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Audacity


Si600
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I asked about learning basslines by ear the other day and I was pointed in the direction of Audacity which I then got.

Has anyone any tips on how to best isolate the bassline in a track? I've tried slowing it down and messing with the equalisation but all I seem to get is a muddy mess which is worse than trying to learn from the original.

Am I on the right lines or is there some other function in the program that I haven't found yet?

TIA

Simon

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Thank you, I'll try that when I get home. If I can get a handle on this then I think my confidence in learning new songs will go up.

How much would you slow it down by in % (as that's the option there is)?

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[quote name='Si600' timestamp='1375442368' post='2161371']
Thank you, I'll try that when I get home. If I can get a handle on this then I think my confidence in learning new songs will go up.

How much would you slow it down by in % (as that's the option there is)?
[/quote]
slow it down as much as you like, there's a slider, +1 for pitching it up an octave, it seems perverse but it really makes the bass line stand out, I found out what Glen Matlock was up to in Anarchy in the UK the other day, a bit of an eye opener.
Audacity is a brilliant bit of kit, and it's free, who says you only get what you pay for?

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[quote name='Thurbs' timestamp='1375448962' post='2161548']
Wont do all the notes but gets you going: [url="http://chordify.net/"]http://chordify.net/[/url]

Just improvise over those chords to the rhythm or work out what the progression is...
[/quote]

Just tried that on a couple of my band's tracks and it's about 80% there, not bad!

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Heehee, Pitch up and slowed down sounds weird :) It makes Ken Casey sound like a chipmunk on He, and also shows how busy he is on what on first listen sounds a simple song. Well, it sounded simple to me :P

[media]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lPAiddHu6KQ[/media]

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[quote name='scoobystig' timestamp='1375471814' post='2162030']
I use an app called songster on my iPad

It's a mere £6.99 but has over 500,000 guitar and bass tabs, the iPad also plays the track for you so you can learn by ear, but glance at the tab if you can't work out the notes

I think you can slow it down as well if needed
[/quote]

I think Songsterr's a great app too, good at showing you the basics but some tracks are lacking the detail

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I find the audacity eq quite useful for learning stuff, isolate about 50-160hz depending on the register of the bassline. It's hardly a magic wand but it really helps define the rhythm. Personally I've never found pitch shifting that helpful, I find if it sounds muddy in the original octave it sounds like mud in any octave.

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[quote name='Thurbs' timestamp='1375448962' post='2161548']
Wont do all the notes but gets you going: [url="http://chordify.net/"]http://chordify.net/[/url]

Just improvise over those chords to the rhythm or work out what the progression is...
[/quote]

That's awesome, thank you.

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