Yeah, it can be awesome for adding energy, great on room mics and especially with a Fatso Distressor
It depends. IME it does funny things to bass guitar. Better off just using the least amount of compression it takes to keep the low end stable in the mix, make sure your bassist is tight and consistent because if they are, transients are your friend.. Multiband though, that’s another story.Does it work as well for bass guitar?
I personally like the bass' low end to be squashed to hell and back and only really let it decay like it normally would. But like I was saying, rather than using MBC, I split the bass so that the low-end is completely clean off the pickups. Like not even with the coloration of a bass amp.
I've never really understood aggressive picking unless a part calls for it. I hate sloppy right hand playing or attempting to compensate for it by emotion. Watching punk rock players bothers me. I prefer economy of motion and keeping everything tight.
Fast picking on bass in my experience is hard. If you listen to isolated bass tracks like Slayer a lot of times the bass parts against guitar parts at 16ths 200 bpm and above are just 8th notes. The bass is so buried in the mix and covered by double kicks that no one can hear it.
Jason Newsted will definitely pick 16ths, which in my opinion is hard because of the additional string resistance over guitar. Dyers Eve bass track is all picked and for the most part follows guitars.
Finger playing on bass is harder to master, I think. It's like classical playing. You have to get the dynamics even, but once you are there and can do it consistently it takes less energy than playing fast with a pick.
A great finger player is better than a mediocre pick player, I think, but I definitely prefer picked bass over sloppy finger playing.
El Dunco, spot on as usual. I think Alex defeats the standard thinking that picked bass for metal is better and more consistent. Alex sounds like he's using a pick when he's using his fingers.
I think finger bassists are also more rounded players and can do more styles and techniques.
What Rex is doing is exactly what I need to work on. Just getting out the click and upping it every day.
Not my ideal tone by any means but I realize it's in a mix. SN2 is also kind of a throwaway song IMO, as is a lot of stuff on the second side of that album (I bought it first as a cassette). I much preferred Hell's Wrath and I Can't Hide from 101 Proof.
Also except for the low/flubby notes under the SN2 mix, I'd say that's the opposite tone Rex would get out of his Thunderbird these days.
Not sure it matters. That's just not the tone I associate with a Gibson bass.
That would be the 5th string.
I believe they only went to Db in those days, with the usual slightly flat Pantera-ness to it.
Yes, but if you listen closely, he’s using a 5 string with that 5th string tuned down to A. Check out the 13 Steps To Nowhere track, he pulls off some super low notes in the breakdown.
Well, my reasoning is it's Metal. It's supposed to be aggressive all throughout.I've never really understood aggressive picking unless a part calls for it.
I don't think it's about more efficiency. At least not for me. But I don't have a Petrucci approach to bass with the efficiency and whatnot. Or with any instrument, for that matter. I just like the sound of guitars or bass being picked hard and agressive. At least the heavy parts, which like what, 99.9% of what I play.Finger playing on bass is harder to master, I think. It's like classical playing. You have to get the dynamics even, but once you are there and can do it consistently it takes less energy than playing fast with a pick.