Bass Lessons

Bass Lessons - Jester's Lessons Vol.1 bass tab

I haven't been playing bass very long. Since Christmas actually.

But I've gotten real good and I just figured that I would share

some lessons with begginers and advanced players. I will split

the lessons up into acouple exercises in each.

Some words you should all ready know:

-Fret

-Sharp

-Flat

-Measure

-Root Note

-Chord

*1- The Fret Board

G| -| A| -| B| C| -| D| -| E| F| -| G|

D| -| E| F| -| G| -| A| -| B| C| -| D|

A| -| B| C| -| D| -| E| F| -| G| -| A|

E| F| -| G| -| A| -| B| C| -| D| -| E|

0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12

The board above shows all the notes from the open position to

the 12th fret, at which all the notes repeat. The spaces with

hyphens(-) represent notes that are either sharp or flat. A

hyphened note can be called sharp or flat interchangable as

long as you put the right note in front of it. For example, all

the notes in the 6th fret are sharp/flat depending on which way

you come from. The E string is A sharp/B flat, the A being D sharp/E

flat, the D being G sharp/A flat, and the G string being C sharp/D

flat.

*2- Tone-Semitone Pattern

As you can see, there is a pattern in which the notes follow and

repeat. This is called the Tone-Semitone pattern. The following

shows the pattern in action.

A B-C D E-F G A

A full space above represents a tone, which means the notes are

a full step (two frets) apart. A hyphen(-) above represents

a semitone, which means the notes are a helf step (one fret) apart.

*3- Short Timing

There area only 4 different things in timing you should know

by now. A quarter note, eigth note, quarter rest, and eigth rest.

G|------0-|------00|--------|--------|

D|----0---|----00--|--------|--------| The stars(*) are rests.

A|--0-----|--00----|----0-*-|--*0*0--|

E|0-------|00------|0-*-----|00------|

+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + + <--- Each + Represents A Beat.

The first measure shows quarter notes, one note per beat. The

second shows eigth notes,

or two notes per beat. The third shows quarter note rests, one

rest per beat. And finally the fourth shows eigth note rests,

or one rest per every half beat.

*4- Turnaround Pattern #1

A Turnaround pattern is one of the many patterns that bass players

use to keep up with the guitar player. It consists of four root

notes. Here is an example.

C Am F G <---Shows Chord Used

G|--------|--------|--------|--------|

D|--------|--------|--------|--------|

A|3-3-3-3-|0-0-0-0-|--------|--------|

E|--------|--------|1-1-1-1-|3-3-3-3-|

+ + + + + + + + + + + + + + + +

The turnaround pattern can be started from any root note and

doesn't have to use just quarter notes. As long as you follow

the pattern, it can start anywhere. Here is the pattern...

|2|-|-|1|

|-|3|-|4|

The numbers DO NOT represent the frets. They represent the order

of which you hit the notes. For example, if you start on the 5th

fret of the A string then the pattern would be... 5th on the A,

2nd on the A, 3rd on the E, and 5th on the E.

*5- 12 Bar Blues Pattern #1

The 12 Bar Blues Pattern is just like the Turnaround Pattern

in which bass players use it to keep up with the guitar player.

Unlike the Turnaround Pattern... The 12 Bar Blues Pattern uses

only 3 root notes instead of 4, and 12 measures instead of 4. Here

is an example of one.

A A A A

G|--------|--------|--------|--------|

D|--------|--------|--------|--------|

A|0-0-0-0-|0-0-0-0-|0-0-0-0-|0-0-0-0-|

E|--------|--------|--------|--------|

D D A A

G|--------|--------|--------|--------|

D|0-0-0-0-|0-0-0-0-|--------|--------|

A|--------|--------|0-0-0-0-|0-0-0-0-|

E|--------|--------|--------|--------|

E D A E

G|--------|--------|--------|--------|

D|--------|0-0-0-0-|--------|--------|

A|--------|--------|0-0-0-0-|--------|

E|0-0-0-0-|--------|--------|0-0-0-0-|

Just like the Turnaround Pattern you dont have to use just the

root notes or quarter notes. And as long as you follow the pattern,

your good to go. Here is the Pattern.

|2|-|3|

|1|-|-|

Just like the Turnaround Pattern the numbers do not represent

the frets... they are the order inwhich you play the root note.

But of course unlike the Turnaround you do not just play through

the roots. There is a pattern in which the order you play them.

The pattern is simple...

1,1,1,1,2,2,1,1,3,2,1,3

So if you start on the 5th fret E string the pattern will be...

5th on the E four times, 5th on the A twice, 5th on the E twice, then

7th on the A, 5th on the A, 5th on the E, and 7th on the A.

Thats all I will show for now. I dont want to overload on the first

lesson.

-Jester

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