|  | 
09-29-2001, 12:31 AM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Mar 2000 Location: Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada | | | Favourite Jimi Hendrix Experience Bassline?
Sign in to disble this ad
Does anyone have one...i really dig "hey joe" and there's another one (can't remember the name) which has a little bass solo... | 
09-29-2001, 02:27 AM
| | Supporting Member | | Join Date: Nov 2000 Location: The land of chicken fried funk | | | "You Got Me Floatin' " is the most fun for me. You get to use an odd, treble-middy, bridge pickup sound. And you don't have to have James Marshall himself in your band to play it since the bass is so "guitarish" sounding and up front.
"Machine Gun" can be a gas if you have an amp with the cahones to club people over the head with the lows.
__________________
rick
- I see sound
"Change the bass player, change the engine room." - Keith Richards
"Learn the rules so you know how to break them properly" - Dalai Lama
| 
09-29-2001, 07:10 AM
| | Supporting Member | | Join Date: Aug 2000 Location: In your basement. | | | The break in If 6 was 9 | 
09-29-2001, 09:05 AM
| | Registered User Wouldn't you like to know?! | | Join Date: Apr 2000 Location: Atlanta | | | Crosstown Traffic(played on a Hammond B3 by Dave Finnegan, Noel had left by then) & Manic Depression
__________________
There's a reason why women love us bass players.The tone is like Barry White's voice, and the strings are thick like Ron Jeremy's...well, you get the point.
| 
09-29-2001, 09:54 AM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Feb 2000 Location: Oregon City, Oregon | | It's interesting that this thread came up because we just learned a couple Jimi songs last practice: Manic Depression and Hey Joe. The bass lines are pretty cool on both songs, although Hey Joe gets a little repetitious, other then that unison lick.
We're already doing You Got Me Floatin', which is a blast to play as there isn't a lot of structure during the solo sections so you can pretty much go off and do what you want. We're also considering doing Cross Town Traffic, which is one of my favorite Jimi Hendrix songs, although I don't know the bass-line yet...ooh! I'm supposed to work on that this weekend. 
__________________
Derek: Oh, it's the zipper...settin off the machine.
| 
09-29-2001, 10:44 AM
|  | Registered User Endorsing artist: Musicman basses, Hipshot products | | Join Date: Oct 2000 Location: New York City | | Fire, on Mothers Milk  . | 
09-29-2001, 10:51 AM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Aug 2001 Location: Ontario Canada | | |
__________________
If Its To Loud, Turn It Down
| 
09-29-2001, 11:18 AM
|  | Registered User | | Join Date: Sep 2000 Location: Cali | | | Third Stone from the Sun. | 
09-29-2001, 12:15 PM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Mar 2000 Location: Madison, WI, USA | | | Izabella
__________________
--When it comes, I won't even notice... I'll be too busy looking good.
| 
09-29-2001, 01:17 PM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Jun 2001 Location: London, UK | | | My bass teacher said that there's a different bass line to Purple Haze which is pretty bomb, cos Hendrix played it.
However, I haven't heard it anywhere cos all my Handrix albums are live albums (I just couldn't get into the recorded stuff, but the live stuff is seriously bomb)
But I'm told the alternative Hendric bass line to Purple Haze is quite hard ie real hard. | 
09-29-2001, 02:34 PM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Jul 2000 Location: Overland Park, Kansas | | | Third Stone From the Sun, Power of Soul, Fire | 
09-29-2001, 04:21 PM
|  | Registered User | | Join Date: Aug 2000 Location: AZ mountains | | | Little Wing....I like the SRV version, also.
Doc
__________________
To each his own when it comes to tone.
| 
09-29-2001, 06:03 PM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Jan 2001 Location: Mt. Laurel, NJ | | | "All Along The Watchtower" is my favorite. "In 1983 (A Merman I Should Want To Be)" has a nice solo. "The Wind Cries Mary" has a nice use of diads; tasteful simplicity all around.
