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Posted
17 hours ago, SteveXFR said:

 

Jazz noodling is never better than anything. I'd rather hear Coldplay or even Nickelback. 

Hah hah knowing how you feel about Coldplay that is some condemnation!  But I agree. I've seen some vids of Scott's fave players and to a man they're pretty much all jazz fusion types who spend most of their time widdling above the 12th fret. The only thing worse (by a head) are 80s 'neo-classical' guitar shredders

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Posted
22 minutes ago, Reggaebass said:

He does sometimes 🙂

I have a lifetime membership so at least I don't have to worry about him putting my subs up if I say something too critical 🤣

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Posted
17 minutes ago, ahpook said:

Scott's Bathysphere Lessons

 

For those "deep dives"

 

(God, I hate that phrase)

 

You should take a helicopter view of it, for the blue sky thinking.

 

I'm so glad to be retired.

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Posted
Just now, tauzero said:

 

You should take a helicopter view of it, for the blue sky thinking.

 

I'm so glad to be retired.

 

:)

 

Yes, me too. I'm too old to synergise.

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Posted
40 minutes ago, asingardenof said:

I have a lifetime membership so at least I don't have to worry about him putting my subs up if I say something too critical 🤣

He might subject you to lots of Jazz noodling videos if you did 😬😁

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Posted

I'm sure he's a lovely bloke but he just reminds me of the jazz club character from the fast show but without the hair or smoking.  He can play some utter rubbish by some famous jazz bassist and it's like he's got tourettes with the random outbursts of nice, oh man that's great, tight, pocket or just a similar random word. 

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Posted
19 hours ago, SteveXFR said:

I'm sure he's a lovely bloke but he just reminds me of the jazz club character from the fast show but without the hair or smoking.  He can play some utter rubbish by some famous jazz bassist and it's like he's got tourettes with the random outbursts of nice, oh man that's great, tight, pocket or just a similar random word. 

Don't forget everything that's wicked and super awesome!

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Posted

The logical extension would be other bass instruments, starting with the Bassoon (to keep the branding on point as "SBL") but then Tuba, Sousaphone, Bass saxophone, piano (left hand technique only), etc etc

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Posted

SBL: Stop wearing that Bloody gLove! 🙄

 

Or he could start a cookery show:

Scott Buys Lentils

Scott Burns Lasagne

Screaming Boiled Lobsters

Scott Browns Mince

Slicing Bacon Lengthwise

Strangling Baby Labradors

Oh, wait... that's his other show. 😉

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Posted (edited)

They make a series where they learn to talk and act like each other and then, having planted cameras around each others houses, spend a week trying to pretend to be each other with the others' wife and family. It goes badly, as the respective wives pick up on it immediately, but pretend not to notice and spend the entire week trying to get their "husbands" into bed. At the end of the week, whilst Ian and Scott go on "business trips", the wives go on their own trip away, together. Once Scott and Ian find out, they decide to move in together themselves and fully realise their bromance, just the two of them and their collective $6,000,000 worth of basses (after paying alimony).

 

I realise I may be "shipping" (as people younger than me are wont to say) Scott and Ian far more than is healthy and I should probably seek therapy.

Edited by TeresaFR
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Posted
3 minutes ago, TeresaFR said:

 

 

I realise I may be "shipping" (as people younger than me are want to say) Scott and Ian far more than is healthy and I should probably seek therapy.


Yes very possibly 😂

Posted
6 minutes ago, ped said:


Yes very possibly 😂

But is it not more fun to inflict my mental images upon everyone here? It's certainly cheaper.

Posted
1 minute ago, TeresaFR said:

But is it not more fun to inflict my mental images upon everyone here? It's certainly cheaper.

Have you considered a supporting membership? It’s the least we can do to help you through this 😀

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Posted

I for one prefer Jazz noodling to:

 

1. Scales

2. Slapfest as per Davie504.

3. Judas Priest licks as per SpectreSoundStudios.

4. What makes xxxx the greatest as per Rick Beato.

5. Any U2 bass line. 

 

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Posted (edited)

I got a membership to SBL a few months ago. After reading this I skimmed through Scott's own Bass Fundation course. I just skimmed but I found no trace of jazz noodling. Even in the long sections when he shows how to build bass lines using chord tones, when one could naturally fall into jazz, his playing had a clear pop feeling.

Obviously, if one wants to learn metal that's not the right angle for a course. I would say chords would have to be touched upon briefly and scales, modes and complex rythm should take priority. At the same time, if one wants to become Steve DiGiorgio at some point chord tones are not a waste of time.

There was no trace of jazz noodling also in the courses on blues and preventing i jury I took. Nor in the fretless course - plenty of noodling though, but not jazz and not by Scott.

It turns out in SBL there are two hour long courses on metal bass by David Effelson and a 5-hour course on prog metal bass playing. Then there are three seminars on metal (arpeggios in metal, slap in metal, analysing metal basslines).

Youtube videos are marketing and I imagine the jazz noodling is a way of saying "I am good, I can teach you". Noodling Slayer bass lines would not be as effective as a marketing tool.

I do get a lot of the criticism to SBL - the clickbait, not getting to the point.. but I am under the impression that the crime here is that he likes jazz, or teaches it. I am pretty sure there are worse things one can do :D

 

 

 

 

Edited by Paolo85
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Posted
30 minutes ago, Paolo85 said:

but I am under the impression that the crime here is that he likes jazz, or teaches it. I am pretty sure there are worse things one can do :D

 

 

Like, country music?

