March 6, 2024
Howard
Bass guitar exercises are essential routines bassists practice to enhance their playing technique, improve finger strength and skill, and increase speed across the fretboard. These exercises help in mastering various aspects of the instrument, ensuring a more fluid and versatile performance. Adopting a regular practice regimen with these exercises can significantly elevate a player’s skill level. Let’s dive in.
Here’s a deep dive into some fundamental exercises, ensuring a smoother transition from a beginner to a proficient bassist.
These drills consist of exercises meticulously designed to stretch and fortify each finger. Through repeated practice, bassists can ensure their fingers gain suppleness and robustness.
The Chromatic Scale Run involves systematically playing the chromatic scale across the fretboard, ascending and descending in sequence. This exercise not only refines one’s technique but also embeds a deeper understanding of each note’s placement.
This regimen focuses on exercises that deploy varied finger combinations to articulate distinct sequences. Bassists cultivate heightened individual finger control by challenging each finger to operate autonomously.
Hammer-ons and pull-offs are quintessential techniques wherein notes are sounded without plucking. Instead, the force of the fingers on the fretboard creates the desired note, lending a smoother transition between tones.
String skipping exercises challenge bassists to leap over strings, focusing on playing non-consecutive ones. This manoeuvre tests precision and the ability to swiftly jump intervals without missing a beat.
If you play any scale in intervals greater than 5 you can come up with some cool string skipping exercises. Read my book on Intervals for help!
Remember, always start with your pinky finger, as your longer index finger can reach the strings furthest away easier.
This exercise emphasises the art of seamlessly transitioning between different positions on the fretboard. By mastering this, bassists can navigate the entirety of their instrument with finesse, ensuring they’re always in the optimal place for the following note.
Playing the chord tones in a major scale will get you playing different fretboard positions.
The slap and pop techniques are distinctive methods in bass guitar playing, where the thumb is employed to slap the string downwards while the fingers are used to pop or pluck the strings upwards. This combination creates a rhythmic and percussive tone, adding a unique flavour to the music.
Octave jumps task bassists with playing identical notes across different octaves, moving between the lower and higher registers of the bass guitar. This exercise not only refines a bassist’s spatial awareness of the fretboard but also enhances their ability to transition between pitches.
Two-hand tapping is a mesmerising technique where both hands are actively engaged on the fretboard, tapping notes to produce sound. This advanced style, often associated with virtuoso players, bypasses the traditional plucking and strumming, resulting in a rapid succession of notes.
Metronome speed training involves the systematic escalation of tempo while practising, using a metronome to keep time. Starting slow and gradually increasing the beats per minute, bassists challenge themselves to keep pace while maintaining accuracy.
My usual warm up exercise usually includes picking a scale and playing it in every position (13 of them) on the neck. Or I sometimes choose to run through YYZ by Rush or Bach’s Cello suite in G Major.
Hopefully, I’ve given you some ideas you can use too! Stay inspired, and keep those strings resonating.
I turn confused bass enthusiasts into bass gods through a simple and logical process.