And that's the right answer. No Cliff wasn't the first one but He was the best one - none gave that band that lyrical and musical background found in Orion and To live is to Die- even that James'es solo is the one that Cliff have writen for the bass. Whole truth about Metallica - It was Cliff's gig :)
@@Gabe-1997 Honestly there's a ton of 80's stuff in major keys. I guess it depends on your definition of metal, but I definitely think hair metal counts as metal and there were a ton of hair metal with riffs in major keys. Poison comes to mind off the top of my head.
Love it. We need a part 2....... Peace Sells - Megadeth Run to the Hills - Iron Maiden Aerials - SYOD Orion - Metallica Die Laughing - Therapy? (Obscure shout there I know) Honourable mentions..... Damage Case - Motorhead N.I.B. - Black Sabbath (just for the filthy bass intro)
@@KrakkersBB Trooper is a great shout. It's like "which amazing Iron Maiden bassline do you love the most" ??? Could have been any. My fav is Flight of Icarus but it's just cos I love the song 😎
Was just about to point that out. Can't remember if he actually recorded anything with them or not though - maybe an early demo/tape? Can't be arsed to Google it. 🤣
If I remember correctly, Justin Chancellor actually recorded 46 & 2 on a Stingray. The previous bassist that played on Undertow used a Stingray and a Rickenbacker to record with and Justin was trying to match that sound. He was never really happy with it though, which is when he switched to a Wal full-time. Aenima has a mix of the Wal and Stingray on it.
@@MrDSAPPY yes but he also used one on Forty Six & 2 as well as H. and MAYBE Pushit. He also used one when recording Descending and he breaks it out when they do the song live
It’s funny I play 99% of the time with a pick only time I do not is for Iron Maiden and Crazy Train. I can do the Maiden with a pick but it is pure blasphemy, but Crazy Train I cannot play the verse tight enough with a pick
I spent decades in metal bands. From my perspective you more than covered the most frequently used metal bass techniques. And you did it succinctly and in a way that's very approachable and attainable. That's why SBL is the best! Maybe an "advanced metal bass lines" video in the future?
Yeah I really love the "beginner friendly" thing they've been doing lately. I've been playing for 20 years but these types of videos really inspire me to go back to basics and really dig into my fundamentals like I haven't since I was a kid.
Enter Sandman and For Whom the Bell Tolls were the alchemy that FINALLY hooked me into my bass last night. I've been trying to connect with this instrument since 2008, and it just seemed to waver and I didn't progress regardless of what I did. Last night I was inspired, made a decision. Found this video and ended up playing/"messing around" for 2.5 hours. Time flew by! :) I also realized that a lot of these basslines in songs are shapes! Enter Sandman, Bellz, Anesthesia... etc. Thanks Scott :)
To the list of underrated Metal bass players, I always add the now sadly gone Jimmy Bain: his furious bass tone on "Holy Diver" by Dio was simply amazing!
I saw the Ride the lightening tour . We were in a small venue and they were opening for WASP . They blew WASP off the stage . I was right up at the stage and Burton blew my mind . He was doing stuff not done before .
Black Sabbath's paranoid, iron man, war pigs, symptoms of the universe, iron maiden the trooper, wrath child and killers, White Zombie thunder kiss 65 , Black sunshine ,Pantera walk, cowboys from hell , I'm broken , 5 minutes alone, mouth of War, and Megadeth peace sells but who's buying., Metallica seek and destroy, motor breath but the 5 you guys picked were cool by the way 5 is not enough lol 🤘🤘🤘🤘
I play with fingers whenever possible, but when I use a pick, I usually opt for either a 2mm or 3mm "Big Stubby." These are contoured for your thumb and also rounded on the edges. This makes them much less scratchy than traditional picks, but they have superior attack and speed. I have a pretty large variety of picks, though, because sometimes a soft pick played lightly is exactly what you need. I also found that the Carbon Fiber Jazz III are awesome. They have a great sound and awesome grip.
Guys I’m sure you been informed Ron McGoveney was the bassist before Cliff in Metallica. But Cliff was recruited to get to the next album and was there by the first album.
