Chords for Reggae Bass Lesson
Tempo:
150 bpm
Chords used:
F
Bb
E
A
G
Tuning:Standard Tuning (EADGBE)Capo:+0fret
Start Jamming...
[N]
[Bb] [Gm]
[F] [Bb]
[F]
[Gm] [F]
[Bb] [Gm] Who
[F] is [Gm]
[Bb] that guy?
[F] Hi folks, Ed [Bb] Friedland here with a little discussion about reggae bass.
Reggae [F] bass [Bb] is a very [Fm] large catch-all phrase [F] because reggae [Bb] is a [Db] lot of stylistic subsets that [F] fall under the category of reggae.
That first [Fm] track was from the early ska period.
It [Db] was very similar to one of Bob [Bb] Marley and the Wailers' first hits called Simmer Down.
[Fm] You might have noticed that the bass line was pretty much just a walking bass [Ab] line like jazz.
[B] [F] Back in that time period, most of the ska bass was recorded with upright bass.
To really get the authentic sound, [A] [F] we do this technique called the palm mute.
You take your [E] palm, the fleshy part here, and we put [Fm] it against [A] these strings [F] down by the bridge.
Get that fleshy part there, and then we play with the [Bb] thumb.
[C] [F]
Which is what gives you that real [Bb] acoustic bass type of [Db]
texture.
The next style of [F] music that became popular in Jamaica was called rock steady.
The legend has it [Fm] that the summer of 66 was extremely hot in [Bb] Jamaica, and the [F] dancers were complaining that the [Db] ska was too fast.
It was too hot for them to dance to that.
So, [F]
producers [Eb] and musicians started [E] recording slower [Bbm] tempo music, and they called it rock steady.
This bass line [F] sounds a lot like the staple singers' I'll Take You There.
[A] You'll notice the bass line is very similar to that.
[C] Check it out.
[F]
[Bb]
[F]
[Bb] [F]
[Bb]
[F] [Bb]
[F]
[Bb]
[F]
[Bb] [F]
That's the [Bb] classic bass line from I'll Take You There.
[F]
Very similar.
After the rock steady period, the music transitioned into what they [Bbm] now call the [Bb] reggae period.
[F] Reggae, of course, became synonymous with all Jamaican [Bb] music.
It's not exactly accurate, [F] because it's like saying jazz, which could mean anything from Louis [B] Armstrong to Kenny [Bb] G.
One of the significant things was [A] when the skank on the guitar [Fm] that
[G]
[E] changed,
and they [F] started to play more of a double [Bb] skank, and they called it [Bbm] reggae.
[Db]
And the bass [F] lines started to get more active and much [Bb] more prominent in the mix, and that kind [Db] of left the drummer free [Bm] to start doing some crazy stuff.
This [Bb] next bass line is similar [F] to a reggae tune called [Bb] Throw Me Corn.
You'll [F] notice that I play with my fingers kind [Bb] of up here [F] at the [Bb] end of the fingerboard.
The [F] tone you get out of [Bbm] your bass is [Fm] much darker, [Bb] and the [F] strings are looser.
The articulation isn't quite as precise, which [Eb] is an important [Bb] factor to remember when you're playing reggae bass lines.
Sometimes the [F] bass lines are very busy, but at the same time, they have to have a [Bb] laid-back feel.
[Bm] So [Eb] this line goes like this.
[E] Now [A]
you wouldn't want to play it down here.
[E]
[A] It's a very tight [Eb] and precise sound, so instead we play it up here.
[E]
[A] [E]
[A] Check it out.
[E] [A]
[E] [A]
[E] [A] [E]
[A] [E]
[A] [E]
[A] [E]
[A] [E]
[A] [E] [Eb] The next [Bb] stylistic period in the reggae [F] world was [Bb] called the Roots Period.
What started [F] happening was the spiritual beliefs of Rastafarianism started [Bm] influencing the [F] lyrics and [A] the music.
[Bm] [E]
[G]
[Gbm] [Bm]
[E] [G]
[Gbm]
[Bm] [E]
[G] [Gbm]
[Bm]
[E] [G]
[Gbm] [Bm]
One important [F] thing to note [Bb] about reggae bass playing in general is [E] it's got this [Fm] loose, relaxed feel to it.
The 16th [F] notes are not like tight, jacko [Bb] 16th notes, and the shuffle, like that last track, is this big, wide, loose, open shuffle.
