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01-06-2009, 09:43 PM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Sep 2008 Location: Oslo, Norway | | | what is this technique called?
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I find myself plucking strings that I'm already muting a lot. I like the percussion-y sound it makes. If this is a technique, does it have a name?
Here's an example: http://mejiatryti.com/Ivar2/unsorted...pluckthing.mp3 (if it's not 0:48, try downloading again)
Also, does this count as overplaying? | 
01-06-2009, 09:50 PM
|  | Moderator Endorsing Artist: Levy's Leathers Moderator | | Join Date: Jan 2005 Location: Toronto/Niagara Falls, Ontario | | | A double stop is two notes at once.
There's really no term for this technique. It's pretty much muting with your left hand.
So, it's called muting. | 
01-06-2009, 09:50 PM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Dec 2007 Location: New Westminster, BC | | | Those are called Ghost Notes. They're actually very common in funk music - check out the bassist from Tower of Power.
Don't worry; it's not overplaying if you're groovin' with the drummer!
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01-06-2009, 09:58 PM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Dec 2008 Location: Cincinnati, OH | | | Rocco Prestia (Tower of Power) and Jaco are used ghost notes a lot.
Definitely adds funk, and like DaveF said, you aren't overplaying if you're locked in the pocket.
That's how Rocco and Jaco (HA!-rhyming names...) get away with playing some of the busiest lines out there: they both are perfectly in the pocket.
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01-06-2009, 10:03 PM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Feb 2008 Location: Portland, OR | | | That was a pretty nice groove. Good job.
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01-06-2009, 10:14 PM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Sep 2008 Location: Oslo, Norway | | Oh, ghost notes sounds cool  I've heard of ghost notes or something similar on the snare drum, never occurred to me that the term could be used here, too. Awesome, thanks  | 
01-06-2009, 10:36 PM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Nov 2007 Location: Long Island, NY | | Quote:
Originally Posted by Delta_Petra That was a pretty nice groove. Good job. | Agreed. I love ghost notes. I feel they add a lot to a bassline. I've played lines with my ghost notes in (Almost seems second nature at this point... not sure that's always a good thing though.  ) and then take them out, much less groove.
I'd say keep at it. Didn't sound like overplaying to me. Especially if you're locked with the drummer and working your harmony with the melody.
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01-08-2009, 08:25 AM
| | Registered User | | Join Date: Feb 2005 Location: S. Carolina | | | Also referred to as " grace" notes in orchestration. | 
01-08-2009, 10:55 AM
| | | | Some correct me if I'm wrong here.
What you're playing is referred to as "muted notes"
Ghost notes are simply quieter notes. They can be muted but don't have to be.
Grace notes are quick notes that appear smaller on the page. They are used as an ornamentation to lead into another note. They often don't have a preset rhythmic duration, and you subtract the duration from the note prior.
So mutes can be ghosts, ghosts can be muted, grace notes can be ghosts, etc etc. They can be related in performance but they are different things.
Anyway.
Mutes are a ton of fun. There are lots of ways to articulate them to add a percussive feel to your playing. You can pluck them, slap with your fingertips, incorporate them in your slap bass lines, or slap with your fretting hand. Also try palm muting, which is muting with your plucking hand. The great thing about bass is that with two free hands on the strings, you can mute with your right hand, left hand, or any mix of the two. Get creative. | 
01-08-2009, 12:56 PM
|  | Sucker for Sunburst | | Join Date: Aug 2002 Location: Westminster, CO | | EADG mx- I think you're sorta- right... and wrong too. There is a wiki page for "Ghost Note" that describes it as you do for percussion and keyed instruments; but makes different references for stringed instruments. The technique Ivs is asking about is known as a "ghost note" and as it pertains to electric and double bass and nearly every other stringed instrument I'm aware of. A Ghost Note is muted to the point where there is no distinct pitch. I've never heard it referred to either in instruction or in common discussion as anything other.
Here's the difference as I've understood it as it applies to producing the two sounds-
Ghost notes are produced by the fretting hand by "half-fretting" i.e. providing enough pressure to deaden the string but not produce a tone. The resulting sound produced is an indistinct "thud"
Muting is a function of the plucking or picking hand. Either by deadening the plucked string with the alternate picking finger or thumb or palm muting the strings and picking with a pick or the thumb, "Sting-style" (I just made that up- he's just the most visible player that does it) the result is a note that has a distinct tone, but decays very quickly.
Thelibster.com has a pretty good lesson describing "Ghost Notes"
And because I keep thinking about this- Here's a video of Rocco playing and describing "Ghosting"
And one of Sting's Palm muting style
-ek Quote:
Originally Posted by EADG mx Some correct me if I'm wrong here.
What you're playing is referred to as "muted notes"
Ghost notes are simply quieter notes. They can be muted but don't have to be.
Grace notes are quick notes that appear smaller on the page. They are used as an ornamentation to lead into another note. They often don't have a preset rhythmic duration, and you subtract the duration from the note prior.
So mutes can be ghosts, ghosts can be muted, grace notes can be ghosts, etc etc. They can be related in performance but they are different things.
Anyway.
Mutes are a ton of fun. There are lots of ways to articulate them to add a percussive feel to your playing. You can pluck them, slap with your fingertips, incorporate them in your slap bass lines, or slap with your fretting hand. Also try palm muting, which is muting with your plucking hand. The great thing about bass is that with two free hands on the strings, you can mute with your right hand, left hand, or any mix of the two. Get creative. |
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-ek-
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Last edited by funkyebk : 01-08-2009 at 01:24 PM.
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01-08-2009, 01:22 PM
|  | The Funkfather Endorsing Artist: Kohlman Bassworks | | Join Date: Jan 2003 Location: Hampton Roads, Virginia | | I was taught that a 'ghost' note is when you don't press the string all the way down onto the fretboard causing a percussive sound and not an actual sounding note. I believe the term 'ghost note' is correct.
Muted notes is when you can still hear a note tone but it doesn't sustain giving sort of a percussive effect. Bassist Jerry Brooks is a master of playing muted notes or 'Palm Muting'. Check him out on BassplayerTV. http://www.bassplayer.tv/
Last edited by DWBass : 01-08-2009 at 01:29 PM.
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01-08-2009, 01:52 PM
|  | Sucker for Sunburst | | Join Date: Aug 2002 Location: Westminster, CO | | | <thread jack>
J-E-R-R-Y B-R-O-O-K-S !!!!
I'd never heard of him... thanks for correcting the grievous error, DW!
I especially dig the line he's playing in video #7...
#10 reminds me of Abraham Laboriel... heck... HE reminds me of Abraham Laboriel!
</thread jack>
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-ek-
If you shake it more than once, you're playing with it.
I wouldn't belong to any club that would have me as a member.
Last edited by funkyebk : 01-08-2009 at 01:56 PM.
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