This is why we guitarists (who also play bass) LOVE Chancellor. He comes up with the most wicked droney chord lines that are kind of haunting, melodic and pack so much punch
I loved hearing Dream Theater's Panic Attack in the intro. Having listened to the isolated bass track for Symphony of Destruction, I'm also pretty sure Ellefson alternates between open plucking while the guitar is in and then palm mutes in the absence of guitar, rather than palm muting even while guitar is palm muted which kills the vibe. There's a reason that bass is usually open plucking while guitar is palm muted and that's to retain the heaviness because palm muted bass in a metal application tends to kill the vibe unless you do it tastefully like David Ellefson who would do it in the absence of guitar rather than the presence of it. That's something he did a fair bit with early Megadeth material.
Came up playing metal in the 90s and I was surprised to discover I played 4/5 of these tunes (just not the Tool song). Thanks for keeping the metal alive Scott & Ian.
I am surprised that Steve Harris is missing here! Any of his bass lines really. I think the Wicker Man or Flight of Icarus would have been perfect fits!
No disrespect to Harris but for today's standards, Maiden are more like hard rock than metal. Again, fantastic player but not really what I'd call metal. Then again it's all subjective.
The video says beginner bass lines . Steve Harris plays like a madman! No beginner is going to be able to play his parts lol. He's my favorite bassist from one of the greatest bands in my opinion.
I love the mention of the Squier Contemporary HH Jazz Bass V. My wife bought me one for my birthday last year and I would never have even looked at the bass. However, I played it and it's super impressive with great tone and punch.
For Whom the Bell Tolls was the first song I learned to play the whole way through, in the early 90s. But even with decades of that, when I got a six-string I realized that I really liked being able to play that intro on the C, G, and D rather than G, D, and A. Same exact finger motions, just with a little more space for my fingers, in the 14-11 fret region rather than 19-16.
I just commented on another video how much I appreciate you two and the content you’re creating for us mere mortal practitioners of bass guitar. Also special shout out for the real-person budget gear recommendations. Your gut was right; not everyone only has a $20k budget for a non-income producing hobby.
Hi chaps. I was lucky enough to be front row for Cannibal Corpse last night at Nottingham Rock City directly in front of Alex Webster and man that guy can play! He was using his own signature Spector Euro 5 LX in the blood red drip colour. Bit different to your usual content but a segment on him would definitely be very interesting. Keep up the great work 😊
Yes Bob Daisley played with a pick... ya know I don't recall you guys talking much about Daisley. His playing on Ozzy's I Don't Know is GOD TIER rock-with-a-pick bass playing. He made that EB-3 go DRNT DRNT DRNT, and played super fronty, driving the song forward
Cliff was Metallica's second bassist, Ron McGovney was their first. Ron didn't want to leave LA and move to San Francisco so they auditioned bassists already in San Fran, Cliff was chosen because he not only was a great bassist he could set them up in a sweet house they could split rent on. That's the house in the pic on the back of Master of Puppets in Battery, the neighbourhood where all the 80s thrash bands lived, they had just signed with Elektra and were celebrating in that pic.
As I recall it was James who saw Cliff play Anesthesia with his former band and asked if he wanted to try out. Anesthesia was Cliff's warm up routine that he would play onstage before the rest of the band joined in. It wasn't called Anesthesia back then, just Cliff jamming all alone for a couple minutes. The name of his band is on the tip of my tongue, hate when I can't recall something and Googling it is cheating. It'll come to me eventually.
wrong there folks, there was other bass player before Cliff Burton, this was Ron McGovney he was part of the first line up in the band (Hetfield, Urlich, Mustaine and McGovney) but he left he band shortly after having problems with Dave Mustaine, he performed with the band in some of the concerts in 2011 celebrating the band 30 years anniversary
Forty six & two, and The Pot are what I play to tell if my bass is in tune because Ik exactly how they should sound. Or it’s Come A little Closer and Drones In The Valley by Cage The Elephant. Makes it easy to tune by ear when I don’t have my Zoom H6 with me.
