View Poll Results: Fingers or Pick?

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  • Pick

    6 24.00%
  • Fingers

    6 24.00%
  • Both

    13 52.00%
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Thread: Fingers VS Pick

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  1. #1
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    Quote Originally Posted by player
    And Do not count out Jeff Beck.the man plays great lead without a pick and has for years.
    Just not on bass, which is the point of the thread.
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  2. #2
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    Quote Originally Posted by marnold
    Just not on bass, which is the point of the thread.
    sorry boss
    Life is like a camera, just focus on what’s important and capture the good times, develop from the negatives and if things don’t work out, just take another shot. ~ Anonymous


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  3. #3
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    Quote Originally Posted by player
    sorry boss
    Heh. NP. As an aside, I saw that special recently with Beck and really was impressed.

    Back on topic, I forgot about another famous bass player who uses a pick: Lemmy from Motorhead (insert appropriate umlauts here). He's not a technician by any means, but his style keeps Motorhead straddling that line between metal and punk. I know there's another relatively well-known funk player who uses a pick, but his name is eluding me.
    Axen: Jackson DK2M, Fender Deluxe Nashville Telecaster, Reverend Warhawk 390, Taylor 914ce, ESP LTD Surveyor-414
    Amphen: Jet City JCA22H and JCA12S cab, Carvin X-60 combo, Acoustic B20
    Effecten: "Thesis 96" Overdrive/Boost (aka DVM OD2), Hardwire DL-8 Digital Delay/Looper, DigiTech Polara Reverb, DigiTech EX-7 Expression Factory and CF-7 Chorus Factory, Danelectro CF-1 Cool Cat Fuzz
    "I wish Imagine Dragons would be stuck in an Arcade Fire for an entire Vampire Weekend."--Brian Posehn

  4. #4
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    Quote Originally Posted by marnold
    Heh. NP. As an aside, I saw that special recently with Beck and really was impressed.

    Back on topic, I forgot about another famous bass player who uses a pick: Lemmy from Motorhead (insert appropriate umlauts here). He's not a technician by any means, but his style keeps Motorhead straddling that line between metal and punk. I know there's another relatively well-known funk player who uses a pick, but his name is eluding me.
    this one?
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3uwvBizKAwcsaw fingerstyle and guitar this jumped right up at me Rev.sorry did not catch the Bass drift in it right away.
    our bassist never used a pick either and was still jam good
    I no longer have fingertips on the first three fingers of my right hand
    I'd better not even ask
    Life is like a camera, just focus on what’s important and capture the good times, develop from the negatives and if things don’t work out, just take another shot. ~ Anonymous


    Guitars: 1967(year they came out): Fender Coronado II Wildwood I ,Fullerton ST- 4 Fat Strat , Esteban Legacy acous/elec,99 MIA Standard Fender Strat
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  5. #5
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    Quote Originally Posted by player
    I'd better not even ask
    Let's just say that snowblowers and hands don't mix.
    Axen: Jackson DK2M, Fender Deluxe Nashville Telecaster, Reverend Warhawk 390, Taylor 914ce, ESP LTD Surveyor-414
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    Effecten: "Thesis 96" Overdrive/Boost (aka DVM OD2), Hardwire DL-8 Digital Delay/Looper, DigiTech Polara Reverb, DigiTech EX-7 Expression Factory and CF-7 Chorus Factory, Danelectro CF-1 Cool Cat Fuzz
    "I wish Imagine Dragons would be stuck in an Arcade Fire for an entire Vampire Weekend."--Brian Posehn

  6. #6
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    Don't post this on a bass player's forum. It will degenerate very quickly and never end....

    I don't think it matters all that much how you play a bass as long as it sounds good and is comfortable to you. "Sounds good" is a big part of it though.

    Funk and reggae likely wouldn't sound good with a pick and practically demand finger playing. Lots of punk players use picks as do metal players, so a pick would be perfectly acceptable for those genres.

    I suppose it really depends on what the music asks for and what the player is most comfortable with.

