BB #3 The Range of the Bass (Free Lesson)
Short andΒ sweet, Bass Bit #3 gives you a littleΒ excerpt of chapter 2, talking about the range of the bass (page 10) and what it means that we are a transposing instrument. Useful to know how the range of the bass fits into the sonic spectrum of the band. Let’s find middle C (AKA C4), sonically and onΒ the score.

Chapter 2 givesΒ a detailed account of not only the range of the bass, (four-string, five-string, six-string, take your pic), but also onΒ how the bass is organized. It contains twoΒ tongue-in-cheekΒ “Test Your Understanding” sections andΒ a few great exercise for finding notes, which I am introducingΒ in the next bits.
If youβd like to study with me, click here.
Transcript:
Bass Bit #3. Welcome! The bass β how is it built? What are the relationships of strings to each other? We are now in Chapter 2. It is Chapter 2: How the Bass is Organized and there is quite an extensive explanation about the range of the bass. There is a βTest your Understandingβ section. These are really fun, theyβre brain twizzlers. So, if you think you have a handle on that and donβt need that chapter, then jump in right there. If some of those are confusing, then make sure you understand why they are, what they are. The answers to all questions are in the back of the book, in the appendix.
Iβm interested in the range of the bass. It is the lower end of the spectrum sonically, but the piano beats us by two notes. Even my five-string here with a low B-string is not the lowest string of all instruments or the lowest sound of all instruments. Now the piano is an instrument we play with a lot so we should know how we fit in to that sonic spectrum and the low A on the piano is in fact a whole step lower than my low B (I want to be the lowest! I just canβt get over that).
So, that A is called A0. And the convention Iβm using in the book is a commonly used one. So A0, so that makes my [playing: 1.50] B, B0.
Middle C, maybe another note you are familiar with on the piano! My middle C is up here: [playing: 1.56]. Now, mind you, that makes that β thatβs C4Β or middle C, that is C4 [playing: 2.01], so thatβs [playing: 2.03] C3, [playing 2.04] C2, and [playing: 2.06] C1 because itβs [playing: 2.08] B0 and then [playing: 2.10] C1. So the numbers switch on the note C every time.
Reading-wise, we should know that the bass transposes. Itβs a transposing instrument, when it comes to reading. What that means is, that, if I read a middle C, I am in fact playing this note: [playing: 2.29], which means it sounds an octave lower than written. That is done this way, so that we donβt have to deal with a lot of ledger lines. The area sonically where we live would have to be notated with a bunch of ledger lines in order to mark it out in the right octave, hence the convention is, to transpose it up an octave in the score and to just say, βOkay, we know weβre reading up here but sounding an octave lower than that.β
If you would be doubling something with a piano player and the composer would want you to be in the exact same octave, the piano score would look differently than your own score because the piano does not read transposed by an octave; theyβre dealing with all these ledger lines or maybe with something called 8vb (βoctava bassoβ), which is another shorthand for saying βtake it down an octaveβ. Now on bass, we are always 8vb. And sometimes you see a bass clef on our score that has a little β8β on the bottom, thatβs yet another way of saying: βgo down an octaveβ. But, typically we know that; we donβt need the little 8 or 8vb to tell us.
That was Bass Bit 3. Let me know how youβre getting on. I love hearing from you. Please send me a comment, send me questions. Thank you so much! Music Theory for the Bass Player, Chapter 2: How Notes Are Organized, A Little Excerpt.
I use Marleaux Basses and Dean Markley Strings. Fretwraps by Gruvgear, pedals, amps, cabs by TC Electronics.Β (Official endorser of all these fine companies).
Thanks to Wolftrackaudio.com for audio post production.