Fun video. I would have included something by Maiden. Numerous options but my first choice would be "The Trooper". Have to admit, i would have picked something different from Megadeth, but SoD is probably a better fit for a "beginner" vid. On FWtBT, if using a manual wah instead of an auto (he famously used a Morley, but I can get something comparable with a Cry Baby), you can get closer to what Cliff Burton did, by "sitting back" on the pedal most of the time, then using a forward sweep to emphasise particular notes. For something fairly simple but "different", have a look at some Gojira bass lines. "Oroborus" leaps to mind. For the bass part, one of my favourite metal songs is "Now I lay thee down" by Machine Head. Original is played with a pick, but it works pretty well with fingers.
I'm left handed, and I play a right handed instrument. This makes difficult to reach the higher frets. I used to play For whom the bell tolls moving my hand to the top side of the fretboard. My band laughed a lot the first time I did it, but people loved seeing me doing that live
I wish I had enough time to focus seriously on this course but my free time from work and paycheck aren't enough to focus correctly on it, but I love your free videos anyway, you're great ❤
For the 46 and two sound me sure he uses a flanger pedal. The boss BF2 (if you have the BF3 use the guitar & not the bass input) you can see his pedal settings in the Dunlop TV video. He has a very complicated clean/dirty 2/3 way amp set up but a SansAmp GT2 gets me reasonably close and would be better with a clean blend. That Wal sounds sick more please! I don't think there's a single song that a Wal could not improve
Hey Scott and co.! Hoping to catch your attention - sorry that the request is totally off topic. Could you perhaps do a video on bassist Lincoln Goines? I feel like Mr. Goines is an awesome bass player that fits the style of play that you advocate here on this channel perfectly. Especially his work with Mike Stern (Chromazone, Big Neighborhood (2009) or Jones' Street) would be interesting to hear you guys break down - maybe even get him in for an interview! Regards from Greenland
10:46 now we know, thanks to the Premier Guitar Interview with JC He said he uses both pickups on, and both filters fully open in gain boost mode So lots of high mids
Guitarist: Hey, close your eyes bro. Bassist: Ok bro. Guitarist: What do you see, bro? Bassist: Nothing, bro. Guitarist: That’s my life without you, bro. Bassist: Bro…
Just watched this via e-mail. I really liked the list. There are other great bass lines, of course, but the list was limited to 5. For metal heads like me, there are some bass lines from players in bands that are, shall we say, less mainstream. I like Overkill's D.D. Verni. "Gasoline Dream", for example, has a very eerie bass line. My personal favorite is "Skullcrusher", where thrask meets doom. I won't go on, but metal bassists get a bad rap for being too simplistic. There is a lot of truth to that, but when they let the bassist go off, they create some killer and very memorable riffs.
Someone has even put each song in one of the two stereo channels : check it out, it's amazing that DT didn't get legally attacked for this. I love DT, but they sometimes take a lot of inspiration from others... th-cam.com/video/FhLfLlYY0nE/w-d-xo.html
When I started trying metal out on my bass i picked Zwitter from rammstein easy bass riff to remember and the second for a lil change mayhem freezing moon but both seem simple when you get it down
My first Metallica song was, “ For Whom The Bell Tolls” and when I found out that riff was not a a guitar I lost my mind. I was like HOOOOOOW!!!!!!!???????
Ron McGovney preceded Cliff Burton in Metallica. Justin Chancellor also recorded 46 & 2 with a Stingray through a Boss Flanger into a Mesa Boogie Bass 400+, both available in the HX Stomp. The Ampeg tone doesn't sound right.
I’ve heard that when they started recording Ænima, 46 & 2 was tracked with Justin’s stingray and he either acquired his Wal or used one from the studio for a “heavier” sound for the rest of the session. There maybe some studio trickery by blending a flanger signal and clean and dirty cab.
Daisley was always a pick player from his days in Rainbow on through the Ozzy. He left Ozzy with drummer Tommy Aldridge to join Uriah Heap for Abominog in before coming back to record Diary of a Madman. Daisley was in and out of Ozzy’s band through 91’s No More Tears.
