Last week we sparked some heated debate (and some typical internet vitriol) with a post featuring isolated drum tracks from six of rockâs best drummers. Well, here we go again, this time with isolated bass tracksâ¦. Bear in mind that the bassists featured here are some of the top players in rock who actually have bass tracks available online. There are many more Iâd love to hear out of the mixâand no shortage of jazz, reggae, funk, and soul bassists I deeply dig. If you donât see your favorite player here⦠really, donât take it personally.
The bass guitar tends to be a forgotten instrument, sometimes not even missed when itâs gone (think Black Keys, The Doors), but despite the success of the rare bass-less band, itâs hard to imagine some of the songs represented here without the fundamental thump and groove of well-played basslines. We begin with John Deaconâs bassline for Queen and David Bowieâs âUnder Pressure,â above. As we mentioned in a recent post on that songâs evolution, Stylus named this the #1 bassline of all time. I donât know what that accolade is worth, but the bassline is at least one of the most recognizable, thanks in no small part to Vanilla Ice. In the context of Queen, Deaconâs perhaps best known for the pounding stomp of âAnother One Bites the Dust,â one of many songs he wrote for the band. He has very deliberately disappeared from the spotlight since Freddie Mercuryâs death, but his tasteful, melodic playing is in no danger of being forgotten.
Led Zeppelinâs John Paul Jones, on the other hand, refuses to leave the stage, for which the several dozen musicians heâs toured and recorded with since Zeppelinâs demise are all grateful. Currently one-third of supergroup Them Crooked Vultures (with Dave Grohl and Queens of the Stone Ageâs Josh Homme), Jones also plays mandolin (on Zepâs âGoing to California,â for example), lap steel, and this triple-necked monster. For all his continued relevance into the 21st century, Jonesâs sometimes smooth, sometimes burly basslines for Led Zeppelin, such as the unforgettable âRamble Onâ riff above, will be his enduring legacy. One would have to be a hell of a bass player to keep up with John Bonham, and John Paul Jones is exactly that. He got his start playing jazz at age 15, and while still a teenager, played in a jazz-rock collective that included John McLaughlin (whom Jeff Beck has called âthe best guitarist alive”). Want to learn how Jones does it? Check out this bass lesson with the master himself.
When the subject of rock bassists arises, Geddy Leeâs name will invariably come up. Like his bandmate Neil Peart, Leeâs musicianship astounds, his prog-rock stylings seem inimitable, except perhaps by Primusâ Les Claypool (who Lee names as one of his favorites). Bass magazine No Treble calls Rushâs âYYZâ (above) âone of the greatest bass lines of all time.â Itâs not exactly my cup of tea, but I do know at least one bass player who left for Berklee College of Music hating Rush, then came back listening to this song over and over in hushed awe. Not everyone loves Leeâs over-the-top high pitched vocals, but one has to admire the fact that he plays basslines like this while singing some of the most philosophical lyrics in rock, courtesy of drummer Peart.
The last two bass tracks feature bassists who, like Lee, are also singers. No one pulls that off with more grace and style than Paul McCartney. In the bassline to The Beatles âCome Togetherâ (above), you can hear the deep, resonant tone of McCartneyâs semi-hollow Hofner violin bass (many of which have been “nicked” over the years). Of McCartneyâs playing, John Lennon once said, âPaul was one of the most innovative bass players ever. And half the stuff that is going on now is directly ripped off from his Beatles period.â In my own bass-playing days, I certainly stole my share of ideas from McCartneyâor more probably, his basslines were etched into my music brain, and my fingers automatically plucked out McCartney-style patterns. Music Radar puts âCome Togetherâ at the top of a list of âPaul McCartneyâs 12 greatest Beatles bass performances,â for the âspooky, sinuous, throbbing and groovyâ track above, âas original as it gets.â
Our isolated drum tracks post happened to feature the other rhythmic halves of every player on this list except John Deacon, and while this wasnât exactly by design, itâs no surprise to me thatâs how it worked out. A great rhythm section works as a closely-aligned team, finding locked grooves, creating emphasis and punctuation, building structures and spaces for lead players to fill. A drummer like the Policeâs Stewart Copeland needed a bassist as precise yet passionate as Sting. Very few other bands have successfully fused punk, jazz, and reggae rhythms into a greater whole, a feat accomplished in part because of Stingâs versatility as a player. From the muted âtrain engineâ punk of âNext to Youâ to the left-field pop of âMessage in a Bottleâ (above), Stingâs aggressive playing, often fretless, mostly finger-pickedâto quote that reputable source Uncyclopediaââmakes him better than all other musicians combined by 12 orders of magnitude, and thatâs a pop fact.â
But seriously, heâs good, and so are dozens of other rock bassists who donât appear above. Name your favorites, and if you find their bass tracks online, share âem! Alright, let the bass slugfest begin, and be sure to check out No Treble‘s “Isolated Bass Track Week” posts, with tracks from undisputed masters of the instrument like James Jamerson and Jaco Pastorious.
Related Content:
Isolated Drum Tracks From Six of Rockâs Greatest: Bonham, Moon, Peart, Copeland, Grohl & Starr
Paul McCartney Offers a Short Tutorial on How to Play the Bass Guitar
The Story of the Bass: New Video Gives Us 500 Years of Music History in 8 Minutes
Josh Jones is a writer and musician based in Durham, NC. Follow him at @jdmagness
Hear Isolated Tracks From Five Great Rock Bassists: McCartney, Sting, Deacon, Jones & Lee is a post from: Open Culture. Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Google Plus, or get our Daily Email. And don’t miss our big collections of Free Online Courses, Free Online Movies, Free eBooks, Free Audio Books, Free Foreign Language Lessons, and MOOCs.
The post Hear Isolated Tracks From Five Great Rock Bassists: McCartney, Sting, Deacon, Jones & Lee appeared first on Open Culture.
Hear Isolated Tracks From Five Great Rock Bassists: McCartney, Sting, Deacon, Jones & Lee
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