[Bbm] To get there, [F] you have to imagine what [Bbm] it's like to play a 16th note.
You have to imagine what it's like to play when it's 95 degrees [F] and 95% humidity.
And then imagine [D] you just smoked a joint and rolled up into [F] Sunday [Bb] noon.
[G]
[F] Of course, ska is one of the more popular styles of music that came out of Jamaica.
What happened later in the [Bb] 70s, [F] British bands and punk rockers started listening to those old records and getting inspired by the music.
They decided to create their own subset of the ska.
It was called English Beat or Two [A]-Tone.
[F] Bands like The Specials, [Bbm] The Selector, [Bm] [Bbm] UB40, [F] and English Beat are all [A] examples of that [Fm] second wave of ska.
The thing you'll notice [Bb] is the tempos are [F] way up.
[A] [D]
[G] [C] [D]
[G] [D]
[G] [D]
[G] [C] [D]
[G] [D]
[G] [C] [D]
[G] [D]
[G] [D]
[C] Anyway, I hope you've [G] enjoyed this little short reggae bass lesson.
Of [D] course, my ultimate [Gm] goal is that you'll go out, buy my [G] book, Reggae Bass.
[E] [D] Go to edfriedland [Gm].com on the books page, and there's a link there.
[D] $13, you [G] get 47 tracks to play along with.
You've heard some of them in this lesson.
No machines, and all 100% live, human reggae musicians on these tracks.
[D]
[G] I hope you check it out.
[E] Thanks, and we'll see you soon.
[G] [D]
[Bb] [Gm]
[F] [Bb]
[F]
[Gm] [F]
[Bb] [Gm] Who
[F] is [Gm]
[Bb] that guy?
[F] Hi folks, Ed [Bb] Friedland here with a little discussion about reggae bass.
Reggae [F] bass [Bb] is a very [Fm] large catch-all phrase [F] because reggae [Bb] is a [Db] lot of stylistic subsets that [F] fall under the category of reggae.
That first [Fm] track was from the early ska period.
It [Db] was very similar to one of Bob [Bb] Marley and the Wailers' first hits called Simmer Down.
[Fm] You might have noticed that the bass line was pretty much just a walking bass [Ab] line like jazz.
[B] [F] Back in that time period, most of the ska bass was recorded with upright bass.
To really get the authentic sound, [A] [F] we do this technique called the palm mute.
You take your [E] palm, the fleshy part here, and we put [Fm] it against [A] these strings [F] down by the bridge.
Get that fleshy part there, and then we play with the [Bb] thumb.
[C] [F]
Which is what gives you that real [Bb] acoustic bass type of [Db]
texture.
The next style of [F] music that became popular in Jamaica was called rock steady.
The legend has it [Fm] that the summer of 66 was extremely hot in [Bb] Jamaica, and the [F] dancers were complaining that the [Db] ska was too fast.
It was too hot for them to dance to that.
So, [F]
producers [Eb] and musicians started [E] recording slower [Bbm] tempo music, and they called it rock steady.
This bass line [F] sounds a lot like the staple singers' I'll Take You There.
[A] You'll notice the bass line is very similar to that.
[C] Check it out.
[F]
[Bb]
[F]
[Bb] [F]
[Bb]
[F] [Bb]
[F]
[Bb]
[F]
[Bb] [F]
That's the [Bb] classic bass line from I'll Take You There.
[F]
Very similar.
After the rock steady period, the music transitioned into what they [Bbm] now call the [Bb] reggae period.
[F] Reggae, of course, became synonymous with all Jamaican [Bb] music.
It's not exactly accurate, [F] because it's like saying jazz, which could mean anything from Louis [B] Armstrong to Kenny [Bb] G.
One of the significant things was [A] when the skank on the guitar [Fm] that
[G]
[E] changed,
and they [F] started to play more of a double [Bb] skank, and they called it [Bbm] reggae.
[Db]
And the bass [F] lines started to get more active and much [Bb] more prominent in the mix, and that kind [Db] of left the drummer free [Bm] to start doing some crazy stuff.
This [Bb] next bass line is similar [F] to a reggae tune called [Bb] Throw Me Corn.
You'll [F] notice that I play with my fingers kind [Bb] of up here [F] at the [Bb] end of the fingerboard.
The [F] tone you get out of [Bbm] your bass is [Fm] much darker, [Bb] and the [F] strings are looser.