Ron McGovney was Metallica's first bassist and toured with them for a year before leaving the band in '82
Yes, and then cliff came up to them after a show and ended up in the band
I half believe that they said that as bait
He didn't record shit with them😂
And that's the right answer. No Cliff wasn't the first one but He was the best one - none gave that band that lyrical and musical background found in Orion and To live is to Die- even that James'es solo is the one that Cliff have writen for the bass. Whole truth about Metallica - It was Cliff's gig :)
You can thank Dave for that one 😁😁😁😁😁
It's nuts that one of the greatest metal songs of all time -- Crazy Train -- features a rhythm section essentially playing disco.
"Crazy Train' is one of the only metal songs in a major key
@@Gabe-1997 Honestly there's a ton of 80's stuff in major keys. I guess it depends on your definition of metal, but I definitely think hair metal counts as metal and there were a ton of hair metal with riffs in major keys. Poison comes to mind off the top of my head.
@@Gabe-1997 Ironically Slayer also plays a lot of songs in Major, so there's that
Also listen to Mercyful Fate's song "Devil Eyes", proto black metal with a disco beat
@@jakobgustafsson7898 Good call on Devil Eyes. And man, I don't know if I've ever heard someone jump two octaves as seamlessly as KD. 🙂
Love it.
We need a part 2.......
Peace Sells - Megadeth
Run to the Hills - Iron Maiden
Aerials - SYOD
Orion - Metallica
Die Laughing - Therapy? (Obscure shout there I know)
Honourable mentions.....
Damage Case - Motorhead
N.I.B. - Black Sabbath (just for the filthy bass intro)
Therapy? - great shout, but surely the Trooper is the choice here if we are adding Iron Maiden
@@KrakkersBB Trooper is a great shout. It's like "which amazing Iron Maiden bassline do you love the most" ???
Could have been any. My fav is Flight of Icarus but it's just cos I love the song 😎
Some killer bass lines right there dude! 🤘🏻
This!
Dont forget Hammer Smashed Face - by Cannibal Corpse
Ron Mcgovney was the first bass player.
Was just about to point that out. Can't remember if he actually recorded anything with them or not though - maybe an early demo/tape?
Can't be arsed to Google it. 🤣
@@Rustinho I believe he might have been on the No Life Til Leather EP
@@instalation9 you're correct from what I've read. Cliff is credited, but McGovney played on it.
@@instalation9 I think he played in the Power Metal demo
NEEEEEEEEERD!
If I remember correctly, Justin Chancellor actually recorded 46 & 2 on a Stingray. The previous bassist that played on Undertow used a Stingray and a Rickenbacker to record with and Justin was trying to match that sound. He was never really happy with it though, which is when he switched to a Wal full-time. Aenima has a mix of the Wal and Stingray on it.
Correct
Justin used a stingray before he joined Tool
@@MrDSAPPY yes but he also used one on Forty Six & 2 as well as H. and MAYBE Pushit. He also used one when recording Descending and he breaks it out when they do the song live
@@logananderson4440 cool bro
Yes, and it's a flanger
Bob played crazy train with a pick. He had said in an interview that for fretless and ballads he'd use fingers, but for rock he would use a pick.
Same thing he did with Gary Moore: always pick, except for ballads (usually with fretless). What an underrated bass player by the way. I love the guy.
It’s funny I play 99% of the time with a pick only time I do not is for Iron Maiden and Crazy Train. I can do the Maiden with a pick but it is pure blasphemy, but Crazy Train I cannot play the verse tight enough with a pick
I spent decades in metal bands. From my perspective you more than covered the most frequently used metal bass techniques. And you did it succinctly and in a way that's very approachable and attainable. That's why SBL is the best! Maybe an "advanced metal bass lines" video in the future?
Yeah I really love the "beginner friendly" thing they've been doing lately. I've been playing for 20 years but these types of videos really inspire me to go back to basics and really dig into my fundamentals like I haven't since I was a kid.