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Posted (edited)
9 hours ago, Paolo85 said:

I got a membership to SBL a few months ago. After reading this I skimmed through Scott's own Bass Fundation course. I just skimmed but I found no trace of jazz noodling. Even in the long sections when he shows how to build bass lines using chord tones, when one could naturally fall into jazz, his playing had a clear pop feeling.

Obviously, if one wants to learn metal that's not the right angle for a course. I would say chords would have to be touched upon briefly and scales, modes and complex rythm should take priority. At the same time, if one wants to become Steve DiGiorgio at some point chord tones are not a waste of time.

There was no trace of jazz noodling also in the courses on blues and preventing i jury I took. Nor in the fretless course - plenty of noodling though, but not jazz and not by Scott.

It turns out in SBL there are two hour long courses on metal bass by David Effelson and a 5-hour course on prog metal bass playing. Then there are three seminars on metal (arpeggios in metal, slap in metal, analysing metal basslines).

Youtube videos are marketing and I imagine the jazz noodling is a way of saying "I am good, I can teach you". Noodling Slayer bass lines would not be as effective as a marketing tool.

I do get a lot of the criticism to SBL - the clickbait, not getting to the point.. but I am under the impression that the crime here is that he likes jazz, or teaches it. I am pretty sure there are worse things one can do :D

 

I think it depends on who you're marketing to. The last email I received from SBL mentioned John Patitucci, Gary Willis, Sean Hurley, Rufus Philpot, Steve Jenkins, and Rich Brown; most of whom I've never heard of - a couple I only know the names of because Scott Devine repeatedly name drops them like a priest during sermon name dropping God and Jesus, and none of them remotely interest me (which also applies to God and Jesus, as it happens). With that in mind, it has to be assumed SBL isn't marketed toward my kind of bassist and I should simply block SBL emails. Still, I can't help but feel that perhaps there are methods that SBL could utilise if they wished to upskill those of us with less lofty technical ambitions, who maybe just want to be better at fundamentals within a far less complex genre than microtonal jazz-funk - and name dropping bassists those of us interested in those less complex genres actually enjoy and are inspired by. Perhaps though, that's not where the money is and my autistic donkey should just get on with making the sort of music I like to hear.

Edited by TeresaFR
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Posted
20 hours ago, TeresaFR said:

I realise I may be "shipping" (as people younger than me are wont to say) Scott and Ian far more than is healthy and I should probably seek therapy.

 

Well, SBL's been going a long time - well onto Season 7 or 8. Character arcs and shipping are inevitable. It's late-stage Buffy territory.

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Posted
On 31/07/2023 at 17:10, SteveXFR said:

I'm sure he's a lovely bloke but he just reminds me of the jazz club character from the fast show but without the hair or smoking.  He can play some utter rubbish by some famous jazz bassist and it's like he's got tourettes with the random outbursts of nice, oh man that's great, tight, pocket or just a similar random word. 

Here's some for your delight

  😁

Posted
8 hours ago, Paolo85 said:

I got a membership to SBL a few months ago. After reading this I skimmed through Scott's own Bass Fundation course. I just skimmed but I found no trace of jazz noodling. Even in the long sections when he shows how to build bass lines using chord tones, when one could naturally fall into jazz, his playing had a clear pop feeling.

Obviously, if one wants to learn metal that's not the right angle for a course. I would say chords would have to be touched upon briefly and scales, modes and complex rythm should take priority. At the same time, if one wants to become Steve DiGiorgio at some point chord tones are not a waste of time.

There was no trace of jazz noodling also in the courses on blues and preventing i jury I took. Nor in the fretless course - plenty of noodling though, but not jazz and not by Scott.

It turns out in SBL there are two hour long courses on metal bass by David Effelson and a 5-hour course on prog metal bass playing. Then there are three seminars on metal (arpeggios in metal, slap in metal, analysing metal basslines).

Youtube videos are marketing and I imagine the jazz noodling is a way of saying "I am good, I can teach you". Noodling Slayer bass lines would not be as effective as a marketing tool.

I do get a lot of the criticism to SBL - the clickbait, not getting to the point.. but I am under the impression that the crime here is that he likes jazz, or teaches it. I am pretty sure there are worse things one can do :D

 

 

 

 

 

There are a few bits on metal. When I had the subscription, it was one video with Dave Eleffson about how awesome Dave Eleffson is and one with Nolly about his picking technique. Slap in metal is a really rare thing and with good reason. 

Nothing at all on punk, not a single video. Something like Matt Freeman's bass lines with Rancid could be a great lesson in the use of arpeggios and fast walking bass lines.

I didn't stick with the subscription long before I got bored and cancelled it.

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Posted

watching through the above again it left me thinking about these high tech jazz noodlers....'but so what?' Does anyone among the basschat massive truly enjoy listening to errm  Skulli Sverrisson or Richard Boner (sic) widdling above the 15th?

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Posted
10 minutes ago, SteveXFR said:

 

There are a few bits on metal. When I had the subscription, it was one video with Dave Eleffson about how awesome Dave Eleffson is and one with Nolly about his picking technique. Slap in metal is a really rare thing and with good reason. 

Nothing at all on punk, not a single video. Something like Matt Freeman's bass lines with Rancid could be a great lesson in the use of arpeggios and fast walking bass lines.

I didn't stick with the subscription long before I got bored and cancelled it.

 whaddya think of his selection here

?

 

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