if you have Limewire or Bearshare (etc.), try downloading bass workshops. they have surprisingly good ones on there if you can wade your way through the masses of porn and find one. good luck! oh yea and if you don't know the note patters already, they are as follows:
lines, from bottom up:
Every Good Boy Deserves Fudge (or Does Fine, whichever sticks better)
(so that means the line notes from the bottom up are EGBDF if you didn't catch on)
the spaces, from the bottom up are:
All Cows Eat Grass (ACEG)
if you can remember those and apply them, you should be good. if you have any more specific questions, message me and i'll try my best to answer. good luck!
2006-07-16 17:33:57
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answer #1
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answered by yep 2
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Okay, fast? Learning something fast is a great deal of hard work, so don't think that this would be otherwise. Writing things from treble clef (or your familiar clef - if you're not familiar with any, it will be very difficult and near impossible) into the bass clef, taking into mind the octave differences. Write your music out note for note, using a few references. They could be middle C, or the D above, or really any note that works for you to know. Rewrite A LOT into bass clef, and you will become very familiar. Next, play everything you rewrote in the original clef on the bass instrument and vice versa, thinking out in your mind where it should be on your instrument and in the bass clef. Since Musical notation is a language, you must create some fluencey to learn it well, and this is a very good way to do that.
2006-07-16 18:29:59
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answer #2
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answered by musikgeek 3
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One tip would be to get familiar with what middle C looks like on the bass clef also with the F below middle C, the Bass Clef Symbol starts on the F line and the 2 dots are between the F line (which is why the bass clef is sometimes called the F clef) and then you can work your way around the other notes from there.
2006-07-18 08:55:33
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answer #3
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answered by celticlyric 2
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Get to know the piano or keyboard and mimic what that does withyour instrument of choice. Practice for a good three or four hours a day and listen to bass notes in anything you hear!
2006-07-16 17:27:25
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answer #4
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answered by synchronicity915 6
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do you know treble clef? its just one line difference.
2006-07-16 17:26:53
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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study
2006-07-17 06:58:26
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answer #6
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answered by claironet01 2
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