Drago
Legendary Member
- Location
- Suburban Poshshire
You want an LK edition Rickenbacker bass.
With all the talk about banjos on here and there being a few bass players too I thought I would share this video of Foggy Mountain Breakdown played on a bass. Quite incredible piece of playing.
View: https://youtu.be/HUIsiou0gj4
@CycleopsI’d go for the orange @Richard A Thackeray
Why is it Gretsch don’t seem to be so popular these days?
I find open A a bit of a squash in its standard position, and tend to play it up at the 5th instead, shown in the bottom image...He couldn’t do a D chord. He said his ‘fingers didn’t fit on the strings’. After a week he couldn’t or daren’t progress to a A chord as he assumed it would be harder.
I am a bad person as I didn’t disillusion him. Just handed over the money. When I first learned, it took me a bit to get that D chord tidy but never looked back after. I still, sometimes have to think with a D minor.
I have forgotten my scales but remembered the first couple of bars of Cliffs of Dover. First few bars of Evil Eye too.
Very glad that the lad had no stickability. I really love that little amp he sold it with too. It’s really rather good.
I like that. Thank you. I have little girly hands so an A isn’t a big issue for me.I find open A a bit of a squash in its standard position, and tend to play it up at the 5th instead, shown in the bottom image...
View attachment 620650
I just go down the open tuning route and barre everything. Easy and no or little stress on the fingers/ brainAs a badly self-tought strummer I've always taken the cavalier one finger approach to playing an open A, but I too have always suffered with the speed of changes problem These days I just play slower stuff.