Sex Bob-Omb - I Feel Fine | Bass Cover with TABs | Scott Pilgrim Takes Off Ver.2
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- เผยแพร่เมื่อ 30 พ.ย. 2023
- Here is my bass guitar cover with tabs of the Scott Pilgrim Takes Off song "I Feel Fine" Part 1 and 2 from the soundtrack played by Sex Bob-omb.
This song is easy to play, the hardest part is the speed but I have no doubts you can play it! This is a very fun song from Scott Pilgrim Takes Off and since Scott plays bass, now you too can play his part with my tabs!
You can use this video as a tutorial on how to play this Scott Pilgrim Takes Off song on bass!
This song is part of the Scott Pilgrim Takes Off anime from Netflix OST.
The version of this song is the same from I Feel Fine Music Video Ver. 2.
スコット・ピルグリム テイクス・オフ
ベース TAB Cover
Scott Pilgrim Takes Off (Soundtrack from the Netflix Original Series)
I Feel Fine Part 1 and Part 2
#scottpilgrimtakesoff #bass #cover #scottpilgrim #anime #netflix - เพลง
as a person that does not play any instruments (including bass and a guitar) tabs make no sense at all to me, but it's still fun to watch these kind of videos, hopefully i'll learn the tabs one day.
I'm glad you like it! I can relate, I used to be like that before starting to play myself!
If you ever feel the urge, I think you should give learning music a shot, it's awesome.
as a person who tried playing bass when i was young, musical notes make no sense but tabs on the other hand are perfection, literally tells you "put your finger in this exact spot and strum/pluck", 0 need for musical knowledge unless you wanna play properly, but for playing for funsies? tabs all the way
I just picked up bass a week or so ago and its been suoer gratifying. The tabs tell you where to put your fingers. In this istance. The bottom line is the top string which has the lowest sounds. Which from a bassists point of view if youre watching your fingers makes sense. Especially if your paying attention to the frets. With dots on 3 5 7 9 12 15 17 19 21. As for the notes its just the beats of the notes. A white circle means a whole note which is for beats. A white dot with a stick is half note meaning you hold it for 2 beats. Black dot black stick is a quarter which means its 1 beat. Then this part gets a little tricky. Because we get into eight notes which are those ones that are connected. You play em quick they can take up a quarter note. Which is one beat. So youre playing two for one. Lastly is a 16th note which if you had a hard time wrapping your head around an 8th get ready for this one. 2 16ths make up an 8ths make up a quarter and so on and so on. But that means your playing your 16th notes the quickest because itll take all 16 to create a whole notes worth of sound for a bar. So then you mix em up foibg from 3 33 up 4 44. 44 44 down 4 44 44 44. 5 55. 55 55. And youve got yourself a solid sound. Id you ever need to find the beat. Most songs are 4 on the floor tapcyour foot 4 times in a rhythm thats 4 quarter notes. Bop. Bop. Bop. Bop. Music is fun and encourage everyone and anyone to learn an interest at once in their lives. Try bass. Tutorials like this literally show you how to play. Im literally gonna try and play this now with my bass.
@@shibuyadaemon9111 how was playing it? i forgot to ask before, so i'm really sorry for being late.
it's super weird watching yourself play because it *looks* like you're playing notes on opposite strings since you're so used to the top string really being the bottom one @@shibuyadaemon9111
I really appreciate bass players, because a lot of listeners can’t even hear bass a lot of the time, yet it’s still absolutely crucial to sound
I’ve kinda had to train my ears to hear bass a lot of the time, and i think that just makes it cooler
Thank you! I completely agree, bass is often forgotten because unless it's mixed in loudly, most small speakers can't really reproduce the sound but if you were to remove it, you would instantly notice something is off. Training your ears to notice what the bass is doing is great, it adds a whole new layer to songs, especially when the bass is doing it's own thing.
So cool track! Thank, for making tabs. You`re awesome
Thank you, I'm glad you enjoy them! I plan on doing at least Orange Shirt as well!
Scott Pilgrim é mt bom 😔✊
É sim
Magnifique! Excellent tone :D
Thank you! I think it fits very well with this genre of music.
Sounds awesome well done mate 🔥
Thank you!
Cheers man
Can't wait to start practicing 🔥🔥
Thanks! Have fun.
in love!
Glad you like it!
