Re: pick (plectrum) or fingers?
Why do people say this? Not to pick on you, but I have heard a lot of people say this, and I just don't get it.
The sound from fingers can be every bit as aggressive as the sound from a pick. Geddy Lee plays a lot of stuff that has an aggressive attack. The only place I can see a pick having an advantage is playing rapid-fire 1/16 or 1/32 notes, but even there the advantage is not significant.
IMO, if people can't get an aggressive sound from their bass using fingers, it's a failure of their application of technique, not a failure of the technique itself.
I understand what you are saying. I think languaging can be misleading. 'Pick' attack is just that,
pick attack. What it is not, is 'finger attack'. I agree it really has nothing to do with an aggressive or soft approach as clearly we as bassists can be aggressive or soft with either. Its true Geddy is a monster aggressive player...he has massive finger growl but he doesn't ever sound like a pick player either. Its not a matter of 'advantage', but rather a matter of taste and style. Picks do what picks do. Sometimes using a pick offers the perfect feel for the tune/artist I am working with. Of course the same tune can be played with fingers and it will work, but it may not be what I want to hear or what the artist wants to hear.
A pick is just a tool. It has a certain percussive 'click' that works well sometimes. Fingers can do things picks just cannot and vice versa. Its all valid. The focus for me is always on whats right for the song. Sometimes we stick with what we know we can do well though it may not be what is best. Cheers.
I put this together right now from some different grooves I have done Short
20 sec samples. I have more styles I can post, but this is pretty clear.
Tracks are:
1.
Fingers / Peavey Active Tl-5
2.
Pick / Yamaha passive P-Bass (I could not get this 'YES' type bite from my fingers myself which is why I chose a pick.)
3.
Fingers / Peavey Active Tl-5
4.
Pick / Yamaha passive P-Bass. (Maybe I could get from fingers, but not the 'open' snap which works in context with the rest of the country tune demo)
5.
Fingers / Peavey Active Tl-5
Very distinct and are style specific. I don't use a pick for funky groove stuff, but I almost always prefer it for faster country rock and some prog rock...just as an example.
I really require both and love the sound of each distinct tone.