  7. #7
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    Quote Originally Posted by NWBasser
    I suppose it really depends on what the music asks for and what the player is most comfortable with.


    that could easily be the correct answer to any number of questions around here.

    the "right" way is the way that produces the sound you want to make.
    "I happen to have perfect situational awareness, Lana. Which cannot be taught, by the way. Like a poet's ... mind for ... to make the perfect words." - Sterling Archer

  8. #8
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    Quote Originally Posted by NWBasser
    Don't post this on a bass player's forum. It will degenerate very quickly and never end....
    No kidding. If you ever want to feel better about yourself, search for this kind of thing on TalkBass, although your IQ might drop a good 50 points.
    Axen: Jackson DK2M, Fender Deluxe Nashville Telecaster, Reverend Warhawk 390, Taylor 914ce, ESP LTD Surveyor-414
    Amphen: Jet City JCA22H and JCA12S cab, Carvin X-60 combo, Acoustic B20
    Effecten: "Thesis 96" Overdrive/Boost (aka DVM OD2), Hardwire DL-8 Digital Delay/Looper, DigiTech Polara Reverb, DigiTech EX-7 Expression Factory and CF-7 Chorus Factory, Danelectro CF-1 Cool Cat Fuzz
    "I wish Imagine Dragons would be stuck in an Arcade Fire for an entire Vampire Weekend."--Brian Posehn

  9. #9
    pes_laul Guest

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    Quote Originally Posted by NWBasser
    Don't post this on a bass player's forum. It will degenerate very quickly and never end....

    I don't think it matters all that much how you play a bass as long as it sounds good and is comfortable to you. "Sounds good" is a big part of it though.

    Funk and reggae likely wouldn't sound good with a pick and practically demand finger playing. Lots of punk players use picks as do metal players, so a pick would be perfectly acceptable for those genres.

    I suppose it really depends on what the music asks for and what the player is most comfortable with.
    +1 You pretty much hit in on the head.

  10. #10
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    Quote Originally Posted by NWBasser

    Funk and reggae likely wouldn't sound good with a pick and practically demand finger playing. Lots of punk players use picks as do metal players, so a pick would be perfectly acceptable for those genres.

    I suppose it really depends on what the music asks for and what the player is most comfortable with.
    You slappa da bass?
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  11. #11
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    No question, fingerstyle is the way to play a standup double bass. James Jamerson was a double bassist who converted to bass guitar; notably, he used JUST his index finger, he called 'the hook', on his Fender P-bass, because that's how he played his double bass.

    I certainly understand funk bassists using their fingers and even whacking with the side of the thumb; that technique is essential to the sound and style.

    But as a guitar player who at one point converted to playing bass guitar more or less by necessity or default, I learned to play bass guitar using a pick, and I never really bothered to attempt to learn fingerstyle.

    I thought it was OK to do so because as a kid, I saw some guy named McCartney using a pick on a funny-shaped bass guitar. I thought he played pretty good. Played it practically like it was a lead guitar. Found out later he was actually a frustrated lead guitar player who 'volunteered' to play bass for that dumb little band he was in, so it made sense.
    ^^
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  12. #12
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    Quote Originally Posted by wingsdad
    No question, fingerstyle is the way to play a standup double bass. James Jamerson was a double bassist who converted to bass guitar; notably, he used JUST his index finger, he called 'the hook', on his Fender P-bass, because that's how he played his double bass.

    I certainly understand funk bassists using their fingers and even whacking with the side of the thumb; that technique is essential to the sound and style.

    But as a guitar player who at one point converted to playing bass guitar more or less by necessity or default, I learned to play bass guitar using a pick, and I never really bothered to attempt to learn fingerstyle.

    I thought it was OK to do so because as a kid, I saw some guy named McCartney using a pick on a funny-shaped bass guitar. I thought he played pretty good. Played it practically like it was a lead guitar. Found out later he was actually a frustrated lead guitar player who 'volunteered' to play bass for that dumb little band he was in, so it made sense.
    I, too, was originally a self-taught rhythm guitarist (Gibson SG Jr.). The first band I auditioned for needed a bass player, so I bought a Framus (Hofner knock-off) and proceeded to use a pick only throughout my "career". I was always after that John Entwistle "sound", with the initial high-end treble attack, coupled w the low end. My signature bass set-up thus becoming a Ric, y-corded into a Vox Super Beatle head, one channel set for low-end and the other set for a more trebley attack. Worked perfectly for the instantly recognizable Entwistle sound - the pick adding to the plucky, treble attack, and also for lead-like basslines, as the band that recorded in NYC was a three-piece. So, I was doing alot of Entwistle-like (lead guitar type) runs and fills. (I know Entwistle used a pick - and fingers as well, but I had my style, and it worked well for me, so I saw no reason to change it. None of that slapping and popping stuff was being done during my time, at least not to my knowledge, and when I first started seeing and hearing that style, quite honestly, I hated it. )
    bigG


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