Lesson 0
Lesson 0
one octave above.) Make sure you can find any given note somewhere on your
bass without too much effort, and that you know the names of the notes
produced by playing a given string at a given fret, at least up to the
12th fret.
The next thing to mention is the way songs are arranged in time. Songs
are divided into measures: a common song length is about 100 measures. Each
measure is a certain number of beats long: in almost all modern music there
are four beats to each measure, although other length measures are also used.
Each note in the song has a given duration, and a note that lasts for four
beats is called a whole note. A note that lasts for two beats is called a
half note, and two half notes are the same length as one whole note. Similarly,
there are quarter notes, eighth notes, and sixteenth notes. (In England
these notes have different names. I'll be sticking to American usage
throughout this lesson series.) Each quarter note receives one beat, and
the quarter note is the basic building block of time and of rhythm. Eight
eighth notes make up a four-beat measure, as you can see, as do four quarter
notes and 16 sixteenth notes. Measures can contain notes of different lengths,
so that a quarter note, a half note,and two eighth notes also make up one
measure.
Other time durations can be written by "dotting" a note: in standard
notation, one literally writes a dot next to the note. Dotting a note makes
it last half again as long as it normally would. Thus, a quarter note lasts
as long as two 8th notes: a dotted quarter note is 50% longer, so it lasts
as long as three eighth notes. Thus, two quarter notes have the same length
as a dotted quarter note and an eighth note. Similarly, a dotted half note
lasts for the same amount of time as three quarter notes: a dotted half note
and a quarter note together make up one measure.
The last thing to know is that rests, or times when the bass is not playing,
are named the same way: thus, a whole rest means that the bass does not play
for one measure. A quarter rest means that the bass does not play for one
beat, and there are eighth rests and dotted half rests and so on.
One last note: in some jazz and classical music, a note other than the
quarter note is given the one-beat length. Since almost all music is written
with the quarter note getting one beat, I've assumed it is so throughout
the lesson series. However, if you get into more difficult music, you may
run into music where the half-note or the eighth-note is one "beat" long.
My advice is not to worry about this until it comes up.
The last thing you need to know is how to read TAB. Bass tabulature, or
TAB for short, is a simple method for writing bass music. There are several
different versions of tabulature, but the following features are common to
almost all of them.
Bass tab is written on four-line staves. In text interfaces these are usually
written using dashed characters. Each space corresponds to one string on the
bass: the lowest space corresponds to the E string, the next lowest to the A
string, the next to the D string, and the highest to the G string. A number on
a given space represents a note played at the given fret on the corresponding
string; thus, to indicate playing a G at the third fret on the E string,
one would write:
G------------------------------------
D------------------------------------
A------------------------------------
E----3-------------------------------
Notes are played from the left of the staff to the right; thus, an
ascending G major scale might be written:
G------------------------------------
D-------------------2--4--5----------
A----------2--3--5-------------------
E----3--5----------------------------
G-------------------------0----------
D----------------0--2--4-------------
A-------0--2--3----------------------
E----3-------------------------------
Chords can be written by writing two numbers in the same vertical bar. Thus
one might write a simple A major chord as:
G-----9------------------------------
D-----11-----------------------------
A-----0------------------------------
E------------------------------------
which means to play an open note on the A string, to play a C# at the 11th
fret on the D string, and an E at the 9th fret on the G string.
G---------5P-7h-5p-------------------
D------------------------3b----------
A---0S\5-----------3S-5S----5S-5H---
E------------------------------------
A muted note (one that is not fingered cleanly and makes a percussive
sound rather than a clear tone) is written by placing an x on a line
instead of a number:
G------------5--7--------------------
D------------------------------------
A---5--x--x--------5--x--5-----------
E------------------------------------
G------------5--7--------------------
D------------------------------------
A---5--r--r--------5--r--5-----------
E------------------------------------
G---------5--7--5--------------------
D------------------------------------
A---0--5-----------------------------
E------------------------------------
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--
Steve Schmidt <>< whale@leland.stanford.edu
I can no longer sit back and allow Communist infiltration, Communist
indoctrination, Communist subversion, and the international Communist
conspiracy to sap and impurify all of our precious bodily fluids!