__________________
"That's the politics of the bass--it's sort of a mothering, nuturing instrument. You use it to make other people look good." Mike Watt
| 
09-29-2001, 06:15 PM
|  | Registered User | | Join Date: Sep 2000 Location: Cali | | [quote] Originally posted by Steve Holroyd
[b]"All Along The Watchtower" is my favorite.
The bass line is good but Jimi's lead in Watchtower is nothimg brilliant.  | 
09-30-2001, 05:42 PM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Apr 2000 Location: London | | Quote: Originally posted by warwicknut Crosstown Traffic(played on a Hammond B3 by Dave Finnegan, Noel had left by then) & Manic Depression | I knew that Dave Finnegan played basslines on his Hammond for some of Electric Ladyland, but had Noel Redding really left by then? I didn't know he walked out in the middle of the sessions.
To be honest, a lot of Experience lines are hard to pick out - the low end tends to be all mud. Of what I can hear, I happen to like Fire and 1983 as well.
__________________
This post was actually written by Carol Kaye.
| 
09-30-2001, 07:39 PM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Apr 2001 Location: The Dark Side Of the Moon | | | All Along The Watchtower!
The following are also brilliant:
Spanish Castle Magic
Voodoo Child
Purple Haze
Hey Joe
The Wind Cries Mary
Born Under A Bad Sign
Woke Up This Morning And Found Myself Dead | 
10-02-2001, 11:55 PM
| | Moderator Emeritus | | Join Date: Aug 2000 Location: Iowa | | | Machine Gun
Voodoo Child (Slight return) | 
10-03-2001, 10:27 AM
| | Supporting Member | | Join Date: Nov 2000 Location: Pittsburgh, PA, USA | | | That's a toughie. Redding's role didn't really allow him to do much other than anchor the song very fundamentally to let Jimi, well, be Jimi. Even so, a lot of the bass parts seem a bit mechanical. My vote? Probably the basic but swingy "Third Stone from the Sun," which is probably why it caught Jaco's ear as well (as part of his "Slang" solo on 8:30), "If 6 was 9," maybe "Wait Until Tomorrow," if you can get over the ultra-wimpy back-up singing (and "Click bang, what a hang, your daddy just shot poor me" has to be the funniest lyric ever). Now Billy Cox, that's a whole 'nother matter. But you asked about the Experience, not the Band of Gypsies. | 
10-03-2001, 11:02 AM
|  | Unprofessional TalkBass Contributor | | Join Date: Dec 1999 Location: Brighton, England, UK, Europe | | Quote: Originally posted by yawnsie
To be honest, a lot of Experience lines are hard to pick out - the low end tends to be all mud. | I tend to agree and I think Hendrix technique with a lot of droning lower strings at huge volume almost makes the bass redundant in a lot of things I've heard. Certainly the most famous cuts are usually those with the worst or least audible basslines - they're still great music though, but I think that Hendrix just always takes centre stage and 100% attention whatever he's doing.
I mean "Voodoo Chile" is just all droning guitar strings in lower register and very little bass!
In the 70s I remember that lots of my friends wanted to be JP-J, Jack Bruce, John Entwhistle etc. but nobody wanted to be Hendrix's bassplayer!
I learned all Led Zep's basslines but gave up pretty quickly on Hendrix stuff - no guitarists could do it justice anyway!! 
__________________
“Making the simple complicated is commonplace; making the complicated simple, awesomely simple, that's creativity.” Charles Mingus
Last edited by Bruce Lindfield : 10-03-2001 at 11:06 AM.
| 
10-04-2001, 05:44 PM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Mar 2000 Location: Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada | | Quote: Originally posted by Bruce Lindfield
I mean "Voodoo Chile" is just all droning guitar strings in lower register and very little bass! | well...this may also contribute to the lack of bass...Jack Casady played on that track, and he is known for dropping the mids | | Thread Tools | Search this Thread | | | |
Posting Rules
| You may not post new threads You may not post replies You may not post attachments You may not edit your posts HTML code is Off | | | |