Wednesday, December 23, 2020

Isolated bass...lost opportunity?

 Besides music, and bass in particular, my other (the first, as the matter of fact) is martial arts, and I have noted a strange disparity of how instructors in both fields have tackled the problem of staying put in our homes, without access to our regular "working avenues" of training and gigging. Namely, the number of martial art coaches and instructors who have offered either individual or group sessions via Zoom or similar live streaming outlets has been staggering. With music professionals, not really. Maybe it is because in case of musicians online teaching through live sessions has been a rather normal thing for quite some time, even before the pandemic outburst. 

However, my impressions is that the top echelon of performing professionals has missed a good opportunity here. See, the Berklee bas department did do a few events of the panel-discussion kind, but in all honest, those weren't much educational in terms of specific material or approaches to practicing. The thing is, hosting an online conference with a similar attitude as doing a clinic can be beneficial in several ways. 

To begin with, there are a lot of people out there who would love to have lessons from the top-level "so and so" musicians, but as the potential clients they are either intimidated or thinking there is no way those payers would even consider giving lessons. Conducting a free or affordable online clinic is  great way to show that they are accessible as instructors, and also to demonstrate their teaching chops. Here is a good example of how it can be done - Phil Mann did a series of lessons through Facebook live streams, and later put them on his Youtube channel With Bass in Mind


Adam Nitti is another monster player who has recently started doing similar sessions, with his excellent clinic on ear training. Choosing to do it via Zoom had the advantage of attendees being able to react immediately and establish good rapport, with feedback from both sides. On the other hand, just like the previous gentleman, Nitti is a veteran music educator in parallel with his recording and performing career, so he understands the need to keep in touch with his audience. 


As he matter of fact, even the rare cats that are actually already fully scheduled with their private lessons have understood the value of such public events. Anthony Wellington of the Bassology fame. The man who does 10+ private sessions on a daily basis still offers these opportunities for the potential clients who cannot get in queue or pay his regular fees. That helps spread the word and make sure he will never run out of work. 

And also...well, that's about it. I don't know what it is that makes the bass professionals shun those avenues of work, and that's a shame. I was hoping to be able and see some of them teach in this format, but it wasn't meant to be. 

Or maybe I am wrong and uninformed about such events taking place, in which case - please correct me!

Jazz bass lesson from one of the greats

 In this day it is sort of hard to get pass Youtube when it comes to finding good instructional value, so I couldn't skip the opportunit...