milw_bass75
08-17-2006, 12:34 AM
Has anyone ever heard of another Milwaukee bass player named Mitch Cooper. He has a video on a website of him playing some slap bass guitar ONE HANDED while playing the keyboard with the other. I've never seen this before. The website says it's real but I want to know how it can be done and if it's even possible??
The video was just posted today and this guy asked me to be a myspace friend yesterday. His page is worth a listen but the video is literally unbelievable. The link is http://www.myspace.com/mitchcoopersolo
How is this done and do other players play like that too?
Steve Lawson
08-17-2006, 05:39 PM
Hi ,
well, it's not slap bass - to play slap bass and keys at the same time, he'd have to switch round which hand he was playing which instrument with, and only play open strings. He's tapping notes to get the line on the bass.
It's a pretty cool party trick, and if he's happy with the music at the end of it, then that's fantastic. There's a guy in LA called Scott Brannon who plays kit and bass at the same time, and makes a great sound - seems to work well being the whole rhythm section in one.
For me, the down side would be the same as I see with playing Chapman Stick, you're much more limited in terms of the kind of attack you can get if the only way of starting the note is to tap it. Right hand articulation is so central to the way I conceive of the sound of my bass, that the idea of removing it completely baffles me.
But, as I said above, it's all about whether the technique produces the music he wants to hear - if it does, then it's a success, and he's hit on a great way of getting his music out there and hopefully get paid double scale for holding down the bass and keyboard chairs in the band... ;)
Steve
www.stevelawson.net
superbassman2000
08-18-2006, 12:22 AM
its a nice trick that will impress people, but i don't see it being much different from the guys that can do two hand tapping on their bass like jean baudin or guitar like justin king. it would just be a matter of putting your right hand somewhere else, rather than the bass' neck.
he still has talent though :)
That's some impressive multi-tasking right there.
I like that the technique doesn't get in the way of the music, like it does with a lot of other people.