Enter Sandman and For Whom the Bell Tolls were the alchemy that FINALLY hooked me into my bass last night. I've been trying to connect with this instrument since 2008, and it just seemed to waver and I didn't progress regardless of what I did. Last night I was inspired, made a decision. Found this video and ended up playing/"messing around" for 2.5 hours. Time flew by! :) I also realized that a lot of these basslines in songs are shapes! Enter Sandman, Bellz, Anesthesia... etc. Thanks Scott :)
Fun video. Props to Ian for the edited in recommendations for cost friendly gear for beginners.
Scott and Ian are quickly becoming my favorite internet power couple
LOL
Yes ,and when combined, they play rhythm guitar for Anthrax
Bass is a big masterpiece
To the list of underrated Metal bass players, I always add the now sadly gone Jimmy Bain: his furious bass tone on "Holy Diver" by Dio was simply amazing!
His whole work with Rainbow and then Dio was fantastic, probably one of the bass players that made me want to try playing it
Stand Up And Shout the bass is crazy rockin
I saw the Ride the lightening tour . We were in a small venue and they were opening for WASP . They blew WASP off the stage . I was right up at the stage and Burton blew my mind . He was doing stuff not done before .
Awesome man! Sounds like a hell of a gig!
One of the best bass vidoes of all time🔥
Black Sabbath's paranoid, iron man, war pigs, symptoms of the universe, iron maiden the trooper, wrath child and killers, White Zombie thunder kiss 65 , Black sunshine ,Pantera walk, cowboys from hell , I'm broken , 5 minutes alone, mouth of War, and Megadeth peace sells but who's buying., Metallica seek and destroy, motor breath but the 5 you guys picked were cool by the way 5 is not enough lol 🤘🤘🤘🤘
Might be showing my age here but the ultimate beginner metal bass line is Priest's Breaking the Law.
I play with fingers whenever possible, but when I use a pick, I usually opt for either a 2mm or 3mm "Big Stubby." These are contoured for your thumb and also rounded on the edges. This makes them much less scratchy than traditional picks, but they have superior attack and speed. I have a pretty large variety of picks, though, because sometimes a soft pick played lightly is exactly what you need. I also found that the Carbon Fiber Jazz III are awesome. They have a great sound and awesome grip.
Guys I’m sure you been informed Ron McGoveney was the bassist before Cliff in Metallica. But Cliff was recruited to get to the next album and was there by the first album.
This is why we guitarists (who also play bass) LOVE Chancellor. He comes up with the most wicked droney chord lines that are kind of haunting, melodic and pack so much punch
I loved hearing Dream Theater's Panic Attack in the intro. Having listened to the isolated bass track for Symphony of Destruction, I'm also pretty sure Ellefson alternates between open plucking while the guitar is in and then palm mutes in the absence of guitar, rather than palm muting even while guitar is palm muted which kills the vibe. There's a reason that bass is usually open plucking while guitar is palm muted and that's to retain the heaviness because palm muted bass in a metal application tends to kill the vibe unless you do it tastefully like David Ellefson who would do it in the absence of guitar rather than the presence of it. That's something he did a fair bit with early Megadeth material.
Came up playing metal in the 90s and I was surprised to discover I played 4/5 of these tunes (just not the Tool song). Thanks for keeping the metal alive Scott & Ian.
Hehe. I first read your comment as Thanks for keeping the metal alive Scott Ian.
I am surprised that Steve Harris is missing here! Any of his bass lines really. I think the Wicker Man or Flight of Icarus would have been perfect fits!
No disrespect to Harris but for today's standards, Maiden are more like hard rock than metal. Again, fantastic player but not really what I'd call metal. Then again it's all subjective.
The video says beginner bass lines . Steve Harris plays like a madman! No beginner is going to be able to play his parts lol. He's my favorite bassist from one of the greatest bands in my opinion.
Wicker man is criminally under-rated, Imean these are both b-siders essentially. Which is crazy no disrespect to FOI that tune kicks major bottom
@@vladv5126 kinda true but i wouldnt call Tool also a metal band
@@kylechavez7961 Steves riffs much easier then Justins ones… seems to me. Both actually total animals on their own league.
