Freebase Dali |
01-20-2013 01:36 AM |
Yea, practice.
Personally, I do everything by ear, and don't know notes at all, but I can play a decent bass line for anything you throw at me and expound on it.
I'd prefer to know notes, but I'm not in music as much anymore to justify it, and I do fine off the cuff anyway. If I were you and you didn't come from a background of musicians and grow up in that atmosphere, I'd learn the basics. Get the notes down, get the basic technique down, then start trying to mimic. There are plenty of resources around today. It's not like when I grew up, which had no mainstream internet, no Youtube and nothing you could refer to other than by going to a music store and buying books, or learning first hand from someone else.
I'm sort of a cheater in that I was never a bass player to begin with, but grew up in a family of multiple instrumentalists, and the concept of learning a new instrument comes naturally. For others, though, I understand that there needs to be a more directed approach, and I would definitely suggest getting a hold of a basic guide that walks you through the process so that you're familiar and comfortable with the basics, then learn the notes, and finally practice following along with material until you're confident enough to provide what it is a bass player provides.
You don't have to be fancy with it. That will come with time, after you no longer have to think about how to play the instrument, and can think about how to add your own personality into it. Start small, and steady. But if you're looking for a quick-fix sorta thing, you're not going to find it.
You literally have to train your brain to think like a bassist (and a musician, at the very least) and be able to perform the job of bassist. This also applies to any other instrument.
Keep this in mind.
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