Why the bass is so important to music in general, even though it doesn’t sound loud in most songs?

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I feel it “fills” the song but I dont know how to express this in better words

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5 Answers

Anonymous 0 Comments

But it’s great when the Bass just lets loose too. My favorite example of this right now is Skameleon’s cover of ‘What is Love’. Go over to youtube and watch it. Right after the bridge, the bassist steps forward and lays down some righeous bars….

Anonymous 0 Comments

In club music you get 16 beats to a bar, for most of the track you get 12 beats of bass then the last four are a recognisable buildup then a bang as the first of the next 16 beats. This is a consistent pattern that is used to know when to cue up another to mix in or out to. You can use head phones listen to the alternate track whilst counting the beats of the track thats playing and as not all tracks are recorded at the same speed (or played at the same RPM) the bass then is a distinct marker that helps to know if one track is going faster or slower.

Anonymous 0 Comments

The drummer is your goalkeeper.
The bass is your defence.
The guitar is your midfield.
The singer is your striker.

Anonymous 0 Comments

Depends on the music you are listening to. Most pop songs will have the bass ride the root notes. Bass players job is to keep time and out line the chord. So that in genres like rock, jazz, blues, etc the other instruments like piano, guitar, horns can solo and improvise. Jazz music is a great example. Bass “walks” the chord progression while keep time with the drummer, keeping the overall feel and rhythm while the improvisation is done.

Check out Miles Davis “So What”

Anonymous 0 Comments

Filling the song is actually quite a good way to think about it. It’s not about loudness, it’s more like the foundation of a building. You need to be able to build *on* something.

For example, imagine [this song](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IuezNswtRfo) without the bass. Without the bass there is no song.