Transcriptions
Learn from the legends through full transcriptions, guided breakdowns, and practice tools that bring their language into your playing.
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- Bernard Odum
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- Bob Babbitt
- Bootsy Collins
- Charlie Haden
- Chuck Rainey
- Dave Holland
- Donald "Duck" Dunn
- Eddie Gomez
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Stella By Starlight
Ron Carter’s solo combines modern harmonic thinking with elegant phrasing. This transcription highlights how space, note choice, and rhythmic placement shape a sophisticated bass voice.
Pitter, Panther, Patter
Jimmie Blanton — “Pitter Panther Patter” (Duke Ellington Orchestra)
One of the earliest moments the bass steps forward as a solo voice. Blanton’s phrasing, articulation, and harmonic movement changed the role of the instrument forever.
Beautiful Love
Ray Brown — “Beautiful Love” (Moonlight Serenade)
This transcription captures Ray Brown’s complete performance — including his expressive arco introduction, walking bass line, and lyrical solo. A powerful example of tone, phrasing, and swing from one of jazz bass’s greatest voices.
Eddie Gomez Solo “Emily”
Eddie Gómez’s solo on “Emily” from Another Time is a stunning example of lyrical bass improvisation—fluid, expressive, and technically effortless. His phrasing dances around Bill Evans’ harmonies with clarity and emotional depth, creating a solo that feels both intimate and virtuosic without ever losing its musical center.
Dave Holland Solo “In Walked Bud”
Dave Holland’s solo on “In Walked Bud” is a study in clarity, intention, and melodic intelligence inside a modern jazz context. With effortless command of time and harmony, Holland shapes a solo that is both deeply rooted in the bebop language and unmistakably personal—lyrical, purposeful, and full of rhythmic nuance.
Are You Ready?
Chuck Rainey’s bassline on “Are You Ready?” delivers a powerful electric shuffle rooted in blues feel and driven by a clear, forward-moving pulse. His rhythmic variations, warm tone, and subtle harmonic coloring give the tune energy and direction, making this a standout example of how to play a jazz shuffle on electric bass with authority and purpose.
Charlie Haden - The Cost of Living
Charlie Haden’s solo on “Cost of Living” is a powerful example of melodic restraint and emotional depth. With warm tone, patient phrasing, and perfectly placed notes, Haden shapes a story that rises above technique and speaks directly to the listener. This transcription highlights his mastery of space, feel, and narrative-driven soloing.
Things Ain’t What They Used to Be
Ray Brown’s “Things Ain’t What They Used to Be” bass transcription with isolated bass and minus-one play-along tracks. Study the feel, shed the lines, and step into the bass chair.
You’re My Everything
This transcription captures Paul Chambers at his most elegant: steady, unforced, and completely in command of the harmonic flow. His walking line on “You’re My Everything” is a study in clarity—every quarter note sits deep in the pocket, and his voice-leading threads the changes together with effortless logic. What stands out here is Chambers’ ability to keep the groove buoyant while shaping each chorus with small variations that lift the entire band. For modern bassists, this line offers a blueprint for relaxed time, functional harmony, and the kind of musical intention that defines great straight-ahead playing.