Matt R. wrote:
Personally I can’t stand that stuff. For them It’s about clicks & ad revenue, not music. I cringe every time I see scotts bass “lessons” clickbait bullshit. And there’s a whole crop of other influencer wannabes out there too obviously.
I tend to agree with you on this one. I'm generalizing here, but in my opinion, the Insta-players have chops, and perfect 'hi-fi pin drop' tone, with no finger noise etc. But in my - albeit loud and big stage rock and roll based - experience, those things don't matter a bit in the mix if you haven't spent time playing with other real humans in real time. Again... I'm talking rock and roll here. I know jazz and other more
subtle types of music are different. But who hasn't watched a 16 year old virtuoso play a cover of a Rush or Led Zep tune so perfectly that it comes all the way back around to.... wrong. And chances are that kid - as amazeballs as he is - would get eaten alive on a stage with 3 or 4 other peeps fighting for dominance. Or worse, they don't develop the skills to
listen to the other people on stage and do what's right for the songs. And, as has been pointed out, it sets unrealistic expectations of what
good is.
All I'm trying to say is, if you enjoy playing your bass and you have some buddies that you make loud rock and roll - or other - noises with. You're not doing it wrong. Is there really a wrong? Can anyone be good at all the things? Any practice is good practice. Pick your next goal and focus on that for awhile. I spent a great deal of my ten thousand hours learning how to hold down a solid groove while singing lead vocals, or with two other guys in harmony without wandering off the meter. I traded that skill for some Insta-chops for sure. But I wounld't change it if I could. You can't have it all, right? I mean.... right? Like.... no one.... well... ok... maybe there's a couple Paul McCartney's out there. But that's next level prodigy stuff. Hah... (Also... listen to PM's isolated tracks. They are flat out some of the most amazing things I've ever heard. And yet.... you can hear his fingers on the strings. You can hear little flubs. You can hear the
human. Then listen to that track as a whole with the band. Guess what.... no more finger noise. No more flubs. Still
human....)
My motto has always been, "I'd rather be a mediocre bass player that plays really well with others, than a virtuoso that sits in my basement trying to see notes per minute I can play."
I can say with absolute experience, I've earned some great gigs over other - technically better - bass players than myself because I found a way to fit in to the situation better than them. Find your thing. Do you.