I'm trying to prove myself wrong. . . Why is it that not too many solo artists/bass players play EB/MM basses?
As a bass nerd, I do have a good collection of music from bass players, like Victor Wooten, Marcus Miller, Adam Nitti, Patitucci, Matt Garrison, Victor Bailey, Michael Manring, Gary Willis, etc, etc.
But I can't recall any of these virtuosos/shredders playing an EB/MM. (Tony Levin to me is a master sideman more than a solo artist, so he doesn't count.) Dave LaRue comes to mind, but is he also known more as a master sideman than a solo artist.
-Is it because bass players think of EB/MMs more as supportive or foundation basses than solo instruments?
-I could think that it is because many of these artist tend to have a relationship with high-end luthiers, instead of production instruments.
-But then, you see Victor Bailey and Marcus Miller playing Fender, or Gary Willis playing Ibanez, for example.
-Maybe players associate EB/MM more with rock, pop, r&B, and funk, than jazz and fusion?
The only fusion record that I have been able to find featuring an EB/MM is John Scofield 1987's "Pick and Hits," with Gary Grainer on a StingRay (this CD is a must for fusion/funk and StingRay fans, by the way).
Or maybe it's just coincidence, and this whole subject is just irrelevant, and I should go and take the dog for a walk.
.
As a bass nerd, I do have a good collection of music from bass players, like Victor Wooten, Marcus Miller, Adam Nitti, Patitucci, Matt Garrison, Victor Bailey, Michael Manring, Gary Willis, etc, etc.
But I can't recall any of these virtuosos/shredders playing an EB/MM. (Tony Levin to me is a master sideman more than a solo artist, so he doesn't count.) Dave LaRue comes to mind, but is he also known more as a master sideman than a solo artist.
-Is it because bass players think of EB/MMs more as supportive or foundation basses than solo instruments?
-I could think that it is because many of these artist tend to have a relationship with high-end luthiers, instead of production instruments.
-But then, you see Victor Bailey and Marcus Miller playing Fender, or Gary Willis playing Ibanez, for example.
-Maybe players associate EB/MM more with rock, pop, r&B, and funk, than jazz and fusion?
The only fusion record that I have been able to find featuring an EB/MM is John Scofield 1987's "Pick and Hits," with Gary Grainer on a StingRay (this CD is a must for fusion/funk and StingRay fans, by the way).
Or maybe it's just coincidence, and this whole subject is just irrelevant, and I should go and take the dog for a walk.
.
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