Steve Burke

Steve Burke

I'm a professional bass player, composer, and teacher from Brooklyn, NY. I make videos about playing bass.

instagram: @steveburk3

Hot Club of Gowanus - Dinah

Hot Club of Gowanus - Dinah

Steve Burke Music

Steve Burke Music

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  • @can-li1gg
    @can-li1gg13 сағат бұрын

    I have been doing this all along and didn't know what it was called! Im open to learning new bass technique and when this was reccomened to me I clicked on it, to my surprise this one I have been doing without knowledge of what it was!

  • @eugeniasackson7128
    @eugeniasackson712814 сағат бұрын

    excellent lesson

  • @tonyserzo
    @tonyserzo5 күн бұрын

    I've always anchored my thumb on the pickup, but I just got a new bass and am finding it difficult because of the layout of the instrument. This lesson was super helpful, thank you Steve!

  • @tomhart6962
    @tomhart69626 күн бұрын

    Thanks for the review. So little information out there on these.

  • @iancannon3200
    @iancannon32008 күн бұрын

    Love your tips! Started using your “slide up” pentatonic scale tip on bass and acoustic guitar. Thank you 🙏

  • @marknieuweboer8099
    @marknieuweboer80999 күн бұрын

    My right hand technique is largely the same as yours as explained from 11:10 on. My hands are narrow (one finger per fret without shifting is only possible for me at about an octave up on the fret board) but my arms and fingers are relatively long. So when sitting I rest my bass in my left leg. This allows me to keep both my wrists nearly straight (and even more so when standing). I did this from the beginning a year ago and mastered it in less than three weeks. This indeed solved half of the muting problem immediately. I noticed though that I use my right underarm as an anchor and I suspect that you do as well. Like you I adapted the floating thumb technique when switching strings several times in a row. But when playing a long row of notes on the highest string (in my case D, because I have BEAD) I still put my right thumb against the A. Btw as my thumb is straight I use the spot between the side and the tip. Finally now and then I let my right pinky rest on the string just above the one I'm playing for more stability - I still can pluck with three fingers when I do. Indeed I practised exactly the exercise you demonstrated but with a slight modification: 4 notes per string (plucking with two fingers, triplets (three finger plucking) and finally 2 notes per string. It's a good exercise to develop speed with the aid of a metronome. It took me about three months to reach 140 bpm (and 150+ on a good day). So I wholeheartedly recommend it, especially to beginners.

  • @jls70570
    @jls7057024 күн бұрын

    Great video. I’ve been doing this since the 70s, taught it to my students, and wondered why it isn’t taught more. The only thing I do differently is that I prefer the shift from the 1 to the 2 instead of the 2 to the 3.

  • @WeepTheGreed
    @WeepTheGreed28 күн бұрын

    Like everyone else, this simple idea has totally made my beginner/intermediate hackery so much more musical and has really opened my brain to listen more and approach things differently. Thanks a lot. Great vid.

  • @JagadisM
    @JagadisMАй бұрын

    Thanks sir, very useful!

  • @JagadisM
    @JagadisMАй бұрын

    Thanks sir, very useful!

  • @wack8589
    @wack8589Ай бұрын

    🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸🎸

  • @wernermoser3406
    @wernermoser3406Ай бұрын

    You need a thumb rest!

  • @jema1122
    @jema1122Ай бұрын

    Great explanation

  • @Ugfromumantman
    @UgfromumantmanАй бұрын

    I really dislike how most books and tutorials of the pentatonic for guitar or bass show you the patterns and try to get you to memorize those pattern chunks. It wasnt until I started practicing them on one string and then connecting it like you've done that I really started learning scales. I think guitarists need go put mor emphasis on the intervals rather than just learning chunks and patterns.

  • @swconnexion
    @swconnexionАй бұрын

    as a beginner, I found your video easier to digest because it focuses on only one shape of pentatonic. Thank you

  • @billydutton7184
    @billydutton7184Ай бұрын

    Great tips Steve!

  • @dylangadwa3119
    @dylangadwa3119Ай бұрын

    Thanks for this! Very useful and well presented.

  • @SteveBurke
    @SteveBurkeАй бұрын

    Thank you! Appreciate the feedback.

  • @DarylWeber1
    @DarylWeber1Ай бұрын

    Very simple yet powerful tip, love it.

  • @bramvanmelle5130
    @bramvanmelle5130Ай бұрын

    Great lesson! This really opened up my playing. I tend to move the first finger up to the second degree, rather than moving the pinky from second to third, but ill try your way as well. If you're trapped in the minor pentatonic box, this major pentatonic tip will transform your playing!

  • @loctardamity1
    @loctardamity1Ай бұрын

    I love a good eureka video.

