Hallo Musikfreunde! Hello Music Lovers!
Walking Bass patterns are usually associated with "Jazz or Blues Music" but you will find them in almost every style of pop music from the beginnings of rock & roll to the pop music of the 1960s and 1970s. Many of the first generation electric bass players who recorded rock and roll in the late 1950s and early 1960s were actually jazz bassists (or guitarists) like James Jamerson or Carol Kaye for example. No wonder that Paul McCartney and others picked up these bass lines - maybe even without knowing these basslines were actually connected to Jazz and developed a style of their own. May I invite you to a walking bass line (over a Duke Ellington chord progression)?
Best regards
FraMat
P.S. You may visit my Site at the INTERNET ARCHIVE if you like. You'll find my Video-Upload from AUGUST 2021 https://archive.org/details/framats-musikalische-rumpelkammer-5 under this link as stream or download
Walking Bass patterns are usually associated with "Jazz or Blues Music" but you will find them in almost every style of pop music from the beginnings of rock & roll to the pop music of the 1960s and 1970s. Many of the first generation electric bass players who recorded rock and roll in the late 1950s and early 1960s were actually jazz bassists (or guitarists) like James Jamerson or Carol Kaye for example. No wonder that Paul McCartney and others picked up these bass lines - maybe even without knowing these basslines were actually connected to Jazz and developed a style of their own. May I invite you to a walking bass line (over a Duke Ellington chord progression)?
Best regards
FraMat
P.S. You may visit my Site at the INTERNET ARCHIVE if you like. You'll find my Video-Upload from AUGUST 2021 https://archive.org/details/framats-musikalische-rumpelkammer-5 under this link as stream or download
- Category
- Paul Mccartney
Commenting disabled.