Guest bassman7755 Posted October 29, 2012 Share Posted October 29, 2012 (edited) Ive owned a few fretless basses for a couple of years now, always use them when playing at home but only ever played on stage in a band with one once. I just cant work out how people manage to hear themselves well enough to keep good intonation. This is something I've always struggled with in general as I am bit OCD about being able to hear myself very clearly live. I used a rh450/midget-t/compact rig but thinking of getting some sort of personal monitoring either in-ear or something like one of those warfdale mini vocal monitors to perch on top of my rig to bean sound directly at my head. Edited October 29, 2012 by bassman7755 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
chrismuzz Posted October 29, 2012 Share Posted October 29, 2012 Pointing speakers at ears will help, as will experimenting with adding some midrange Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Kongo Posted October 30, 2012 Share Posted October 30, 2012 I use fretless basses even in metal where it's easy to get buried, I feel ya on needing to hear yourself. after all, how can you tell what people are hearing if you cannot? Midrange is your friend as is monitoring. In-ear monitoring would be awesome then you'll know for sure. It's a bit scary once you get up there, unlike fretted you can't poorly fret (those moments when you barely caught the note) but worse of all is you seem to become even more concious about what your doing, which in itself can make you mess up and thus, be out of tune. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
fretmeister Posted October 30, 2012 Share Posted October 30, 2012 Buy the guitarist a working tuner. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
ikay Posted October 30, 2012 Share Posted October 30, 2012 [quote name='fretmeister' timestamp='1351555846' post='1852696'] Buy the guitarist a working tuner. [/quote] +1 haha nothing like the guitarist tuning themselves to a randomly selected string to mess with your head on fretless Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
wombatboter Posted October 30, 2012 Share Posted October 30, 2012 A nice midtone helps in any situation.. Fretless playing is always a challenge because you have to keep the other instruments as a reference and have to work around them... I've played with piano-players who were really picky about intonation but luckily didn't have too many complaints.. Being able to play with a clear sound of your own bass and enough information of the other instruments and it should make things easy enough to pull it off.. Having lined-fretless basses also is a great help.. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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