SteveXFR Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago We're in need of some advice. My daughter is in a band where she plays bass and they also have keys, guitar, vocals and drums. The recordings work really well and everything comes through nicely but live, the bass quite often gets lost and im wondering whether sound techs are struggling to differentiate between the low end of the keys and the bass. Are there any tips to make them work together live reliably and make it easy for the sound tech? Here's an example of one of their songs for reference. 1 Quote
godathunder Posted 3 hours ago Posted 3 hours ago If the keyboard player cant maintain discipline and stay out of the bass players way then nail a plank across the two lowest octaves of the keyboard 1 Quote
ian61 Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago Or super glue his left hand to the floor. Its an age old battle which only the most mature, musically knowledgeable keyboard players will let you win. Good luck. 1 1 Quote
Burns-bass Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago 5 minutes ago, ian61 said: Or super glue his left hand to the floor. Its an age old battle which only the most mature, musically knowledgeable keyboard players will let you win. Good luck. Agreed, try to stop them playing anything below middle C. Quote
Dad3353 Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago 37 minutes ago, SteveXFR said: ... Are there any tips to make them work together live reliably and make it easy for the sound tech? ... Split the keyboard, with the bottom half panned hard left, the upper hard right (well, maybe not as hard as that, but more than 50% at least...). Pan the bass to the middle, obviously. Ideally, of course, this 'sharing' of the frequencies should be done when the song is composed and arranged, so as to have a better sonic field for each instrument, although there's no absolute rules for this, either. Some overlap can be musically valid, it depends on the song. Kudos for the drumming in the video; more interesting than many 'young' bands these daze. All in all, Good Stuff, worth getting right 'live'. Hope this helps. Quote
itu Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago Like @ian61 said. Problem solved. The lower you go, the further the two instruments/notes must be. Frequency difference gets very small the lower you go. Therefore you should not get closer to the keys than a fifth, but an octave sure is safe. The same applies to chords played ɓy us bassists. You can make simple calculations by subtracting A4 from F4 (a major third), and then A1 from F1 (try this with your bass!). The difference in the lower end starts to resemble flanger, and the result is really mushy. Besides if there are any issues with tunings of different instruments, the result will be even worse. https://www.vibrationdata.com/piano.htm This is the musical theory reason why only one bassist is needed, and keyboardist should stay far enough. For the same reason there's theoretically space up there for two g-word players, but in practise... Quote
Lord Sausage Posted 2 hours ago Posted 2 hours ago (edited) I used to be in a band with the best keyboard player of all time. He's approach was The right hand is for playing, the left hand is for smoking and drinking. In originals we'd never have to tell him the chords or structure. He just play the right thing and his parts would dance around wherever all the other instruments or voices were. Another regular aspect was Doesn't sound like this one needs keys lads! Edited 2 hours ago by Lord Sausage 1 Quote
PaulThePlug Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago Keys could be a replacement for a rhythm guitar... But really should only be used for weired far out sounds, or Helicopter noises! Quote
Skinnyman Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago Your daughter could announce that she’s swapping to guitar as the keys player has the bass parts covered. The guitarist will have conniptions because of the competition for volume as will the keys player who now has to learn the left hand parts properly. At the subsequent band meeting, your daughter can graciously agree to stay on bass but ask that the keys player write proper keys parts that don’t occupy the same sonic ground as the bass and kick. Or just sack the keys player Quote
Judo Chop Posted 1 hour ago Posted 1 hour ago I like the song but yeah that bass is buried isn't it? Quote
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