JohnFitzgerald Posted Saturday at 06:32 Posted Saturday at 06:32 Not sure if it's Trevor Horn who wrote the part, but Mark O'Toole does a great job of playing it here, and that's a fantastic tone. It doesn't hurt that it's given pride of place in the mix here. One for the good headphones / speakers. 8 3 Quote
Lozz196 Posted Saturday at 15:42 Posted Saturday at 15:42 I watched a clip of FGTH doing a rehearsal of this and agree his playing very good, much more complex & interesting line than I’d thought. Quote
BassAdder60 Posted Saturday at 15:53 Posted Saturday at 15:53 Great tone and use of a pick with a PBass 🎸🤟 Quote
franzbassist Posted Saturday at 16:05 Posted Saturday at 16:05 I think I posted the very same clip a while back with the very same reaction. It really is very good. 1 Quote
Russ Posted Monday at 20:28 Posted Monday at 20:28 Really good, driving line that grooves hard. All the FGTH stuff has great bass on it though, thanks to Trevor Horn. Here's a live version of The Buggles playing Two Tribes, with Horn playing bass: Best P-bass tone ever though? For me, that's Eric Avery on Deconstruction, the project he started with Dave Navarro in 1993 after Jane's Addiction broke up the first time around. 1 Quote
Lozz196 Posted Monday at 20:31 Posted Monday at 20:31 That clip of Buggles doing Two Tribes is great, I knew Trevor Horn was a good bassist but imo he really shines on that version. 1 Quote
Beedster Posted Monday at 20:41 Posted Monday at 20:41 On 19/07/2025 at 07:32, JohnFitzgerald said: Not sure if it's Trevor Horn who wrote the part, but Mark O'Toole does a great job of playing it here, and that's a fantastic tone. It doesn't hurt that it's given pride of place in the mix here. One for the good headphones / speakers. Sublime 12 minutes ago, Russ said: Really good, driving line that grooves hard. All the FGTH stuff has great bass on it though, thanks to Trevor Horn. Here's a live version of The Buggles playing Two Tribes, with Horn playing bass: Best P-bass tone ever though? For me, that's Eric Avery on Deconstruction, the project he started with Dave Navarro in 1993 after Jane's Addiction broke up the first time around. Dull 1 Quote
wintoid Posted yesterday at 04:38 Posted yesterday at 04:38 Two amazing performances, thanks chaps! Quote
Baloney Balderdash Posted 8 hours ago Posted 8 hours ago (edited) To me it sounds thin, farty and mid scooped. But I digress... I suppose this is a somewhat thin tone too, but at the same time monterous, and very snappy and punchy, I love this P tone: Edited 8 hours ago by Baloney Balderdash 1 Quote
Russ Posted 7 hours ago Posted 7 hours ago 1 hour ago, Baloney Balderdash said: To me it sounds thin, farty and mid scooped. But I digress... I suppose this is a somewhat thin tone too, but at the same time monterous, and very snappy and punchy, I love this P tone: Not bad. It's very Stranglers. Quote
Jean-Luc Pickguard Posted 6 hours ago Posted 6 hours ago Poor Old Steve Howe looks like he turned up for the wrong gig but they let him play anyway. Quote
Old Man Riva Posted 5 hours ago Posted 5 hours ago Mark O’Toole wrote the bass line for Two Tribes. There are demo versions online that show the song in its early stages (pre ZTT) with the bass line pretty much formed. I think there was also a BBC (John Peel?) session at one point too (again, pre ZTT). I always really rated him, even more so after I saw them live at Brum NEC in, around ‘86/‘87, touring the Liverpool album. It certainly belied the myth that they couldn’t play… Quote
Russ Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago 1 hour ago, Jean-Luc Pickguard said: Poor Old Steve Howe looks like he turned up for the wrong gig but they let him play anyway. Steve Howe played on the original album - him and Trevor Horn are long-time collaborators, even before the short-lived Buggles/Yes "merger". He does look a bit out of place here, sitting down and playing dobro though! Quote
Jean-Luc Pickguard Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago Yes (no pun intended),I read Trev's autobiography. The Yes/buggles connection came through them having the same management. Quote
Russ Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago 42 minutes ago, Old Man Riva said: Mark O’Toole wrote the bass line for Two Tribes. There are demo versions online that show the song in its early stages (pre ZTT) with the bass line pretty much formed. I think there was also a BBC (John Peel?) session at one point too (again, pre ZTT). I always really rated him, even more so after I saw them live at Brum NEC in, around ‘86/‘87, touring the Liverpool album. It certainly belied the myth that they couldn’t play… It's a brilliant bass part. It's a shame the album version of the track had synth bass instead of a proper bass guitar track. It also reminds me of how many people were influenced by the whole post-punk/goth thing - the P-with-a-pick midrangey tone, the melodicism, the high-register fills, etc - straight from the Hooky and Gallup school of bass. Quote
Lozz196 Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago Definitely, in my first proper band much of the bass work was on the D & G, with a sly bit of chorus added in of course. 1 Quote
Dood Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago I definitely favoured those raspy mids and punch low end. I’d love to find this P bass again. Fullerton ‘62 neck on a 70’s body, dimarzio P pup and a pair of 15’s delivered some warm lows too. My secret weapon (not pictured) was a converted HiFi preamplifier with a “loudness” control on it which paired very well with the punchy mids for a BIG tone@ 1 Quote
Old Man Riva Posted 4 hours ago Posted 4 hours ago 14 minutes ago, Russ said: It's a brilliant bass part. It's a shame the album version of the track had synth bass instead of a proper bass guitar track. It also reminds me of how many people were influenced by the whole post-punk/goth thing - the P-with-a-pick midrangey tone, the melodicism, the high-register fills, etc - straight from the Hooky and Gallup school of bass. As well as the thundering bass line, the demo versions (or at least the stuff they did before getting signed) also feature exactly what you’re referencing. The droning open D, whilst playing a melody on the G - akin to Hooky, Gallup - is all in there… 1 Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.