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    • Image courtesy of pizarradelespectador.blogspot.com

      pizarradelespectador.blogspot.com

      Charles Mingus

      • Charles Mingus is one of two upright bassists on this list, and probably the most famous one. It's worth noting that Mingus was so much more than just a jazz bass player. He was also a band leader, a composer, and an overall musical genius.
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    • Thundercat. Survey the sounds that have defined the vanguard of hip-hop, jazz, R&B, electronica, and beyond during the past decade-plus — including records made by Kendrick Lamar, Janelle Monáe, Flying Lotus, Kamasi Washington, Erykah Badu, Childish Gambino, and more — and you’ll land on one name again and again: Thundercat.
    • Duff McKagan. Prior to joining Guns N’ Roses, Duff McKagan had barely touched a bass. He was an ex-guitarist and ex-drummer who had come up in Seattle’s early-Eighties punk scene, and the combo of his background and his raw approach to playing gave Guns N’ Roses songs like “It’s So Easy” and “You Could Be Mine” a rough edge.
    • Kim Deal. Kim Deal was working as a receptionist at a doctor’s office in 1986 when she read a Boston Phoenix newspaper ad saying a band was looking for a “bassist into Hüsker Dü and Peter, Paul, and Mary.”
    • Leland Sklar. The singer-songwriter movement of the Seventies called for backup musicians who could anchor ballads and midtempo rockers while never distracting from the singer or the song.
    • Brett Milano
    • Jaco Pastorius. Jaco Pastorius used every minute of the short time he had to expand the technical and dramatic possibilities of the bass, giving his various clients – Joni Mitchell, Pat Metheny, and even Ian Hunter – more than they bargained for.
    • Paul McCartney. Paul McCartney made a trademark out of the supple, lyrical bassline more than any rock player before or since, and that’s on “Paperback Writer” alone.
    • Carol Kaye. Putting the bottom end into The Wrecking Crew, Carol Kaye played the indelible parts on “Midnight Confessions,” “River Deep – Mountain High,” The Beach Boys’ “Good Vibrations” and an estimated 10,000 other tracks.
    • Stanley Clarke. Stanley Clarke was a bass virtuoso with a canny sense of riffs and grooves, plus a few great tricks like that finger-strum trademark.
  2. Jun 9, 2021 · Our hunt for a band of GOATS now moves to the bass player, and you’ve whittled down a long list of hundreds of low-frequency legends to arrive at our final round. Below are the 30 bassists you chose as the best to ever deliver the bottom end.

    • Paul Chambers
    • Ray Brown
    • Sam Jones
    • Jaco Pastorius
    • Esperanza Spalding
    • Charles Mingus
    • Ron Carter
    • Stanley Clarke
    • Scott Lafaro
    • Jimmy Blanton

    One of the most influential jazz bassists of all time, Paul Chambers was born in Pennsylvania in 1935 but grew up in Detroit playing baritone and tuba. He began learning the double bass at the end of the 1940s and began working as a sideman for several important artists. By 1955, he was a member of the Miles Davis Quintet and played on some very fa...

    Pittsburgh native Ray Brownwas a driving force in Dizzy Gillespie’s band in the 1940s and was known for his huge, swinging sound. His bass playing with that big band laid the track for the progression of jazz into the bebop style. Brown played with so many jazz legends, including, Charlie Parker, Kenny Clarke, Milt Jackon, and more; but notable amo...

    After knocking around in New York in the 1950s playing with various outfits, Sam Jonessettled in as Cannonball Adderly’s bassist, where he earned a stellar reputation. He was renowned for his technical proficiency on the instrument and, along with Adderly drummer Louis Hayes, cultivated a distinct brand as a guy who could stay in the groove. Chet B...

    Born in Pennsylvania to a jazz drummer, Jaco Pastoriusplayed the electric bass and is hailed by many as the greatest ever to do so. He’s one of a handful of musicians who reinvented his instrument. Jaco played a Fender Jazz bass from which he’d removed the frets (with a butter knife, by some accounts), which gave his playing a distinct sound. He we...

    Oregon-born Esperanza Spaldingwas a professional violinist before she was a teenager. Growing bored with the violin (and other instruments she taught herself to play), Spalding hit upon the bass and got hooked. She’s recorded nearly 10 solo albums and received vast critical praise. Her first Grammy was for Best New Artist, and she shocked the world...

    Our next bassist, Charles Mingus, grew up in Southern California in a home where non-religious music was forbidden. Despite that, he discovered jazz and felt drawn to it immediately. He learned the cello as a boy, then moved to the bass, where he was classically trained and was nearly instantly recognized as a prodigy. Mingus played behind bebop mu...

    The iron man of jazz bassists, Ron Carter,has played on more than 2,200 recordings throughout his storied career, making him the most recorded jazz bassist of all time! The Detroiter is one of the few who, when you say, “He’s played with everybody,” you mean literally “everybody.” Among that vast number of recordings are names like Antonio Carlos J...

    As a founding member (alongside Chick Corea) of the group Return to Forever, Stanley Clarkehelped create a space in the jazz world for the electric bass. A contemporary of Jaco Pastorius, Clarke made new rules for the instrument just like Pastorius did, but not dying early has allowed Clarke to expand the bass’ role even further. He started as an a...

    The short life of our next bassist, Scott LaFaro, started in New York state, where his father was a big band player. He became most closely identified with the Bill Evans trio. He recorded with Stan Getz and Ornette Coleman and toured with Chet Baker. LaFaro was known for humming along with his bass as he played it. He was also widely respected for...

    Jazz double bassist Jimmy Blantonpicked up the bass at Tennessee State University after studying the violin. That experience heavily influenced his bass playing, which influenced generations of jazz players. Before Blanton, a bass solo was mainly about its rhythm. After all, it’s a part of the rhythm section, right? However, Blanton’s violin traini...

    • Jaco Pastorius. Topping our list of the 50 best jazz bassists is the mighty and inimitable Jaco Pastorius, who rose to fame in the 70s fusion supergroup Weather Report.
    • Stanley Clarke. With his dexterous fretboard work and supreme technical mastery, this virtuoso Philadelphia bass pioneer and composer helped to establish the electric bass guitar as a viable solo instrument in the 70s, with a series of groundbreaking albums that fused jazz with funk and rock.
    • Ron Carter. With over 2,200 session appearances to his name, Michigan-born Carter is, without doubt, the most recorded jazz bassist in history – not to mention one of the best jazz bassists to ever pick up the instrument.
    • Ray Brown. From Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, Brown was a revered master of the upright bass, which he took up in high school. Influenced by Jimmy Blanton, Brown made his name with Dizzy Gillespie’s bebop band in the late 40s, but it was in the 50s, as part of pianist Oscar Peterson’s trio, that he truly made his mark as one of the world’s best jazz bassists.
  3. Oct 31, 2023 · Anthony Frederick Levin (born June 6, 1946) is an American musician and composer, specializing in electric bass guitars, Chapman Stick and upright bass. He also sings and plays synthesizer. Levin is best known[1] for his work with King Crimson (1981–2021) and Peter Gabriel (since 1977).

  4. Dec 2, 2021 · 1. Winner, Best Bassist 2021: John Taylor, Duran Duran. It’s been 40 years since the Birmingham New Romantics Duran Duran first entered the limelight with their debut single, ‘Planet Earth’, and by rights they should have retired to a private island in the Caribbean decades ago.

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