Alvabass
Well-known member
Hi again.
From some time ago, I've had the idea of arranging the fifteen two-part inventions by J.S. Bach for two basses. I know that such work has been done before, but I want to create my own version and, if possible, look for the way of releasing a book with it. Of course, this is intended as a didactic material. Right now, I've adapted the inventions # 1, 8 and 13. I created the score for two basses and a separate part in standard notation with fingerings for each bass. Of course, a work like this is not complete without a recording, so last night I started working on that and now I want to share my effort on the two-part invention # 13 (yet another one?). It was done with (guess what?) my 5-string Bongo with these settings: Full piezos, full bridge pickup, no neck pickup, full high-mids and treble, low-mids and bass slightly cut. The two track recording was done with Adobe Audition plugging the bass direct into my SoundBlaster Audigy 2 Platinum sound card and the only effect I used was a compressor. No reverb or chorus, for instance, so you can hear the real tone of the Bongo. Bass # 1 is panned fully to the right and #2 is panned fully to the left, so they can be isolated for you to play along (and hear my mistakes in detail
). The opinions I'm looking for are about the quality of this recording as a teaching material to be released to the public. I know that Bunny Brunel did this and I haven't heard it but I guess that the arrangements and recordings must be monstruously good. In my case, I just want to know if you think this recording meets a minimum quality standard. I mean, if you have the chance of trying this, would you buy it? The YouSendIt link below has a zip file with the recording, the score and the parts for each bass. The biggest problem I'm facing is that I chose to play these pieces at a moderately fast tempo and so many punch-ins should be done for getting this the best possible (specially for the first bass. I only did one punch-in for the second). I know I can record them much slower and use the software for speed them up, but I don't want to do that. I want to be as honest as possible with this. There are lots of mistakes, but I want you to tell me if those mistakes are so prominent to ruin the work or if, on the other hand, they contribute to the "warmth that the human factor adds to the recording". So please let me know your sincere opinion on this work (I'm ready for anything
). Again, think of this as if you were at your local store and were looking for such material for you to study. Thank you in advance!
Link:
http://s50.yousendit.com/d.aspx?id=1W1I50B85MYG82ZZUTRGGGHKQ0
P.S.: I also posted this at TalkBass, but this link is different (more chances to download before expiring).
From some time ago, I've had the idea of arranging the fifteen two-part inventions by J.S. Bach for two basses. I know that such work has been done before, but I want to create my own version and, if possible, look for the way of releasing a book with it. Of course, this is intended as a didactic material. Right now, I've adapted the inventions # 1, 8 and 13. I created the score for two basses and a separate part in standard notation with fingerings for each bass. Of course, a work like this is not complete without a recording, so last night I started working on that and now I want to share my effort on the two-part invention # 13 (yet another one?). It was done with (guess what?) my 5-string Bongo with these settings: Full piezos, full bridge pickup, no neck pickup, full high-mids and treble, low-mids and bass slightly cut. The two track recording was done with Adobe Audition plugging the bass direct into my SoundBlaster Audigy 2 Platinum sound card and the only effect I used was a compressor. No reverb or chorus, for instance, so you can hear the real tone of the Bongo. Bass # 1 is panned fully to the right and #2 is panned fully to the left, so they can be isolated for you to play along (and hear my mistakes in detail

Link:
http://s50.yousendit.com/d.aspx?id=1W1I50B85MYG82ZZUTRGGGHKQ0
P.S.: I also posted this at TalkBass, but this link is different (more chances to download before expiring).
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