Justin Meldal-Johnsens point of view
Postat: fre 02 mar 2007, 11:02
Saxat från Bass Players hemsida:
“The subtlety of tone is a huge thing,” said Beck bassist and lo-fi session god Justin Meldal-Johnsen. “Everybody who hires me really expects a lot out of me in that regard. I’m finding that more and more. I can’t roll into a session with a 7-string piece of driftwood and a fancy amp that goes to 20k. They’re not having it.” So what did Justin suggest players bring to gigs? “Right now the cycle is definitely toward vintage tones. Come in with some vintage tones that you can mess with or brighten up as needed. And there’s no reason every bass player here shouldn’t have a hollowbody. I can’t tell you how blown away people are when you roll in with a Hofner, or a Guild Starfire, or an old EKO bass from the ’60s that costs 300 bucks on eBay, or something like that with flatwounds on it. They sound huge—huger than you would think—and producers go ga-ga over it. Short-scale basses: Airline Pocket bass—28"-scale; Gibson EB-0—30w"-scale. You’ve got to experiment with this stuff. People freak out when you plug it in. You might think, Well I can’t do much on that. But it’s just not the case.”
“The subtlety of tone is a huge thing,” said Beck bassist and lo-fi session god Justin Meldal-Johnsen. “Everybody who hires me really expects a lot out of me in that regard. I’m finding that more and more. I can’t roll into a session with a 7-string piece of driftwood and a fancy amp that goes to 20k. They’re not having it.” So what did Justin suggest players bring to gigs? “Right now the cycle is definitely toward vintage tones. Come in with some vintage tones that you can mess with or brighten up as needed. And there’s no reason every bass player here shouldn’t have a hollowbody. I can’t tell you how blown away people are when you roll in with a Hofner, or a Guild Starfire, or an old EKO bass from the ’60s that costs 300 bucks on eBay, or something like that with flatwounds on it. They sound huge—huger than you would think—and producers go ga-ga over it. Short-scale basses: Airline Pocket bass—28"-scale; Gibson EB-0—30w"-scale. You’ve got to experiment with this stuff. People freak out when you plug it in. You might think, Well I can’t do much on that. But it’s just not the case.”