The articulation isn't quite as precise, which [Eb] is an important [Bb] factor to remember when you're playing reggae bass lines.
Sometimes the [F] bass lines are very busy, but at the same time, they have to have a [Bb] laid-back feel.
[Bm] So [Eb] this line goes like this.
[E] Now [A]
you wouldn't want to play it down here.
[E]
[A] It's a very tight [Eb] and precise sound, so instead we play it up here.
[E]
[A] [E]
[A] Check it out.
[E] [A]
[E] [A]
[E] [A] [E]
[A] [E]
[A] [E]
[A] [E]
[A] [E]
[A] [E] [Eb] The next [Bb] stylistic period in the reggae [F] world was [Bb] called the Roots Period.
What started [F] happening was the spiritual beliefs of Rastafarianism started [Bm] influencing the [F] lyrics and [A] the music.
[Bm] [E]
[G]
[Gbm] [Bm]
[E] [G]
[Gbm]
[Bm] [E]
[G] [Gbm]
[Bm]
[E] [G]
[Gbm] [Bm]
One important [F] thing to note [Bb] about reggae bass playing in general is [E] it's got this [Fm] loose, relaxed feel to it.
The 16th [F] notes are not like tight, jacko [Bb] 16th notes, and the shuffle, like that last track, is this big, wide, loose, open shuffle.
[Bbm] To get there, [F] you have to imagine what [Bbm] it's like to play a 16th note.
You have to imagine what it's like to play when it's 95 degrees [F] and 95% humidity.
And then imagine [D] you just smoked a joint and rolled up into [F] Sunday [Bb] noon.
[G]
[F] Of course, ska is one of the more popular styles of music that came out of Jamaica.
What happened later in the [Bb] 70s, [F] British bands and punk rockers started listening to those old records and getting inspired by the music.
They decided to create their own subset of the ska.
It was called English Beat or Two [A]-Tone.
[F] Bands like The Specials, [Bbm] The Selector, [Bm] [Bbm] UB40, [F] and English Beat are all [A] examples of that [Fm] second wave of ska.
The thing you'll notice [Bb] is the tempos are [F] way up.
[A] [D]
[G] [C] [D]
[G] [D]
[G] [D]
[G] [C] [D]
[G] [D]
[G] [C] [D]
[G] [D]
[G] [D]
[C] Anyway, I hope you've [G] enjoyed this little short reggae bass lesson.
Of [D] course, my ultimate [Gm] goal is that you'll go out, buy my [G] book, Reggae Bass.
[E] [D] Go to edfriedland [Gm].com on the books page, and there's a link there.
[D] $13, you [G] get 47 tracks to play along with.
You've heard some of them in this lesson.
No machines, and all 100% live, human reggae musicians on these tracks.
[D]
[G] I hope you check it out.
[E] Thanks, and we'll see you soon.
[G] [D]
Key:
F
Bb
E
A
G
F
Bb
E
[N] _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ [Bb] _ _ _ _ [Gm] _
_ _ _ _ [F] _ _ [Bb] _ _
_ _ _ _ _ [F] _ _ _
_ _ [Gm] _ _ _ _ _ [F] _
_ [Bb] _ _ _ [Gm] _ Who _
_ [F] _ is [Gm] _ _ _ _
_ _ [Bb] _ that guy?
[F] _ Hi folks, Ed [Bb] Friedland here _ with a little discussion about reggae bass.
Reggae [F] bass _ [Bb] is a very [Fm] large catch-all phrase [F] because reggae [Bb] is a [Db] lot of stylistic subsets that [F] fall under the category of reggae.
That first [Fm] track was from the early ska period.
It [Db] was very similar to one of Bob [Bb] Marley and the Wailers' first hits called Simmer Down.
[Fm] You might have noticed that the bass line was pretty much just a walking bass [Ab] line like jazz.
_ [B] _ [F] Back in that time period, most of the ska bass was recorded with upright bass.
To really get the authentic sound, [A] _ _ [F] we do this technique called the palm mute.
You take your [E] palm, the fleshy part here, and we put [Fm] it against [A] these strings [F] down by the bridge.
Get that fleshy part there, and then we play with the [Bb] thumb.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ [C] _ _ _ _ [F] _
Which is what gives you that real [Bb] acoustic bass type of [Db]
texture.