If i learned anything in my days playing or trying to play, its play an open D and a melody on the G string. Its always gorgeous.
So happy tool was mentioned on this video 🙏🏻
🧡🧡🧡
I love the mention of the Squier Contemporary HH Jazz Bass V. My wife bought me one for my birthday last year and I would never have even looked at the bass. However, I played it and it's super impressive with great tone and punch.
OMG how cool is your sound on "46 & 2"??? Love it!!
I was hyped up for a "panic attack" how-to because of the intro ):): im sad now
Nativity In Black (NIB) as an honorable mention 🤩
Cliff Burton wasn't a founding member of Metallica. The very first bass player in Metallica was Ron McGovney (1982 - 1982)
I love that SBL is adding more rock and metal! Jacob Umansky's seminars on the site have been amazing.
For Newsted The God That Failed would be awesome too, so groovy
🤘🏻🤘🏻🤘🏻
The zoom pedal and ernie ball is what I've been playing for awhile now. The first zoom pedal I had was a zoom 506 loved that pedal.
Best video yet guys! Adore all of these songs 🤘🏼
Dang, that wal does sound amazing!
For Whom the Bell Tolls was the first song I learned to play the whole way through, in the early 90s. But even with decades of that, when I got a six-string I realized that I really liked being able to play that intro on the C, G, and D rather than G, D, and A. Same exact finger motions, just with a little more space for my fingers, in the 14-11 fret region rather than 19-16.
Finally, you guys give Justin Chancellor some love! You guys should cover more TOOL stuff and you'll see your channel grow ;)
Even better would be to have Justin on as a guest! 🤪🤯🫠🫨
Appreciate the pick-love. Sometimes, that's just what sounds better!
🧡🧡🧡
I just commented on another video how much I appreciate you two and the content you’re creating for us mere mortal practitioners of bass guitar. Also special shout out for the real-person budget gear recommendations. Your gut was right; not everyone only has a $20k budget for a non-income producing hobby.
Gotta mention the part in 46&2 where Justin changes the pedal to the F instead of the D. So cool
Love you guys! (New(ish) SBL member here). I have yet to watch content here or at SBL that I haven't walked away with great knowledge. Thanks!
Hi chaps. I was lucky enough to be front row for Cannibal Corpse last night at Nottingham Rock City directly in front of Alex Webster and man that guy can play! He was using his own signature Spector Euro 5 LX in the blood red drip colour. Bit different to your usual content but a segment on him would definitely be very interesting. Keep up the great work 😊
🙌🏻🙌🏻🙌🏻
Fuck yeah! Do it! 🤘🏻
Uh okay I'm sold on this video from just the badass intro alone!!! ❤😂
love it! Always keep me watching till the end to see what skit you guys will do next. And thanks for the rundown guys!
All so good. I'll never get tired of the Did You Know outros!!
I absolutely love how much Scott let Ian use the Wal!! Ian needs a Wal now! Ima say crazy train is with fingers
Big props for the Zoom B1 shoutout: an amazing tool for under $100.
Really cool video, guys! This selection is awesome!
Yes Bob Daisley played with a pick... ya know I don't recall you guys talking much about Daisley. His playing on Ozzy's I Don't Know is GOD TIER rock-with-a-pick bass playing. He made that EB-3 go DRNT DRNT DRNT, and played super fronty, driving the song forward
GREAT GUYS! 🤩🤩🤩 one of the best videos you've ever made
Souls Of Black! 🔥
🔥🔥🔥
Freakin’ love tool. Great choice of songs
I got that squire contemporary 5 string 3 months ago. Love it.
Thanks again guys.
l LOVE that Wal bass ! Especially as one can get that funky Flea tone from it aswell. Definitely my desert island bass !
One of the most influential was Overkill’s drunken wisdom bass tone. There was no bass sound that massive and heavy before that was released.
And then DD dropped Elimination and Skullcrusher on us on the next album. Massive sound.
🤘🏻🤘🏻🤘🏻
Great video guys!!!
That Wal man is just beautiful 🤩
🧡🧡🧡
Bob Daisley, one of the all time greats, rocked that ish with a "plectrum". His bass line on "Bark At The Moon" is nuts as well.
