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https://soundcertified.com/speaker-ohms-calculator/
Tom Robinson
JJ Burnell
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https://soundcertified.com/speaker-ohms-calculator/
He didn’t mean to sound like a simpleton but that’s all the song needed.
https://soundcertified.com/speaker-ohms-calculator/
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The reason why more people find it difficult to sing and play bass, rather than sing and play guitar is that the guitar parts are often more closely linked with the vocal and the bass parts are not. It's not a note choice issue, it's a rhythmic pattern issue.
Only in pop music does a bass players role mostly involve root notes. That is not true for many other styles and completely wrong for classical and jazz where the bass part is often an entire counter melody. RnB, Country, Blues etc all use forms of walking or far more than root / fifth.
Can you imagine how awful an old classic like "in the mood" would be if the bassist only played root notes?
https://soundcertified.com/speaker-ohms-calculator/
Oh wait - no he didn't. He enhanced them. Massively.
https://soundcertified.com/speaker-ohms-calculator/
I am not sure what country music you listen to but 'simple' roots will suffice for most country songs I know. And the typical 12 bar blues can be successfully played using roots. It might bore the pants off the musician but I doubt the average punter in the audience would even notice. You may be right about 'in the mood' but few bands play it and even fewer play and sing it. Great tune BTW.
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