This is a search-engine-friendly text mirror of the TalkBass Forums

VIEW FULL LIVE VERSION : Walking Bass / Hills and Valleys


chardin
06-02-2003, 07:03 PM
A jazz walking bass line has "hills and valleys" as the line goes up and down the neck. In your experience, how many beats should a "hill" go for before going down to a valley? 2 bars? 4 bars? Do whatever you want?

JazZ-A-LoT
06-02-2003, 07:31 PM
Sometimes I sit on the hill for a while sometimes not at all some times both, just dont go up and down too much.

Pacman
06-02-2003, 07:43 PM
7 and a half bars.

paintandsk8
06-03-2003, 05:12 PM
I personally like big long hills but be careful that you don't under-emphasize the chord tones when you do this. Sometimes i find when a bassist tries to make a big "hill" they play all that notes in a scale and the chord progression isn't as obvious. If that makes sense.

paintandsk8
06-03-2003, 05:17 PM
another technique i use in my basslines is to go up a little bit and then come down like half or a quarter of the way i went up and then go back up higher.

Bryan R. Tyler
06-04-2003, 11:33 AM
Originally posted by Pacman
7 and a half bars.

Sounds like you'd need a couple extra strings on your bass to do that comfortably ;)

cassanova
06-04-2003, 01:16 PM
Originally posted by Pacman
7 and a half bars.

Is that a technically correct answer or just how you do it?

Im asking because I thought Jazz was predominatly improv and you could stay up in the hills and down in the valleys as long as you wanted as long as the line still moved.

thrash_jazz
06-04-2003, 01:21 PM
It really depends on what is going on in the moment and what chord you are going to next.

For example, if it's the middle of a horn solo, you might want to keep things simple (ie, not too many hills and valleys; keep the terrain a bit flatter for the moment) so as not to step on any toes.

Pacman
06-04-2003, 02:38 PM
Originally posted by cassanova


Is that a technically correct answer or just how you do it?

Im asking because I thought Jazz was predominatly improv and you could stay up in the hills and down in the valleys as long as you wanted as long as the line still moved.

I'm sorry, I guess I was feeling squirley that day.

You're right, of course - it's totally up to the 'moment'. Often times, I try to balance the soloist. If they play high, I'll play low, and vice versa. Other times I might match them, register for register. I try to totally react to what the soloist is doing.

If you have a map for your walking line before you start, you won't be listening to what's happening at the moment. And then you're just not being honest.

Wil Davis
06-04-2003, 05:49 PM
...and when they were up, they were up,
and when they were down, they were down,
and when they were only halfway up -
they were neither up nor down...

:hmm:

- Wil

ConU
06-05-2003, 11:55 AM
Originally posted by chardin
A jazz walking bass line has "hills and valleys" as the line goes up and down the neck. In your experience, how many beats should a "hill" go for before going down to a valley? 2 bars? 4 bars? Do whatever you want?

Forward motion,a line that propels the music.Rhythmic inventiveness.The bass must clearly anchor the harmonic structure with keen focus.