Brilliant lesson,lads.Gimme more of this.Give us more metal.
Cliff was Metallica's second bassist, Ron McGovney was their first. Ron didn't want to leave LA and move to San Francisco so they auditioned bassists already in San Fran, Cliff was chosen because he not only was a great bassist he could set them up in a sweet house they could split rent on. That's the house in the pic on the back of Master of Puppets in Battery, the neighbourhood where all the 80s thrash bands lived, they had just signed with Elektra and were celebrating in that pic.
As I recall it was James who saw Cliff play Anesthesia with his former band and asked if he wanted to try out. Anesthesia was Cliff's warm up routine that he would play onstage before the rest of the band joined in. It wasn't called Anesthesia back then, just Cliff jamming all alone for a couple minutes. The name of his band is on the tip of my tongue, hate when I can't recall something and Googling it is cheating. It'll come to me eventually.
TRAUMA! That was his first band. I knew it would pop into my head at some random point, 3:22 am is pretty random.
Thanks for another Amazing video.
Cliff em All!
wrong there folks, there was other bass player before Cliff Burton, this was Ron McGovney he was part of the first line up in the band (Hetfield, Urlich, Mustaine and McGovney) but he left he band shortly after having problems with Dave Mustaine, he performed with the band in some of the concerts in 2011 celebrating the band 30 years anniversary
Forty six & two, and The Pot are what I play to tell if my bass is in tune because Ik exactly how they should sound. Or it’s Come A little Closer and Drones In The Valley by Cage The Elephant. Makes it easy to tune by ear when I don’t have my Zoom H6 with me.
If you turn the pick so that you actually use the dimpled grip to pluck the string you get a raspy sound. Use a medium to soft nylon pick.
Fantastic, cheers guys!
Fun video. I would have included something by Maiden. Numerous options but my first choice would be "The Trooper". Have to admit, i would have picked something different from Megadeth, but SoD is probably a better fit for a "beginner" vid.
On FWtBT, if using a manual wah instead of an auto (he famously used a Morley, but I can get something comparable with a Cry Baby), you can get closer to what Cliff Burton did, by "sitting back" on the pedal most of the time, then using a forward sweep to emphasise particular notes.
For something fairly simple but "different", have a look at some Gojira bass lines. "Oroborus" leaps to mind. For the bass part, one of my favourite metal songs is "Now I lay thee down" by Machine Head. Original is played with a pick, but it works pretty well with fingers.
Ian’s bear sweater = metal af 🤘🏽🤘🏽
🤘🏻🤘🏻🤘🏻
🤘🏼
I'm left handed, and I play a right handed instrument. This makes difficult to reach the higher frets.
I used to play For whom the bell tolls moving my hand to the top side of the fretboard. My band laughed a lot the first time I did it, but people loved seeing me doing that live
I wish I had enough time to focus seriously on this course but my free time from work and paycheck aren't enough to focus correctly on it, but I love your free videos anyway, you're great ❤
Hopefully you get some time free soon to dedicate to your bass journey Simone! Thanks for tuning in! 🧡
All Classic lines, I came up on most of this stuff, cut my teeth on alot of it. Great stuff.
46&2 Justin used a flanger BF-2 to be exact
You have to make a video of "Top 10 (not 5) INTERMEDIATE Metal Bass lines" next!!
Keep up the good work!
2:50 wasn't that Ron mcgovney?
For the 46 and two sound me sure he uses a flanger pedal. The boss BF2 (if you have the BF3 use the guitar & not the bass input) you can see his pedal settings in the Dunlop TV video. He has a very complicated clean/dirty 2/3 way amp set up but a SansAmp GT2 gets me reasonably close and would be better with a clean blend.
That Wal sounds sick more please! I don't think there's a single song that a Wal could not improve
Loved hearing Panic Attack in the intro.
