If you're that dude, and happen to be a music geekoid like yours truly, perhaps you share my appreciation for good basslines in music. I myself play drums and piano, but when I listen to music, I tend to play some groovy-a$$ air-bassguitar along. Why you may ask...? I find this to be quite a headscratcher myself. When it comes to addicting music, an awesome bassline just seems to be a consistent factor.
A band like Primus, who I've had the pleasure of seeing a few weeks ago in Paradiso, is not the reference point I'm looking for. Les Claypools radical three piece rock outfit seems to attract virtuoso bass-enthusiasts -who listen to Pat Metheny and Jaco Pastorius for similair reasons- and casual 90's rock sentimentalists (such as myself) alike.
Woah! As I insert the video into this blog entry, IMMEDIATELY I get the image I want you to notice. You see Rasmus Stolberg bobbing his head while playing that quirky, bouncy bassline which simply reeks with awesomeness. It makes 'I Was Playing Drums' a really addicting track, and it sounds even better live than on the record.
Efterklang here is a really good example of a song in which the bass steals the limelight without it being all that sophisticated by itself ...yet it allows all the instrumentation around it to sound the way it's supposed to. Every drum break, every detail just makes sense because of it. The best analogy I can think of is that the bassplayer represents the head of a snake...it navigates and allows the rest of the song to move along fluently.
I shall exhibit few more examples of this phenomenon, off the top of my head. Macca's smooth bass playing in 'Dear Prudence' by The Beatles is another terrific, simplistic bassline that just makes you want to listen over and over.
Fleetwood Mac prolly have a shitload of songs I can think of...aha! 'The Chain' of course! Behold!
That's enough randomness from this musicologus geekus..for NOW. See ya!
Oh. Riiigght. Feel free to post your own examples! For I exist to be revelled!
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