E:v:O wrote:Your comment is an insult towards metal.
Edit: @Geebs
Bass recomendations
[size=75][i]I once had a glass of milk.
It curdled, and then I couldn't drink it. So I mixed it with some water, and it was alright again.
I am now sick.
[/i][/size]
[img]http://img162.imageshack.us/img162/3631/171164665735hk8.png[/img]
It curdled, and then I couldn't drink it. So I mixed it with some water, and it was alright again.
I am now sick.
[/i][/size]
[img]http://img162.imageshack.us/img162/3631/171164665735hk8.png[/img]
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JulesWinnfield
- Posts: 625
- Joined: Tue Feb 08, 2005 12:09 pm
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Big Kahuna Burger
- Posts: 2458
- Joined: Sat Jul 09, 2005 6:56 pm
JulesWinnfield wrote:Jaco was decent. He was far from the end-all-be-all.DRuM wrote:I doubt anyone here would have a clue who jaco is. They probably think you're talking about michael jackson.riddla wrote:Dammit, get a Fender Jazz. Its what Jaco played and thats all you need to know
i've never heard a bass player with better phrasing than Jaco. he's the fucking man
edit: not to mention one incredible composer. Donna Lee is more than just a show off piece, it has some of the most fluid chord changes ever written
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JulesWinnfield
- Posts: 625
- Joined: Tue Feb 08, 2005 12:09 pm
Jaco was good - player, writer, etc.. but I think quite honestly one of the primary reasons he's held in such high regard now is because of his death. He was obviously talented, but the whole psychology of losing that talent before it solidifies does much to create that sense of 'what could have been'.
It's like.. (not trolling).. Hendrix. Hendrix was good. Hell, he was really good, but he wasn't great. And while a lot of his stuff was different (mainstream different) - he wasn't terribly revolutionary for the time. If he'd lived longer he probably wouldn't be held in such high regard now.
To bring up a modern example (impossible comparison, but meh - idea is close enough), look at Nirvana. Nirvana is credited with inventing grunge, alternative, whatever you want to call it. Yeah, Nirvana was very good, Nirvana made something popular with the masses, but had Cobain not off'd himself there'd probably be a very different picture of how Nirvana is remembered now (The Melvins, Alice In Chains might rank a bit higher).
Personally, I find Tim Bogert a much better bassist/writer than Pastorius ever was (and was doing this stuff long before Jaco). He just never achieved that cult status by inadvertently dieing.
Tony Levin for President.
It's like.. (not trolling).. Hendrix. Hendrix was good. Hell, he was really good, but he wasn't great. And while a lot of his stuff was different (mainstream different) - he wasn't terribly revolutionary for the time. If he'd lived longer he probably wouldn't be held in such high regard now.
To bring up a modern example (impossible comparison, but meh - idea is close enough), look at Nirvana. Nirvana is credited with inventing grunge, alternative, whatever you want to call it. Yeah, Nirvana was very good, Nirvana made something popular with the masses, but had Cobain not off'd himself there'd probably be a very different picture of how Nirvana is remembered now (The Melvins, Alice In Chains might rank a bit higher).
Personally, I find Tim Bogert a much better bassist/writer than Pastorius ever was (and was doing this stuff long before Jaco). He just never achieved that cult status by inadvertently dieing.
Tony Levin for President.
hey what about donald "duck" dunn
he play p-bass yo
http://elwoodb.free.fr/Video/Blues/pics/DonaldDunn.jpg
he play p-bass yo
http://elwoodb.free.fr/Video/Blues/pics/DonaldDunn.jpg
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JulesWinnfield
- Posts: 625
- Joined: Tue Feb 08, 2005 12:09 pm
Tim Bogert, Jack Casady, Richard Davis, Francis Prestia.. etc - before Jaco.riddla wrote:before it solidifies? lol, it didnt and hasnt gotten a whole lot more solid since. Jaco was an immortal even when he was alive, sorry you cant accept that fact. Sure, I could start spouting off obscure Jazz bassists more well-rounded who died before Jaco was even born (and even after he died) with your logic, but nothing changes the fact that the technicality, originality and innovation of Pastorius changed the perception and methodology of Bass playing long before he was tragically beaten to death by a bouncer who didn't even realize who he was.
Billy Sheehan, Tony Levin, Geddy Lee, John Alderette,
Dave Holland, Jean Baudin, John Patitucci, etc - after Jaco.
Jaco was one of many greats. He wasn't the best - he just died; instant mystique.
Aren't you some claimed jazz connoisseur? All you can pop out is Jaco? Obscure jazz bassists?
Go back to your Flea.