Hey Scott and co.! Hoping to catch your attention - sorry that the request is totally off topic. Could you perhaps do a video on bassist Lincoln Goines? I feel like Mr. Goines is an awesome bass player that fits the style of play that you advocate here on this channel perfectly. Especially his work with Mike Stern (Chromazone, Big Neighborhood (2009) or Jones' Street) would be interesting to hear you guys break down - maybe even get him in for an interview! Regards from Greenland
Yes. Please cover or better yet, interview Mr. Goines!
Great content. I'm subbing so I don't miss part 2 with Iron Maiden, Black Sabbath, and Motörhead.
10:46 now we know, thanks to the Premier Guitar Interview with JC
He said he uses both pickups on, and both filters fully open in gain boost mode
So lots of high mids
Guitarist: Hey, close your eyes bro.
Bassist: Ok bro.
Guitarist: What do you see, bro?
Bassist: Nothing, bro.
Guitarist: That’s my life without you, bro.
Bassist: Bro…
I guess if I got this question, I would intentionally hallucinate to keep the vibe 😂
I love this thank you!!!!!🤘🤘
For sure the first bass player for Metallica was some dude Ron that played on that cassette tape “No Life ‘til something” way way back in the day.
Love these video’s with there Wayne and Garth vibe😂
I’m gonna get stoned for mentioning this but Mötley Crües “looks that kill” was one of the first things I remember wanting to try
Great as always!
🧡🧡🧡
Bob Daisley always played with a pick.
Just watched this via e-mail. I really liked the list. There are other great bass lines, of course, but the list was limited to 5. For metal heads like me, there are some bass lines from players in bands that are, shall we say, less mainstream. I like Overkill's D.D. Verni. "Gasoline Dream", for example, has a very eerie bass line. My personal favorite is "Skullcrusher", where thrask meets doom. I won't go on, but metal bassists get a bad rap for being too simplistic. There is a lot of truth to that, but when they let the bassist go off, they create some killer and very memorable riffs.
I love how you turn down the volume on the bass at 12:58 XD
its a great routine, even when not plugged in.
The bass part in Forty-Six & 2 always reminds me of another song, "Home" by Dream Theater.
Someone has even put each song in one of the two stereo channels : check it out, it's amazing that DT didn't get legally attacked for this. I love DT, but they sometimes take a lot of inspiration from others...
th-cam.com/video/FhLfLlYY0nE/w-d-xo.html
Dream Theater came after Tool in this instance
@@zoedoesmusic4520 true, but I’ve always been more a fan of DT than Tool.
@@timhutchinson8485 me too, but Credit where Credit is due
@@zoedoesmusic4520 true.
Thanks, guys, as much as I like your funk stuff, this was really nice for me.
When I started trying metal out on my bass i picked Zwitter from rammstein easy bass riff to remember and the second for a lil change mayhem freezing moon but both seem simple when you get it down
Awesome dude! 🤘🏻
My first Metallica song was, “ For Whom The Bell Tolls” and when I found out that riff was not a a guitar I lost my mind. I was like HOOOOOOW!!!!!!!???????
I love this thank you🤘🤘🤘🤘
Symphony of destruction is a hard banger.
Great selection
Ron McGovney preceded Cliff Burton in Metallica. Justin Chancellor also recorded 46 & 2 with a Stingray through a Boss Flanger into a Mesa Boogie Bass 400+, both available in the HX Stomp. The Ampeg tone doesn't sound right.
ron mcgovney was the first metallica bass player
I’ve heard that when they started recording Ænima, 46 & 2 was tracked with Justin’s stingray and he either acquired his Wal or used one from the studio for a “heavier” sound for the rest of the session. There maybe some studio trickery by blending a flanger signal and clean and dirty cab.
i love to play the guitar riff as the bass line for enter sandman
im feeling nostalgic by realizing that i already know most of the riffs shown in bass beginner videos
Daisley was always a pick player from his days in Rainbow on through the Ozzy. He left Ozzy with drummer Tommy Aldridge to join Uriah Heap for Abominog in before coming back to record Diary of a Madman. Daisley was in and out of Ozzy’s band through 91’s No More Tears.
Awesome dude! Thanks for the insight!
i love bass 46 &2
Metal bass LETS GO!