Jump to content
Why become a member? ×

Barking Spiders

Member
  • Posts

    3,335
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Posts posted by Barking Spiders

  1. Depends if I'm in a funky mood, an 80s poppy one or a post punky one. Currently it's a funkadelic one so in a kinda rough order and best known for

    1. Louis Johnson - Jacko's Off The Wall and Thriller albumens
    2. Larry Graham - Sly & The Family Stone
    3. Mark King - any need to explain?
    4. Marcus Miller - ditto
    5. Bernard Edwards - and he
    6. Rocco Prestia - Tower of Power
    7. Stuart Zender - Jamiroquai, 2 three albums
    8. Julian Crampton - Incognito, also been on Heaven 17's recent tours
    9. Paul Jackson - Herbie Hancocks's Headhunters
    10. Joe Dworniak - some Style Council, I Level

  2. Ha, another who uses is one a lot. I always use this way for playing Dub / reggae style in this position




    I also use conventional fingerstyle, thump n' pluck / slap n' pop, plectrum, strumming, double thumbing, slapping by pulling strings upwards. Why stick with just one?

  3. Like Oasis, Williams was on top of the pile for a few years in the UK but was unable to sustain the same level of critical or commercial success over the longer term. Now he's half forgotten. Outside the UK and especially in the US he aroused little interest. He has an unremarkable voice while Guy Chambers actually wrote the music to his big hits.

  4. I'm a huge fan of Dub, from the original 70s sounds of King Tubby and Lee Scratch Perry through to electronica acts that've incorporated Dub into their sounds like Leftfield and Dreadzone. It's hard to beat the arsequaking sounds of the bass and it's bloody good fun to play n' all. Anyone else fee the luv for Dub?

  5. Based on the replies here it seems there's not a lot of love for funk, 'cos if you love funk it's inevitable you're a big fan of slap bass. Slap is what largely brought the bass from out of the shadows and helped dispel the widely held belief it's the easiest instrument in a band. Sure musicians recognise the skills of fingerstylists like Ox and Jack Bruce but it was noted thumpers like Mark King that brought it to the masses.

  6. Whenever I go to see bands I wanna see some activity. If you've got a reasonably charismatic frontman/men then bass players can get away with Ox / Wyman type stillness. If the whole band is static, and also lacking banter, it makes for a dull night out for punters. Well I'm usually bored rigid. I want to see a show. I wouldn't expect Rammstein type theatrics but at least move about. I used to only ever play in funk and dance music bands and we always put performance ahead of showing how well we could play.

  7. Quite liked Radio Free Europe then it was downhill all the way for me. Shiny Happy People and Losing My Religion are among my all time bottom 50. They weren't an awful band but I just don't get the praise critics lavished on them

  8. The Stingray is THE bass for slapping although the SUB Ray 4 does a very acceptable imitation. Non stop high speed slapping totally misses the point. It should only be used in fills, in the same way a fast paradiddle should be on a snare. Like metal shredding it can be impressive but it isn't music.

  9. For my money the best example of how to slap with groove is Mister Magic by Troublefunk with Big Tony Fisher on bass. I don't know how to put up YT stuff in a post here. For the funkless, Troublefunk were the big band of Washington DC's 80s Go Go scene. Big Tony was /is a monster player and deserves more acclaim.

  10. I love funk and I love slap but there are those slappers who have groove and those that don't. The faster you try to play and the groove is lost. Personally I don't care for Flea, though I may be a bit prejudiced as I loathe the RHCP. Vic Wootten's slap impresses but it doesn't move me. Now Larry Graham and Louis Johnson have/had groove by the bucketload. My 'bible' of slap was LJ's vid for 'Star Licks'. You can see it on You Tube and I wholeheartedly suggest you check it out.

  11. Following on from theBrig, my wife put up a shout on her Facebook page saying I was selling some of my electric guitars and drums. Of her 500 'Friends' just one said her boy 'might' be interested. This did'nt work so we had a garage sale with about 300 attending, half who were teens and tweens. The screens and computer games went in a flash. Barely anyone even glanced at the guitars.

  12. Like various schemes to get kids to engage more with nature, the government's plans are laudable but I don't see these enticing many kids away from the Internet and gaming. Also where are the role models to fuel their interest? In the 60s we had the Beatles and Hendrix, 70s had the stadium rockers and the 90s had Grunge and Britpop. I picked up guitar cos of the Stray Cats. I don't see anyone around now who can do likewise.

  13. So, the government plans to plough £300 million of taxpayers money over the next four years on music schemes designed to give more kids and teen the opportunity to learn an instrument. When they're cutting back on so much else is this really a good use our dosh?. At my eldest daughter's secondary school they already offer music lessons across a broad range of instruments but take up rates aren't high, including for guitar and drum kit. I think what the government have failed to consider that music generally doesn't cut it with kids the way it used to. Gaming's where it's at. Give most kids £250 and chances are they'd rather buy an X Box or an iPhone than a budget guitar or bass. In their world these have more kudos than a plank of wood with strings etc What say you?

×
×
  • Create New...