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Chopstick Muzukashi – Bass Guitar Learning Journey

Bass Tab Editor Update: Ties, Repeats & Looping Playback

The bass tab editor I built has had a big update. The headline features: ties — the curved slur lines that join one note to the next — so held notes and hammer-ons finally look right, and repeat sections, where you mark a bar or a group of bars, set how many times it plays, and the editor shows it as a tidy repeat block instead of making you write the same pattern out over and over.

Best of all, playback now honours the repeats — press play and it runs the loops in order with the cursor following along, so what you hear matches what's on the page. I also added the song title above the first bar (it carries through to the printed PDF), and made saving smarter: load a song, tweak it, and Save updates that same song — you only type a new name when you actually want a separate copy.

It's made learning repetitive lines like the Zombie verse so much faster — write four bars, mark them ×4, done. You can try everything on the bass tab editor, and there's more on the Resources page.

Open the editor →

New Bass Tab Editor: Write, Save & Share Your Tabs

I got tired of losing bass guitar tabs scrawled on paper so I built my own browser-based bass tab editor — and after a bunch of improvements it's now properly feature-complete. Toggle between 4 and 8 beats per bar, add as many bars as you need (they wrap into rows automatically), and save your songs to a local library you can export, back up, and reload on any device.

There's also a cloud sync button that loads a selection of my own tabs straight from the site, and a clean print-to-PDF layout for when you want a physical copy. No sign-up, no install — runs entirely in the browser. Find it on the Resources page.

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My First Slap Bass Breakthrough

Today was HUGE! After weeks of struggling with the slap bass thumb technique, something finally clicked. I was practicing along to some funk tracks and suddenly the tone just... rang out. That perfect percussive pop I've been chasing.

The key was relaxing my wrist more and bouncing off the string instead of pressing through it. My thumb was too tense before. Now it's starting to feel natural, like the bass is responding to me instead of fighting back.

Still need work on the speed and consistency, but this feels like a real turning point. Tomorrow I'm going to try combining it with some pull-offs on the G string.

Learning "Come Together" - Beatles Bass Line

Started working on this classic Paul McCartney bass line today as part of my bass guitar practice. It's deceptively simple but SO groovy. The main riff sits right in the pocket and that repetitive pattern is hypnotic.

What's challenging is keeping the muted ghost notes consistent while maintaining the groove. My right hand keeps wanting to rush through the pattern. Need to slow down with the metronome at 60 BPM and really nail that feel.

The chorus section is tricky too — those quick octave jumps need to be clean. I've been writing the bass line out in the bass tab editor to help memorise it. But man, when you lock in with the drum track, it feels incredible.

Finger Independence Exercises for Bass Guitar

My pinky is officially my nemesis. Been doing the 1-2-3-4 chromatic bass exercises up and down the fretboard, and by the third pass my ring and pinky fingers are already cramping up.

Found some good advice on BassBuzz about keeping the fingers hovering close to the strings and using minimal movement. Also realized I need to build more stamina — 5 minutes of bass practice and I'm already fatigued.

The good news? I can already see improvement from last week. My pinky is actually hitting the notes now instead of just grazing them. Slow progress is still progress!

First Week of Learning Bass Guitar – Reflections

One week into this bass guitar journey and my fingertips are officially destroyed. But in the best way possible!

Started with the absolute basics — holding the bass properly, right hand positioning, and just getting comfortable with the weight and feel of it. It's heavier than I expected, and after 30 minutes my shoulder starts aching.

But here's what's amazing: I can already play a simple blues progression in E. Just root notes for now, but it SOUNDS like music. That feeling when you lock in with a drum beat for the first time is addictive. Check out the bass practice tools I'm using to track my progress.

My goal for next week: Learn the basic fingering patterns and maybe start working on a simple song. Maybe "Seven Nation Army" or "Feel Good Inc"?