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Related: About this forumScience Suggests Bassists Are Far More Important Than Most People Realize
http://mic.com/articles/120137/science-suggests-bassists-are-far-more-important-than-most-people-realizeWhen Led Zeppelin's bassist John Paul Jones was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1995, he made a classic bass joke. "Thank you to my friends for finally remembering my phone number," he said, looking over at the rest of the band.
Like any good joke, there's some truth to it: Bassists are criminally overlooked and underappreciated members of most every band. Yet there's scientific proof that bassists are actually one of the most vital members of any band. There are powerful neurological and structural reasons why our music needs bass. It's time we started treating bassists with the respect they deserve.
Holding it down. Last year, researchers from McMaster University in Hamilton, Canada, found that there's a reason why bass lines tend to fill out the background of a song, leaving the theatrics to higher-pitched instruments. Our brains are far better suited to establishing a song's rhythmic feel if they occur in lower tones.
Laurel Trainor, the study's lead author, hooked up participants to an EEG to monitor brain activity while they heard simultaneous streams of two piano notes one high-pitched, the other low-pitched. Every so often researchers played one of the notes fractions of a second too early. Participants were far better at recognizing these errors if they occurred in the bass notes. That same study also found that, if asked to tap their fingers along to this unpredictable stream of notes, subjects were much better at adjusting their tapping when the lower tones began to arrive early than they were if the same thing happened with the higher tones.
Like any good joke, there's some truth to it: Bassists are criminally overlooked and underappreciated members of most every band. Yet there's scientific proof that bassists are actually one of the most vital members of any band. There are powerful neurological and structural reasons why our music needs bass. It's time we started treating bassists with the respect they deserve.
Holding it down. Last year, researchers from McMaster University in Hamilton, Canada, found that there's a reason why bass lines tend to fill out the background of a song, leaving the theatrics to higher-pitched instruments. Our brains are far better suited to establishing a song's rhythmic feel if they occur in lower tones.
Laurel Trainor, the study's lead author, hooked up participants to an EEG to monitor brain activity while they heard simultaneous streams of two piano notes one high-pitched, the other low-pitched. Every so often researchers played one of the notes fractions of a second too early. Participants were far better at recognizing these errors if they occurred in the bass notes. That same study also found that, if asked to tap their fingers along to this unpredictable stream of notes, subjects were much better at adjusting their tapping when the lower tones began to arrive early than they were if the same thing happened with the higher tones.
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Science Suggests Bassists Are Far More Important Than Most People Realize (Original Post)
geardaddy
Jun 2015
OP
NRaleighLiberal
(60,500 posts)1. calling bluesbassman? This is your kind of article!
geardaddy
(25,342 posts)2. Yes!
I'm a bassist too! Good call on getting bluebassman's attention!
Wilms
(26,795 posts)3. How often do people get to really enjoy hearing the bass in recorded music.
The speakers most people listen with, let alone earpieces, only do so good a job.
As a result, it makes it hard to appreciate what a good bass player can do.
Scuba
(53,475 posts)4. That's why I have 15" woofers.
Scuba
(53,475 posts)5. Whaddya call a beautiful woman on a bass player's arm?
A tattoo.
Thanks, I'll be here all night.