The next style of [F] music that became popular in Jamaica was called rock steady.
The legend has it [Fm] that the summer of 66 was extremely hot in [Bb] Jamaica, and the [F] dancers were complaining that the [Db] ska was too fast.
It was too hot for them to dance to that.
So, _ [F]
producers [Eb] and musicians started [E] recording slower [Bbm] tempo music, and they called it rock steady.
This bass line [F] sounds a lot like the staple singers' I'll Take You There.
[A] You'll notice the bass line is very similar to that.
[C] Check it out.
[F] _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ [Bb] _ _ _
_ _ _ [F] _ _ _ _ _
[Bb] _ _ _ _ _ _ _ [F] _
_ _ _ [Bb] _ _ _ _ _
_ _ [F] _ _ _ _ _ [Bb] _
_ _ _ _ _ [F] _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ [Bb] _
_ [F] _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ [Bb] _ _ _ _ _ [F] _
_ That's the [Bb] classic bass line from I'll Take You There.
[F]
Very similar.
After the rock steady period, the music transitioned into what they [Bbm] now call the [Bb] reggae period.
_ [F] Reggae, of course, became synonymous with all Jamaican [Bb] music.
It's not exactly accurate, [F] because it's like saying jazz, which could mean anything from Louis [B] Armstrong to Kenny [Bb] G.
One of the significant things was [A] when the skank on the guitar [Fm] that_
_ _ _ [G] _ _ _ _
[E] _changed,
and they [F] started to play more of a double [Bb] skank, and they called it [Bbm] reggae.
_ _ _ [Db] _
_ And the bass [F] lines started to get more active and much [Bb] more prominent in the mix, and that kind [Db] of left the drummer free [Bm] to start doing some crazy stuff.
This [Bb] next bass line is similar [F] to a reggae tune called [Bb] Throw Me Corn.
You'll [F] notice that I play with my fingers kind [Bb] of up here [F] at the [Bb] end of the fingerboard.
The [F] tone you get out of [Bbm] your bass is [Fm] much darker, [Bb] and the [F] strings are looser.
The articulation isn't quite as precise, which [Eb] is an important [Bb] factor to remember when you're playing reggae bass lines.
Sometimes the [F] bass lines are very busy, but at the same time, they have to have a [Bb] laid-back feel.
[Bm] So [Eb] this line goes like this.
_ _ [E] _ _ Now _ [A] _
you wouldn't want to play it down here.
[E] _ _ _
_ _ [A] _ _ It's a very tight [Eb] and precise sound, so instead we play it up here.
[E] _ _ _
_ _ [A] _ _ _ _ [E] _ _
_ _ [A] _ _ Check it out. _
[E] _ _ _ _ _ [A] _ _ _
[E] _ _ _ _ _ [A] _ _ _
[E] _ _ _ [A] _ _ _ _ [E] _
_ _ _ _ [A] _ _ [E] _ _
_ _ [A] _ _ _ _ _ [E] _
_ _ _ [A] _ _ _ [E] _ _
_ [A] _ _ _ _ [E] _ _ _
_ [A] _ _ _ _ [E] _ [Eb] The next [Bb] stylistic period in the reggae [F] world was [Bb] called the Roots Period.
_ _ What started [F] happening was the spiritual beliefs of Rastafarianism started [Bm] influencing the [F] lyrics and [A] the music.
[Bm] _ _ _ _ _ _ [E] _
_ _ _ _ [G] _ _ _ _
_ [Gbm] _ _ _ _ [Bm] _ _ _
_ _ [E] _ _ _ _ _ [G] _
_ _ _ [Gbm] _ _ _ _ _
[Bm] _ _ _ _ _ [E] _ _ _
_ _ [G] _ _ _ _ [Gbm] _ _
_ _ _ [Bm] _ _ _ _ _
[E] _ _ _ _ [G] _ _ _ _
_ [Gbm] _ _ _ _ _ [Bm] _
One important [F] thing to note [Bb] about reggae bass playing in general is [E] it's got this [Fm] loose, relaxed feel to it.
The 16th [F] notes are not like tight, jacko [Bb] 16th notes, and the shuffle, like that last track, is this big, wide, loose, open shuffle.
_ [Bbm] To get there, [F] you have to imagine what [Bbm] it's like to play a 16th note.
You have to imagine what it's like to play when it's 95 degrees [F] and 95% humidity.