Fantástico!
thanks for this, im getting into bass and this is super helpful
Welcome to bass! It's a great instrument I hope you enjoy it! I'm happy to help out, that's why I make these TABs.
noob
yessir
Con razón knife dominó el bajo tan rápido....
I love these videos even tho I can’t read tabs lol.
Thanks! Do you play any instrument?
If you don't, these just tell which frets to press so people can play along! For people who don't play any instrument, I feel like they might be kind of a music visualizer of sorts? haha
@@alorbeM i play bass but i usually just do it by ear. I never learnt how to read tabs 😭
@@Ghost_A.2that's uncommon. Troubling with sheet music is easier to imagine.
But it isn't that complicated at all. You have 4 lines on top of each other and the lower ones represent the lower strings. So the top line is the G string (highest string of the bass), same thing for the lowest being the E. Then numbers will show up on the strings and with that you can recognize which string and fret to press on. So a "3" in the third line is the third fret of the A string, and that's what you gotta play. Then there are the technique indicators, such as circles surrounding an isolated fret number, meaning a note has to ring for an entire bar. Or straight lines from a number to another, telling you to slide. It is pretty easy, and ofc there is more to it such as details brought from sheet music, like the bars, rythm lines under the notes and tempo, but if you're not used to reading it, then those things won't matter rn. The thing you have to care about the most is the string and fret position as they are the basis to play.
Just started playing bass after playing kit for a few years, got a link to the music for this or something? Sounds great!
That's awesome! I'd love to help you out but I'm not sure of what you are asking.
@@alorbeM Meant to ask if you have a link to the sheet music for it, like a pdf or something I could just look at. Sorry for the confusion
@@octopuswithahat Ah, at the moment I don't have sheet music/tabs available as a file but I plan on making them available soon, I just haven't decided on how I will do it but I hope the tabs on the video can still help you out!
Can you do a bass tab for Sadistic Eyes from KOF ‘99 please
Sure I can add it to the list of songs, does the XV version work for you? Or do you only prefer the 99?
I've been planning on doing video game covers as well so I'll get to it once I'm done with exams and have time to work on new things
@@alorbeMwhatever is easier for you, I was just using KOF 99 in case you didn’t know who Iori was lmao. XV would be cool tho
what do the circled numbers towards the end mean?
It simply means the note lasts 4 beats meaning the entire measure (rectangle)
Can you do tabs of the intro to Scott pilgrim takes off please
I'll consider it but I think you can already find some on TH-cam!
@@alorbeM I’ve tried but I can’t find any💔
Isn't the original bassline distorted? Or i'm just really needing to sleep lol
It might be, I added a bit of overdrive to my bass for this cover, I didn't want to distort it too much only for the sake of being easier to tell in the mix without drowning everything else since I boost the bass so people can hear it more easily. I was also unsure how much the bass was distorted in the original since the guitar is really heavy as well!
@@alorbeM oooh! Ty for the reply. Makes sense. When casually playing i think it's safer to play with more overdrive if thats the case
@@The_Copper_Element_Itself No worries, always happy to reply. Thanks for your comment!
I agree, if you're just playing for fun by yourself or whatever go wild, crank it to 11, fuzz bass/overdrive sounds awesome!
What tuning is it?
It's in EADG standard
when you play the quarter - double eighth - quarter - double eighth pattern, why do you switch notes when it serms to all be the same note? (i play violin, so im not sure if this is just a reading difference)
I looked a bit closer, and noticed the numbers. It looks like Xs from a distance, still though, is it the same note just different octaves or how does that work?
The simplest answer is that I play it and transcribe it as close to the the original bass part as possible. But to be technical like you are interested, could you point me to a specific moment in the video because I'm not entirely sure to which section you're referring. From what I understand is that sometimes I might play the same not but on different positions to create the octave contrast like you mentioned but sometimes the notes may sound similar but are different.
Generally though, for example:
-
-
- 7
-0
Are essentially two E but on different octaves.
Violin is awesome, if I had gone down the classical path when I was young that would have probably been my choice! Alas I will just play paganini on my guitar hahah, well to the best of my ability.
@alorbeM It's bar 7 to be specific. The 5-5-5 to 3-3-3, I wasn't too sure what the numbers meant and why they made you change notes/octaves. I'm assuming it's telling you what position to play in but I'm not sure.
Also thank you, I love the violin. I'm not amazing at it but it's definitely a fun skill go have. I usually play a lot of rock style songs on it instead of classical