  • @MattnUska
    @MattnUskaАй бұрын

    You generally want to shift to your pointer finger going up and your pinky going down. I don’t know if that makes sense. It’s how the Simandl technique teaches it. It makes a bigger difference when you’re playing Fretless because you are more accurate with your position. It’s a good habit to develop on fretted though. You are always using your pointer finger to set your position.

  • @csg1lcolonel528
    @csg1lcolonel528Ай бұрын

    It really depends on the context, and it's important to know when it's appropriate to slide with your pointer or ring/pinky. I try to slide up with my pointer if I plan on using the target fret as the "root" of the next position, or with my ring/pinky if I'm sliding past the root and instead starting on the 2nd or 3rd of a scale or something similar (this is all in the case of the E string ofc, and using scales as one of many examples. There's so many ways you could apply either method. Just try not to favor one over the other so you'll be ready for anything).

  • @StuartRAberdein
    @StuartRAberdeinАй бұрын

    Very useful. Thanks

  • @theaaronimal
    @theaaronimalАй бұрын

    THIS IS SO GOOD! THANK YOU!

  • @jj-eg5up
    @jj-eg5upАй бұрын

    Thank you

  • @zeusdavenport393
    @zeusdavenport393Ай бұрын

    I recently heard the phrase "playing the dots" to describe Geezer Butler's minor pentatonic approach to Black Sabbath's bass. The brilliance of playing the pentatonic in this way is that everything is 2 frets or a string change away. I like to call it the "Pentatonic Cross" because one can imagine a + shape. If you start the pattern on the left side of the + as your root, you are playing the minor pentatonic. If you start at the top of the + as your root, it's the major pentatonic. Using the + as a scale "backbone", it is easy to take the pentatonic and add in the appropriate two notes one fret away to complete a full 7 note major or minor scale. I get way more millage playing in and around the + than I ever have using the typically major scale pattern - just as he mentions in the beginning of the video. In short, it is much easier as a beginner to start to learn the notes on neck, not get lost, and always play in key if everything is 2 frets or a string change away !

  • @ianbellert2154
    @ianbellert2154Ай бұрын

    Awesome thanks - Bell hit look forward to more learning from you mate. Cheers ❤

  • @cedrickpeter6263
    @cedrickpeter6263Ай бұрын

    Hello Steve Burke great job.... My name is Cedrick, a request please record a tutorial teaching the melody you played at the start of this video 🙏🏿 and watching your videos in Uganda, Africa please

  • @TheMightyAvonJnr
    @TheMightyAvonJnrАй бұрын

    ♥👍🏾☝🏾 Thank you.

  • @mark-stefaniw
    @mark-stefaniwАй бұрын

    I move the same way on the neck. These are basic box patterns. The minor pentatonic scale, root on your fourth finger, moves the same way with the slide between the 4th and 5th scale degrees.

  • @IsomJacobs
    @IsomJacobsАй бұрын

    is this the same rule on a 5-string bassssss?

  • @ML-nj4qi
    @ML-nj4qiАй бұрын

    You my friend just earned a subscriber.

  • @lngsrp4612
    @lngsrp4612Ай бұрын

    It's amazing to me that I am just now starting to see the pentatonic taught this way. I picked this up less than a year into my 40 year career as a shitty bedroom player, but I never EVER saw it taught this way until very very recently. Also, if you know what additional notes to plug in where, and depending on where in that pattern you place the root, you can easily get the notes for any mode (major or minor) or the blues scale. Very, very simple.

  • @natespringer9934
    @natespringer9934Ай бұрын

    Do you have any advice for taking solos like these? I’ve been working on my scales and arpeggios but can’t put together good sounding solos like this one

  • @justinmclean9275
    @justinmclean92752 ай бұрын

    Plus inversions! kzread.info/dash/bejne/qI2t1tuuacuogs4.html&ab_channel=RealBassLessons

