A tapping tip courtesy of Billy Sheehan: Increasing the attack of the right hand by adding the middle finger on top of the index finger helps get the volume of a tapped note close to the level of a plucked one by doubling the strength of the hand.
One of the great things about living in Nashville is during the
off-season when most tours slow down or stop completely, touring
musicians are able to hang out socially and play music together. We
don’t often get to see each other at festivals and out-of-town gigs, so
this is our chance to put on in-town shows with players we normally
don’t play with. We get to cover songs from any genre or difficulty
level just for the fun of it.
A few months ago, a friend suggested we perform “Shyboy” from David Lee Roth’s debut solo album, Eat ’Em and Smile.
The classic song is a musician backbreaker and involves a lot of bass
tapping. If you read my columns regularly, you know there’s a clear
pattern of me admiring “song guys” who support the music with simple,
non-egocentric bass patterns—not necessarily bass lines that might land
them on the covers of magazines. This means that in my 30-year career,
tapping is not something I’ve focused on, at all. I love low notes and that’s why I decided to play bass in the first place.
The song in question features Billy Sheehan on bass and Steve Vai on
guitar. While Sheehan was one of my absolute biggest influences growing
up, I focused on completely different aspects of his playing, like his
tone with sub lows and really crisp highs co-existing, even when
distorted. Most of all, I thought his attitude and the slight vibrato he
applied to his most fundamental, low-bass lines on verses were worthy
of awe. Still, all the bass magazines at the time featured
transcriptions of his tapping sections and solos. I enjoyed listening to
these things, but I wasn’t inspired to learn them.
My gut reaction was to say no to playing the song since I didn’t
think I’d be able to do it justice. I’ve spent decades working on my
fingerstyle technique, so how could using a technique I’ve never
practiced possibly sound good? The voice of reason, however, is also the
voice of fear, so the other side of me stepped in and accused the voice
of reason of being a coward. So, the long preparation began. I spent a
couple hours tapping a few days a week for a month.
This is, unfortunately, a bit of a trend with younger musicians pursuing YouTube fame.
The first step in learning the song was slowing it down on the
computer to better hear the flurry of notes. The interesting thing was
discovering that a lot of the unison lines between Sheehan and Vai—or
at least what I thought were unison lines—had slight discrepancies in
them. At those insane speeds, sliding across several frets or performing
hammer-ons and pull-offs in unison is bound to sound less, well, unison.
Discovering that even these beasts have moments of humanity was my
first encouraging sign that learning the song might be doable.
The second step was going on YouTube to investigate other players
who’d attempted to tame this beast of a song. There was something to
learn from each of their approaches, even if they made fairly serious
mistakes in exact note selection. What was interesting is that I found
quite a few players who pretty much nailed the tapping part—which I
considered to be a huge mountain to climb—but struggled with the actual groove
part of the song. Playing eighth-notes on the root of every chord was
apparently less enticing to them than learning the high-register tapping
parts. (This is, unfortunately, a bit of a trend with younger musicians
pursuing YouTube fame.)
I also found a video of Sheehan explaining his part at a clinic. He
was so used to playing it at speed, it actually took him a while to
break it down. Sheehan showed how the ending part of the tapping section
uses a five-over-four feel, and having that information made the last
third of the “impossible” section much easier. The biggest discovery was
hearing him perform the tapping section without his signature
distortion. His attack and sheer volume when tapping match his
fingerstyle volume, making both techniques sound like one statement. This is an important result of most technical practicing.
The third step was looking at available tabs online. Different sites
have different versions of the tab, and while I didn’t find one I
considered to be 100 percent correct, I picked up a few crucial passages
from searching around. Ultimately, each of the learning approaches I
used helped me with details that the others lacked.
The whole experience both enabled and inspired me to get out of my
comfort zone in a big way. When we fail to challenge ourselves
technically as bassists, it just might help to hop on some licks from
our guitarist brethren. Now I’m thinking that since I haven’t dabbled in
Latin bass since college, tackling some of those lines that sounded
quite impossible a few years ago might be a good idea. I have some
newfound hand strength from tapping—of all things—that might come in
handy.
From: http://www.premierguitar.com
From: http://www.premierguitar.com
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