Fundamentals of Gospel Bass

AI Gospel Bass Player

Gospel music is a genre that allows bass players to experiment with musical genres as far ranging as blues, funk, R&B and even rock. While gospel music is spiritual in nature, it encompasses these genres to deliver a big sound that makes a perfect musical palette for gospel bassists. Although gospel takes on many musical personalities, the fundamentals of playing it remain simple. By learning basic patterns and playing techniques, you can play gospel bass lines that will provide a rich, spiritual rhythm foundation to the gospel music you enjoy.

Listen to as much gospel music as you can. Listen to the choir at your church, listen to gospel CDs, and go to gospel performances. One of the best ways to get ideas for gospel bass lines is to hear and see them in practice. Immerse yourself in all the various sounds that gospel can encompass, then experiment to find your own sound. Listening to gospel before you attempt to play it is essential to helping you develop the feeling that goes along with playing.

Familiarize yourself with the 1-4-5 progression. These numbers indicate chord positions within a key of music. Gospel is played in all of the major keys. The fundamental gospel bass line is built around the chords built on the first, fourth, and fifth notes of a given scale. In the key of C (C-D-E-F-G-A-B), C, F and G are the first, fourth and fifth notes of the scale. The basic major chords built on these notes are C major, F major and G major. These are the chords you will use to build your fundamental bass lines.

Break down the notes in each chord. Any major triad (three note chord) uses the first, third and fifth notes of the scale with the same name. A C major chord, for instance, uses the first, third and fifth notes of a C major scale. These notes would be C-E-G. These are the three notes you might use over a C major chord. An F major chord is made up of the first, third and fifth notes of the F major scale (F-A-C). These notes work over an F major. There are twelve major keys, so keeping a major key chart handy as you memorize all the notes in every key can help you structure a chord at a glance.

This lesson was taken from www.ehow.com and was written by Carl Hose. For the rest of this lesson click [here]


For more lessons like this, be sure to join our {mailing list}