..
I'm 46 and have been playing bass since I was 12 and have never had a lesson. It's cool to have someone explain what I'm doing.
Thanks. Really helpful. What about your Thumb. As you start to ascend your thumb is resting on the pick. If you go down the strings, is your thumb resting on one string above?
Hi Scott, same as some others I played guitar before, so the left hand feels almost comfortable at the fret. But I feel like randomly starting with index or middle. Actually I feel more comfortable by starting with middle (tipping from pinkie to index seems to be our nature ;-) So, here are my questions:
a) Should I choose one starting finger and keep it? (if yes - what I think - which one ist better?)
b) Should I alternate each note or - like on guitar up/down stroke - do the 1s,2s.. with one finger and the "ands" with the other one?
Hope I could explain what I mean :-)
Kris, germany
If I ever took up bass alongside guitar, I would come straight to your channel. Speaking of guitar, how do you find (if it's applicable) the swap from bass? Very alien?
Sott i hope you check older vids like this:
What bass are you using on this one?
Hey scott. It would be aswome if you make a video talking about the plucknig hand when there are rests. and also i would like to know if its ok to start the beat with the second finger if the alteration demands it.
I really appreciate this, video however songs like Master of Puppets demand Strict Alternate picking in certain areas.
So now I have to learn bass all over again.
How does this apply to rhythms like a gallop, for example. Do you go: PMP---MPM---PMP---MPM. Or do you go PMP---PMP---PMP---PMP?
Good teacher
Scott, when you play the G string do you rest your thumb on the D string?, I have a book that applies this, but your technique is solid too. Super informative video bro, thanks!!!
Thanks Scott for bass lesson this i belief its very practice
Is it important if one starts alternate picking with middle or index finger as long as the alternating is always consistent?
I use a pick when playing but trying to develop my right hand technique. I just never realised how bad I was until I tried this 😂😂 slowly getting. Finding raking with my index finger easier than when I take with my middle lol