_ And then imagine [D] you just smoked a joint and rolled up into [F] Sunday [Bb] noon.
_ [G] _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
[F] Of course, ska is one of the more popular styles of music that came out of Jamaica.
What happened later in the [Bb] 70s, _ _ [F] British bands and punk rockers started listening to those old records and getting inspired by the music.
They decided to create their own _ subset of the ska. _
It was called English Beat or Two [A]-Tone.
[F] Bands like The Specials, [Bbm] The Selector, _ [Bm] [Bbm] UB40, [F] and English Beat are all [A] _ _ examples of that [Fm] second wave of ska.
_ _ The thing you'll notice [Bb] is the tempos are [F] way up.
_ [A] _ _ [D] _ _
_ _ [G] _ _ [C] _ _ [D] _ _
_ _ [G] _ _ _ _ [D] _ _
_ _ [G] _ _ _ _ [D] _ _
_ _ [G] _ _ [C] _ _ [D] _ _
_ _ [G] _ _ _ _ [D] _ _
_ _ [G] _ _ [C] _ _ [D] _ _
_ _ [G] _ _ _ _ [D] _ _
_ _ [G] _ _ _ _ [D] _ _
[C] Anyway, I hope you've [G] enjoyed this little short reggae bass lesson.
Of [D] course, my ultimate [Gm] goal is that you'll go out, _ _ buy my [G] book, Reggae Bass.
[E] [D] Go to edfriedland [Gm].com on the books page, and there's a link there.
[D] $13, you [G] get 47 tracks to play along with.
You've heard some of them in this lesson.
_ _ No machines, and all 100% live, human reggae musicians on these tracks.
_ [D] _
[G] I hope you check it out.
[E] Thanks, and we'll see you soon.
[G] _ _ _ _ _ _ [D] _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ [Bb] _ _ _ _ [Gm] _
_ _ _ _ [F] _ _ [Bb] _ _
_ _ _ _ _ [F] _ _ _
_ _ [Gm] _ _ _ _ _ [F] _
_ [Bb] _ _ _ [Gm] _ Who _
_ [F] _ is [Gm] _ _ _ _
_ _ [Bb] _ that guy?
[F] _ Hi folks, Ed [Bb] Friedland here _ with a little discussion about reggae bass.
Reggae [F] bass _ [Bb] is a very [Fm] large catch-all phrase [F] because reggae [Bb] is a [Db] lot of stylistic subsets that [F] fall under the category of reggae.
That first [Fm] track was from the early ska period.
It [Db] was very similar to one of Bob [Bb] Marley and the Wailers' first hits called Simmer Down.
[Fm] You might have noticed that the bass line was pretty much just a walking bass [Ab] line like jazz.
_ [B] _ [F] Back in that time period, most of the ska bass was recorded with upright bass.
To really get the authentic sound, [A] _ _ [F] we do this technique called the palm mute.
You take your [E] palm, the fleshy part here, and we put [Fm] it against [A] these strings [F] down by the bridge.
Get that fleshy part there, and then we play with the [Bb] thumb.
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ [C] _ _ _ _ [F] _
Which is what gives you that real [Bb] acoustic bass type of [Db]
texture.
The next style of [F] music that became popular in Jamaica was called rock steady.
The legend has it [Fm] that the summer of 66 was extremely hot in [Bb] Jamaica, and the [F] dancers were complaining that the [Db] ska was too fast.
It was too hot for them to dance to that.
So, _ [F]
producers [Eb] and musicians started [E] recording slower [Bbm] tempo music, and they called it rock steady.
This bass line [F] sounds a lot like the staple singers' I'll Take You There.
[A] You'll notice the bass line is very similar to that.
[C] Check it out.
[F] _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ [Bb] _ _ _
_ _ _ [F] _ _ _ _ _
[Bb] _ _ _ _ _ _ _ [F] _
_ _ _ [Bb] _ _ _ _ _
_ _ [F] _ _ _ _ _ [Bb] _
_ _ _ _ _ [F] _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ [Bb] _
_ [F] _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ [Bb] _ _ _ _ _ [F] _
_ That's the [Bb] classic bass line from I'll Take You There.
[F]
Very similar.
After the rock steady period, the music transitioned into what they [Bbm] now call the [Bb] reggae period.
_ [F] Reggae, of course, became synonymous with all Jamaican [Bb] music.