  • @spacedaddy5517
    @spacedaddy55172 ай бұрын

    This and chromatic are used in every kind of music, if you know it or not. The major scale is rarely used, but you can combine any shapes that you like !. How awesome is that, whatever shapes or patterns you can do. I do that way of playing the scale and do almost the exact same thing as you. I play by ear though, I never read any music in my life and I basically ignore scales, I don't really need to think about it anymore. I do think about it, but it's more fluid. Kind of like singing now, I just have to find the right key. The rhythm is so important, for any song as a bassist, it's just as important as chords, scales. But really, you just need real comfort with your Bass, your fretboard. Once you can slide up a few octaves, find keys without missing, game changer. That just comes with time, like a lot of techniques. Rhythm takes a lot of time, to really get your timing down. People think they got it down, but then everything changes later on. Because they need to count more timing and rhythm, that's all. Your fret style will actually change, based on the amount of rhythm you practice, because as you improve your choices will change and always evolve. This continues on for like 20 years, more. The stuff I play now, compared to 6 years ago has completely changed. I will never stop learning new stuff, though. I will become more like a drummer, also a guitarist. Bass is half drum, half guitar and it's a bridge between instruments. Nobody really mentions this, too much anymore except drummers. If you keep this in mind, I find Bass practically plays itself. Your choices are actually slim at best, for what you need to be playing for any given song. It's a matter of how well you can play the song in your head. The drummer kind of needs you more than anyone else on the stage. Stages are not the hardest part of playing, it's practicing. Bass is maybe the hardest instrument to master. If anyone thought it was easy, your bassist sucks. Guitar has one job, Bass has two jobs. If I played guitar only, Id slay you guys after a while. I learned that stuff too fast...had to put her down cause it's distracting me. Play that thing with your wang, still sounds good or the same. Now I understand Jimi Hendrix, playing with his mouth.

  • @bandicoot5412
    @bandicoot54122 ай бұрын

    That bring out the imrov in you!

  • @russellthompson197
    @russellthompson1972 ай бұрын

    Been playing bass 3.5 years. At first I learned my scales the usual way… across 3 strings. But then I realised you need to also be able to play across 2 strings, which I think is the principle he’s talking about here; The added bonus is that you get to practice shifting & moving around the fretboard more which is how you get into & out of a different register. Also, playing up & down a single string is a good way to visualise & learn the intervallic nature of a scale.

  • @iancannon3200
    @iancannon32002 ай бұрын

    Thank you Steve! I’ll be trying this new-to-me way of playing pentatonics. Your a natural teacher. 😊

  • @Space_Rooster420
    @Space_Rooster4202 ай бұрын

    This is great information! Hard to not sound musical with this idea! Thank you for making this video 🤘🤘

  • @djrodriguez6582
    @djrodriguez65822 ай бұрын

    This video instantly made my random pentatonic noodling sound more musical 🎉

  • @mattbybee5354
    @mattbybee53542 ай бұрын

    Yup....

  • @jonahcarston9491
    @jonahcarston94912 ай бұрын

    MY 👀 ARE OPENED NOW!!!!!

  • @balkandohla9879
    @balkandohla98792 ай бұрын

    Good concept, but can see anything as your playing too fast and your fingers are in the way.

  • @FloridaTrailrider
    @FloridaTrailrider2 ай бұрын

    So good. Thank you!

  • @1234drums
    @1234drums2 ай бұрын

    Makes sense, ty ❤❤❤❤

  • @vinodonnell805
    @vinodonnell8052 ай бұрын

    I hear Jaco

  • @robertziawinski6554
    @robertziawinski65542 ай бұрын

    Shift going up, ascending, with the 1st instead of the 3rd finger! Shift with the 3rd going down, descending, going down! It will be smoother!

  • @andreipetrov4850
    @andreipetrov48502 ай бұрын

    Probably under-viewed and underrated video :-(… (?). Steve, what about the minor pentatonic (and the rest of the “normal” diatonic set of scales, speaking of alternative fingering?) :-)

  • @illustriousdrbobble
    @illustriousdrbobble2 ай бұрын

    minor pentatonic goes like this: third finger on root then first finger on b3 on string above then third finger on 4, slide through the blue note to third finger on 5, then first on b7 and third on 8(1) on string above. fingering goes like this 3,1,3slide3, 1, 3. shhh don't tell anyone

  • @andreipetrov4850
    @andreipetrov48502 ай бұрын

    @@illustriousdrbobble thank you very much! :-), really surprised somebody noticed my squeak on an old video … :-)…. I sure liked the concept and … could have (should have would have) figured the same for the minor by myself but kinda wanted to hear from a real bassist…. The point was that I got quite nostalgic in the environment of “western music” playing Major and focusing on pentatonics, 7ths, modes, etc… (I am 65 means a mean stubborn old man :-() and I like exploring harmonies on a bass or keyboard but playing any scales (although I like it a lot) does not help figuring out fingering AT ALL when the speech is about how to nicely (melodically) connect a few chords in a simple progression. Thus, I am just used to put some videos on slow speed and watch how a real bassist literally does it… I found a lot of interesting videos on beaten to death Maj progressions (say, standards) but next to none (excepting some Spanish videos) on the minor standards…

  • @KlintonSilvey
    @KlintonSilvey2 ай бұрын

    The only time I anchor is for disco octaves if they are super fast. I've been doing floating for so long I pretty much can't anchor

  • @grandegroove5485
    @grandegroove54852 ай бұрын

    This is great !!