debriefing
First of all...
Sir Duke isn't really difficult...I suppose it's because (though I never played it with any combo - back when I was playing bass) I worked out the riff (when waiting for a gig to start - unplugged, obviously). I was rusty at it, but it came back (B-major...but keys don't make a damn bit of difference on stringed instruments - whereby all the strings are tuned apart at the same interval...as long as one stays away from first position). The easiest part of it (assuming one doesn't screw up the shifts) is the highest part - up around the 13th fret...The frets are close together, the notes are slower and the fingerings are very easy.
The one that's "hard" for me is "I want you back"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=y2bVIBwpCTA because it's relentless...The bass player (in a small combo) has to cover that trombone lick - over-and-over-and-over-and-over-and-over ad infinitum. There's a quick shift involved, and (of course) that shift has to occur every...single...time. There's also the issue of "concentration"... (it's MUCH longer than it was on this Ed Sullivan Show appearance). Also (and I wish it wasn't), I believe we're playing it a little faster than the record.
Of the "pop" stuff, this Cyrus tune (along with the one Swift tune we did) were the easiest...There's no harmonic substance, and both rely (100%) on the vocalist...and our vocalist is quite capable.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M11SvDtPBhA
Packing up my stuff (and thinking about all the little things I screwed up), some of these bass charts roadmaps are wild (and I don't believe they were written out by the bandleader to be read, but - rather - to be "learned"...and (based on how I have to budget my time) I'm just going to have to look them over a day before each of these jobs (as the set lists and rep change for every job), and do my best (with my 70-year-old brain) to remember where (back on page 1 of 3) the "chorus #1" is (ex: Where it says "play chorus #1 two more times, go to the bridge, play half the bridge, and then jump down to the outro and play this rhythm - written in pencil, rhythm only - no notes - as the last bar" - etc.)
He DID help me out a BUNCH before last night's gig and - several of the tunes (whereby it was just typed lyrics and chord changes approximately over the words) - he spent some time before the gig and penciled in most of the bar lines for me.
I do best on the tunes whereby
- the bass parts are written out (100%) in notes in the bass clef
and
- the bass parts which are simply a piece of paper with the name of the tune and the key
One thing we did was (Chicago)
Does Anybody Really Know What Time It Is?. It's one whereby (bass chart) every single note to be played is written out (and even in the string bass octave). Pretty much (though I'd not played it before, and had only HEARD it a zillion times) I read that one flawlessly, including the 5/8 time section (which - truth be told - is probably the least "busy" section for the bass.)
ALL of these tunes have "enhancement tracks" with them (amazing guy...He created ALL of them himself

). I've been struggling with earbuds...but (I believe I'll need some customized $$$ earbuds, because
ALL earbuds fall out of my ears) I brought the (remember me bragging about picking these up cheap?) the new-to-me Sony 7506 headphones to use instead. These are "over-ear", which (again) makes me (again) wish that I had some replacement hangers (which are both broken) for my 7502 Sony headphones (which are the open-air type). Those replacement hangers are no longer made...and I keep trying to find a "parts only" 7502 on eBay.
He also DID pass off a really nice compliment.
(He plays trumpet, keyboard, and sings some - mostly: left to the female vocalist - on these gigs, but he also plays bass.)
While we were packing up, he said something to the effect...
"As a bass player, a lot of the things you play (ie. when we're not playing pop/disco/rock/etc., and it's up to me to supply my own bass lines) really make me grin."
I suspect (??) he's referring to the fact that (with the combo being so small) that - WHEN I CAN - I'll work in missing harmony lines (that people expect to hear - associated with the melodies), YET I'll strive to work them in IN THE FORM OF bass lines. I also strive to add some variety in my bass lines, yet WITHOUT screwing up the harmonic structure and/or implied inversions (etc...as maybe you've read by posts about - back in the early 1980's, in a series of gigs - being sternly "schooled" by Sidney Chilton, jazz pianist - father of Alex Chilton of the band,
The Boxtops - re: not just playing any ol' damn walking bass line "just because its in the chord change".) Finally (just as there are MANY really nice "substitute chords") there are SOME (not as many) substitute bass notes which sound really nice (when used appropriately) and add a bit of sophistication to the harmonic structure...and (whoduh thunk it?

) I know of a few of these.
Anyway...
I'm playing electric bass again.
(I know longer own an upright - neither the 5-string Kay that I sold, nor the Korean "stick bass" that I had in the past, and have NO plans to re-acquire similar axes.)
The 12" Polytone MiniBrute bass amp - which I specifically bought to follow me around all over the west coast of the US, as well as all over western Europe (bought new in 1982 - Dixieland Revival Era II, and which
@tadawson helped me self-rehab) worked like a champ (was totally useless when I first pulled it out), and (though only a 12-inch speaker - though with a HUGE magnet - driven by only 80 watts) offered PLENTY of sound (only turned up to 7-1/2 or so...and that's with a good big of treble dampening (which reduces EFFECTIVE volume, as do my flat-wound strings).
I need to keep up the tuba playing...I quit an orchestra (simply didn't sign nor return this year's contract...), but others are calling. I have one of those (truly) fun John Williams movie-tunes concerts booked soon. Of course, there's Easter, some dixie jobs, et al.