2 Reading Music For Bass
2 Reading Music For Bass
Depending upon your musical situation, you could go your entire life never reading a line of music in
standard notation. Musicians communicate in many ways. We often demonstrate our lines to each other in
person or use chord charts as a short-hand way of representing musical ideas. Many players are quite
happy with tabulature for notating difficult melodies. Recordable media are also efficient way to
communicate musical information.But I'm not trying to talk you out of learning standard notation. Doing so
opens up a world of musical opportunities to any player, and learning to read isn't as hard as you might
think. Not only will you be able to read bass books and articles not written in tab, but you'll also be albe to
read trombone books, bassoon books and bass lines written as a part of piano music. It doesn't take the
rest of your life to learn how to read music. It just takes regular practice. And if you try it for at least a
month, you'll see continual steady improvement. It will get easier, I promise. And once you have it under
your belt, you'll be able to play all sorts of gigs that you might not have otherwise had a chance to play.
Each of the five lines of this chart shows a different note which indicates that a note is to be played for a
certain amount of time. You'll notice that, for sake of simplicity, the same note is used for each exercise.
The note is (open) E.If you have a metronome handy, set it to a relatively moderate beet (80-100
b.p.m.) and tap your foot along with the click. Your foot should hit the floor with each click. If you don't have
a metronome just tap your foot at a steady tempo. The moment when your foot hits the ground is known as
the down beat. Practice counting aloud(i.e. 1, 2, 3, 4, 1, 2, 3, 4, . . .) with each down-beat of your foot, and
keep your down beats in synch wit the metronome. After you're comfortable counting, try playing the open
A string along with the down beats (one note per down beat).Besides the down beat, there is also an up-
beat. The up-beat occures exactly half-way between any two down beats. So the up beats should occur
when your foot is at it's highest point in the air. To count the up beat, we say "and." On the counting chart,
the "ands" are marked with plus signs. Practice counting along with the metronome as you have already
done, but this time add in the upbeats(i.e. 1 and 2 and 3 and 4 and 1 and 2 and 3 and 4 and . . . ). Be
sure not to slow down your counting. Only the 1, 2, 3, and 4, should occur on the down beats (i.e. the click
of the metronome). The ands should fall in-between..Once you're comfortable counting the down beats and
the up beats, begin playing along on the open A string along with the down beats and up beats (strike the
string once for each down beat and one for each up beat).
Quarter Notes
The third line of the chard shows quarter notes (four of them):
You'll see four black dots with single, vertical lines attached to them. In musical lingo, the dots are called
"heads" and the lines are called "stems." Beneath each note, you'll see a number, and between each pair
of notes, you'll see an addition sign (+). This bit of standard notation puts to use what we've learned about
counting. Each quarter note starts on a down beat and lasts until just before the next quarter note begins .
Take a breath, tap your foot, and count off "1 and 2 and 3 and 4 and" before starting with the first note of
the quarter note line. After you've played the last note, stop. Not so hard, eh? It shouldn't be, you've playing
quarter notes (whether you knew it or not) as long as you've been playing bass.
Eighth Notes
The fourth line of the counting chart illustrates eighth notes:
Notice that eighth notes are also black dots, but each pair of eighth notes is connected by a single, thick
bar This black bar is what separates eighth notes visualy from quarter notes. Notice that half of the eighth
notes are on the down beats and half are on the up beats. Keeping your tempo the same as when you
played the quarter notes, count off and play this group of eighth notes.We can create other values by
continuing to sub-divide the basic beat into shorter notes or by combining beats together into longer notes.
Let's start by combining quarter notes into longer notes.
Half Notes
The second line of the counting chart shows two half notes. Notice that half notes are constructed with a
hollow head (it looks like an oval) instead of a solid dot (like quarter notes). This is the feature, along with
the stem, which distinguishes half notes from all other notes. You'll also notice that the first half note starts
on beat number 1, while the second starts on beat number 3. When we play a half note, we hold it for two
beats. Even though we will always count using quarter notes (i.e. 1, 2, 3, 4, . . .) or eighth notes (1, +, 2, +,
3, +, 4, +, . . .), in this example we will only start a note on the first and third beats. The first half note will
end just before the second half note begins. The second half-note should be just as long as the first (be
careful to hold the note out to its full value. Don't cut it off just because it's the last thing you have to play. A
half note should always be two beats long, whether it's the first or last note in a piece). Catch your breath,
count off, and play these two notes as you count along with your metronome.
Whole Notes
If you combine two half notes (or four quarter notes) together, you get a whole
Whole notes last the entire length of the measure, no matter how long that measure may be. In our
example, a whole notes last for four beats. One whole note lasts as long as two half notes, four quarter
notes, or eight eighth notes.By now you have undoubtedly noticed that each of our examples is four beats
long.Not all music is arranged in groups of four beats (though much of it is, and that's why we've started
here).
Sixteenth Notes
Dividing any eighth notes in half gives you two sixteenth notes:
So we have four sixteenth notes per beat. You can count these several ways, but I prefer counting them
"one-e-and-a, two-e-and-a, three-e-and-a, four-e-and,a" (the "e" notes are long e's as in "tree"; the "a"
notes are short, as in "ah"). The down beats and the upbeats (i.e. the "and" beats) are in the same place as
they would be if we were counting eighths. The "e" and "a" beats fall between each the up beats and the
down beats.Now let's look at something you've undoubtedly seen before: the C major scale:
The Major Scale/Ionian mode, Once Again
Play the above C major scale slowly and concentrate on each note as you play it. Force your mind to
recognize that the second space of the staff is (and ever shall be) C. Try saying the names of the notes out
loud (or sing them on pitch if you can manage that) as you play them. Try to remember which note goes
with which line or space.The notes in the next example are also all in C major, but they go down to the low
E (the lowest note on the four string bass in standard tuning). We'll deal with them more in the reading
examples, but try to get a feel for the locations of as many notes as you can.