| Ask Willis - August - 2007 | |
Hey Willis, Hey Willis. Any chance of revealing the patch settings you use on Actual Fiction and Slaughterhouse 3 so I can try them out on my own V-BASS rig? A.B. Sure - here's the link: http://garywillis.com/V-Bass-sysex.mid.zip The only problem is that the sounds that I've programmed (the 1st 6 or 7 banks) depend on using the expression pedal for the mix. If you don't have an expression pedal connected you won't be able to mix your dry sound and the V-Bass patch. But, you could re-program the patches so that the mix was dependent on the GK's volume knob. Hey Willis, What inspired you to take up fretless as your main voice, was this early on when you started playing bass? L.R. Hey L.R., I first wanted to go fretless while playing in jazz ensembles at college and figured that was the only way I could get closer to the way an upright bass functioned. I tried lowering the strings on my fretted and only succeeded in getting funny looks from my fellow band members. My first summer after college, I joined a top 40 band and saved up enough to buy a '65 Jazz and made it fretless. Several years later after trying to be a typical Los Angeles "chameleon" - you know, sound like this guy for this tune, then sound like this guy for this tune - I decided that musically, the fretted was just too one-dimensional and found myself only playing fretless in creative situations.. Hey Willis, How do you build the ability to play fretless and not have to look down at your fingers to intonate the notes properly? When I jump positions is where I have to look the most. C.H. Hey C.H. Hey Willis, On your Web site, you state: "Developing a medium, instead of hard, touch gives you a fatter sound and the potential for a lot more dynamic playing." How does one do that "in the heat of the moment," that is when the energy is really pumping, the band is kicking hard, and the normal instinct is to want to dig in? B.L. Hey B.L., It's definitely a big contradiction to feel like it's time to "kick some butt" and still move your fingers only a little. It took me a good 2 years of always making myself uncomfortable with the live amp or practice amp turned up. Eventually you will be able to get into the music physically and pull off all your break-dancing, booty shakin', neck-bobbing moves without influencing your right hand technique.
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