It's not exactly accurate, [F] because it's like saying jazz, which could mean anything from Louis [B] Armstrong to Kenny [Bb] G.
One of the significant things was [A] when the skank on the guitar [Fm] that_
_ _ _ [G] _ _ _ _
[E] _changed,
and they [F] started to play more of a double [Bb] skank, and they called it [Bbm] reggae.
_ _ _ [Db] _
_ And the bass [F] lines started to get more active and much [Bb] more prominent in the mix, and that kind [Db] of left the drummer free [Bm] to start doing some crazy stuff.
This [Bb] next bass line is similar [F] to a reggae tune called [Bb] Throw Me Corn.
You'll [F] notice that I play with my fingers kind [Bb] of up here [F] at the [Bb] end of the fingerboard.
The [F] tone you get out of [Bbm] your bass is [Fm] much darker, [Bb] and the [F] strings are looser.
The articulation isn't quite as precise, which [Eb] is an important [Bb] factor to remember when you're playing reggae bass lines.
Sometimes the [F] bass lines are very busy, but at the same time, they have to have a [Bb] laid-back feel.
[Bm] So [Eb] this line goes like this.
_ _ [E] _ _ Now _ [A] _
you wouldn't want to play it down here.
[E] _ _ _
_ _ [A] _ _ It's a very tight [Eb] and precise sound, so instead we play it up here.
[E] _ _ _
_ _ [A] _ _ _ _ [E] _ _
_ _ [A] _ _ Check it out. _
[E] _ _ _ _ _ [A] _ _ _
[E] _ _ _ _ _ [A] _ _ _
[E] _ _ _ [A] _ _ _ _ [E] _
_ _ _ _ [A] _ _ [E] _ _
_ _ [A] _ _ _ _ _ [E] _
_ _ _ [A] _ _ _ [E] _ _
_ [A] _ _ _ _ [E] _ _ _
_ [A] _ _ _ _ [E] _ [Eb] The next [Bb] stylistic period in the reggae [F] world was [Bb] called the Roots Period.
_ _ What started [F] happening was the spiritual beliefs of Rastafarianism started [Bm] influencing the [F] lyrics and [A] the music.
[Bm] _ _ _ _ _ _ [E] _
_ _ _ _ [G] _ _ _ _
_ [Gbm] _ _ _ _ [Bm] _ _ _
_ _ [E] _ _ _ _ _ [G] _
_ _ _ [Gbm] _ _ _ _ _
[Bm] _ _ _ _ _ [E] _ _ _
_ _ [G] _ _ _ _ [Gbm] _ _
_ _ _ [Bm] _ _ _ _ _
[E] _ _ _ _ [G] _ _ _ _
_ [Gbm] _ _ _ _ _ [Bm] _
One important [F] thing to note [Bb] about reggae bass playing in general is [E] it's got this [Fm] loose, relaxed feel to it.
The 16th [F] notes are not like tight, jacko [Bb] 16th notes, and the shuffle, like that last track, is this big, wide, loose, open shuffle.
_ [Bbm] To get there, [F] you have to imagine what [Bbm] it's like to play a 16th note.
You have to imagine what it's like to play when it's 95 degrees [F] and 95% humidity.
_ And then imagine [D] you just smoked a joint and rolled up into [F] Sunday [Bb] noon.
_ [G] _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
[F] Of course, ska is one of the more popular styles of music that came out of Jamaica.
What happened later in the [Bb] 70s, _ _ [F] British bands and punk rockers started listening to those old records and getting inspired by the music.
They decided to create their own _ subset of the ska. _
It was called English Beat or Two [A]-Tone.
[F] Bands like The Specials, [Bbm] The Selector, _ [Bm] [Bbm] UB40, [F] and English Beat are all [A] _ _ examples of that [Fm] second wave of ska.
_ _ The thing you'll notice [Bb] is the tempos are [F] way up.
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[C] Anyway, I hope you've [G] enjoyed this little short reggae bass lesson.
Of [D] course, my ultimate [Gm] goal is that you'll go out, _ _ buy my [G] book, Reggae Bass.
[E] [D] Go to edfriedland [Gm].com on the books page, and there's a link there.
[D] $13, you [G] get 47 tracks to play along with.
You've heard some of them in this lesson.
_ _ No machines, and all 100% live, human reggae musicians on these tracks.
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[G] I hope you check it out.
[E] Thanks, and we'll see you soon.
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