Great Rock Bassists your Top 10.Rock not Jazz. But Hey what about Reggae


My top 10.

  1. Chris Squire
  2. Jack Bruce
  3. Tina Weymouth
  4. Kim Deal
  5. Kim Gordon
  6. Peter Hook
  7. Rick Danko
  8. John Entwistle
  9. Jaco Pastorious
  10. Aston Barrett (Bob Marley and the Wailers) 
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Showing 5 responses by stuartk

@tylermunns 

Thanks for the clarification. I feel the same way about “Sheer technical proficiency".

The guitarists you mention and their ilk have never appealed to me because they fail to engage me emotionally.  I find watching them more akin to witnessing an athletic competition than experiencing art. They do enjoy a very devoted following, though. 

Clarke was much more unambiguously Jazz-oriented early on in his career. For example, he was a member of the first (mostly) acoustic iteration of Return to Forever that released "Return to Forever" and "Light as a Feather". His playing in that group was much more supportive and does not display the extroverted Funk influenced "lead bass" approach for which he's best known. 

I have no idea whether you would enjoy these recordings and I'm not attempting to champion Clarke by any means-- simply pointing out that there is stylistic  variation in his discography. 

What-- no Jack Casady, Geddy Lee, Sting or John Paul Jones ?  ?  ? 

You said "Rock, not Jazz" but...

Jack Bruce was classically trained and most often described himself as a Jazz player. 

I've heard recordings of Jaco playing Jazz and Fusion but never Rock. . . would be curious to know what you are referring to...

 

@tylermunns 

S. Clarke has never been a favorite of mine but I'm curious: are you rejecting all of his recorded performances or his own albums, specifically?