mike sirman

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Viewing 15 posts - 16 through 30 (of 110 total)
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  • in reply to: help!! ive hit a brick wall #705
    mike sirman
    Participant

    Oh and I meant to include, for the different type of slaps google for scott hinds, he has some pretty good videos showing the different slaps and how to do them.

    Theres also the drag triplet which memphisevil has a wicked video for you can find on youtube.

    in reply to: help!! ive hit a brick wall #704
    mike sirman
    Participant

    I am by no means an expert and dont claim to be but I would recommend learning to play more before throwing in slaps. Not sure where you are for your bass playing but going to assume you are very new to it, if not then most of the info below is pointless as you probably know it.

    Work on stuff like your intonation, make sure your playing the note right and not sharp or flat as well as chords and patterns and stuff.

    A good site for beginner stuff is http://www.studybass.com

    There is a pretty good lesson on http://www.rockabillybass.com but it mainly just playing root-5th and showing some different chords and progressions.

    studybass would be the place I recommend, they have a lot on basic music theory, chord patterns, some basic blues progressions, covers stuff like 7th chords.

    I find working on stuff like that helps more than sitting there trying to learn it while trying to learn to slap at the same time.

    The more I work on those things the easier I find it to just randomly throw in some slaps without even thinking about what I am doing.

    You said you know a dozen chords? what kind of chords, once you know one type of chord you can play it anywhere.

    When I started learning different chords I would practice one chord at a time and basically come up with 3 different finger patterns for it.

    One using an open string as the root, one using first fret as the root, and then a 3rd one to play anywhere else (the pattern will be the same anywhere).

    Ones I think are pretty essential for any type of music to learn would be major and minor chords, maj7th, min7th, and dom7 chords.

    Another thing that works well for any kind of music is using the same chords you know already but play them differently, like if your walking on a chord dont always do the walk starting on the root to the next root, change it up a bit and try playing the same chord but start it on the higher root note and walk back to the low one. Not the best way of explaining it but say your playing a G7 chord, it would be G-B-D-F, not sure how much music theory you know but g7 would be the root-3rd-5th-flat 7.

    So you would normally play it the G on the E string, B on the A string, D on the A string, F on the D string and then if you were walking you would play the root again but on the D string and then play the same notes back to the one just before the original G you played so the B.

    You can do the opposite as well and start on the high root and walk to the low root then back to the high one.

    Playing something like that you can just randomly switch between them on different chords and play some using a low root and some starting on the high one. very noticable sound difference.

    another thing I like doing for a lot of country is to use the lower flat 7th note of the chord.

    So for a kind of country gallopy beat I would play say the C chord in this case and just keep alternating between C and the low 5th so that would be the G on the E string, then when I am going to change to the next chord I would end on the C again (the root) and then play a quick 5th then flat 7th using the low ones. the lower flat 7th will always be 2 half steps before the root you are on (2 frets if you know electric).

    tab wise would be something like this.

    ———————————————
    ———————————————
    —3—3—3—3—–1—————————-
    —–3—3—3—–3—————————–

    then move on to the next chord and just gives you a nice transition instead of switching directly to the chord.

    Anyways hopefully something there is usefull for you and on the reverse hopefully it atleast makes a bit of sense.

    I have no idea how beginner/intermediate you are so if it doesnt make sense let me know and I can break it down into something easier to understand.

    as for tabs theres a few places depending what kind of music you are into, for more mainstream stuff just google usually works fine, 911tabs.com usually has most stuff.

    There are some on http://www.rockabillybass.com but most of them just show the chords not actual tabs.

    for some psychobilly you can find a few at http://www.wreckingpit.com

    also google for psychobilly online retard krew (PORK), its a psycho forum and in the music section there is a page with like 40-50 pages of random guitar and bass tabs that people post.

    anyways, cheers

    in reply to: Ladies, Ladies, Ladies… #700
    mike sirman
    Participant

    welcome

    in reply to: Funny story about Gipsy bassplayers #690
    mike sirman
    Participant

    [b]dubouch wrote:[/b]
    [quote]You’re lucky Thomas !
    Let me know when you’ll be back in France, we are always playing gypsy style in here :
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yOxuhnwFf_g%5B/quote%5D

    Great video

    in reply to: Howdy from Austin #676
    mike sirman
    Participant

    Welcome, that sounds like a pretty crazy jam.

    in reply to: Hallo! #665
    mike sirman
    Participant

    Welcome, wish my friends would buy me a bass haha

    in reply to: whoa #663
    mike sirman
    Participant

    Yeah I like the old layout more as well but if the way its setup now helps prevent it from being hacked again im all for the adjustment.

    in reply to: hey ya’ll #662
    mike sirman
    Participant

    Welcome barney

    in reply to: Double Stops. #652
    mike sirman
    Participant

    A bit of info on them here as well to check.

    [url=http://www.doublebasschat.com/forum/showthread.php?t=7784]Double Stops post[/url]

    in reply to: Howdy From Calgary #651
    mike sirman
    Participant

    Welcome, thats a rad pic by the way.

    You planning a canada tour for the future yet?

    in reply to: Good To Be Here. #650
    mike sirman
    Participant

    Welcome to the board

    in reply to: Salut from Montreal! #639
    mike sirman
    Participant

    Welcome to the board.

    in reply to: Hello from Florida #638
    mike sirman
    Participant

    Welcome to the board, I love the hillbilly hellcats and superior strings. Best investment I have made into my bass so far. Hope you do take it over, I want to get another set or 2 as backups.

    in reply to: Djordje’s setup on atmonic boogie video #612
    mike sirman
    Participant

    Yeah I have had that happen with my bass too. Kind of glad it happened though as I was thinking I had a really shitty bass for a while and then heard someone else play it and was like wow.

    in reply to: Bonjour de Suéde… #589
    mike sirman
    Participant

    [b]hiwatt wrote:[/b]
    [quote]Cheers everyone…

    Eric, french citizen living in sweden since 1991.

    Have plaid/still play with: the Mouse Trappers (my first band), Wreckless, Go Getters, Phil Trigwell & the Deputies, Wildfire Willie & the Ramblers, Rayburn Anthony, Knock-out Greg & Blue weather, Mike Sanchez, El Loco, Sleepy La Beef, Terry & the Spin out Trio, Bobby Crown, Flat Git it Gang, Slidding Slim & the Roadmasters, Bo Weevil Blues Band, Slim Baker’s Combo, Claes Yngström, the Thunderbolts, Clipjoint Cutups, Björn & Jenny, Huelyn Duvall, High Jacks, Rusty Shermans, with myself…and 9 years with Slapping Suspenders/thee Suspenders…

    About 16-17 years of wood choping (and still a biguiner) and using mainly guts.

    Nice place you have here, I think I’m gonna enjoy myself…see u out there… ;)[/quote]

    Welcome to the board, is the Wreckless you played with the old psycho band?

Viewing 15 posts - 16 through 30 (of 110 total)