Walking Bass Lines with Chord Changes

Viewing videos requires the latest version of Adobe's Flash Player.
Get the latest Flash player.
Showing 1-5

Part of the video series: Jazz & Latin Bass Guitar Grooves

Summary: Walk bass lines with chord changes on a bass guitar; learn how from a professional bass guitar player and teacher in this free music instruction video.

Views: 436 | Tags: bass, guitar, scales, theory, jazz, folk, guitarlessons, guitars, bass guitar, music theory


About the Expert

Ryan Larson Ryan Larson is a young jazz composer whose teaching technique focuses on the basics of music theory in all twelve keys. When applying his 12 key technique to ... read more

Conversations About This Video

  • Comments
    (0 comments)
  • Questions & Answers
    (0 questions)
Be the first to comment on this video.
Have a question about this video topic? Ask our community members and let them share their knowledge with you!
Ask A Question

Video Transcript

Walking Bass Lines with Chord Changes

Okay, so we just looked at how we can play over chord changes. Basically we can walk our way to them using passing tones, chromatics, scales, basically everything in our arsenal so far. Well, that's walking quarter notes. To make our lives a little more interesting we can use some rhythmic differences. There is two ways of changing the rhythm sometimes outside of the quarter notes that really have a good sound. There's playing a dotted eighth note to a sixteenth note, usually at the end of a measure. Let's see. Right there. It goes B flat, F, G, D flat...So those are dotted eighth notes and sixteenth notes linked. Okay, there's also triplets. Usually those going down the strings. That's a triplet like... that's an eighth note. Triplet, okay, triplet. Dotted eighth note. Here it is written. So if you play this line right here, B flat, C minor, this walking bass line. It's on E flat, F, G, D, D flat, C... G, F, and then A. And now you do a triplet. B flat, F, and D. You can roll your fingers off. You can do that all with one finger on your right hand. Now B natural as a chromatic, C, C, F, A, so that would sound... So practice using dotted eighth notes and triplets to make your walking lines a little more interesting.

Bass Ads

Community Members who...

  • Favorited this Video
  • Rated This Video

Check out what people are watching now
left_arrow right_arrow