0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 11799 times.
For instance you can hear in the Beatles evolution when Paul changed his bass playing to emulate Brian Wilson's. Paul's playing blossomed after being exposed to Brian's work.
Why is Brian Wilson so admired to this day?
This astonishes me. Can you give an example? To my ears, Paul was the preeminent bass player in pop music at the time (by far) and I would have thought if anyone was copying anyone it would have been Paul being copied.
From a quick google search:"Then I started listening to other bass players--mainly Motown. As time went on, James Jamerson became my hero, although I didn't actually know his name until quite recently. Jamerson and later Brian Wilson of the Beach Boys were my two biggest influences: James because he was so good and melodic, and Brian because he went to very unusual places. With the Beach Boys, the band might be playing in *C*, but the bass might stay on the *G* just to hold it all back. I started to realize the power the bass player had within the band. Not vengeful power--it was just that you could actually control it. So even though the whole band is going along in *A*, you could stick in *E*," he says, and sings an insistent, repeated bass note. "And they'd say: 'Let us off the hook!' You're actually in control then--an amazing thing. So I sussed that and got particularly interested in playing the bass."Magazine: Bass PlayerIssue: July/August 1995Title: Paul McCartney - Meet The BeatleAuthor: Tony Bacon