FLCL n00bs
- Edge22
- Joined: Mon Dec 13, 2004 3:20 pm
FLCL n00bs
okay this is where most of people that like FLCL piss me off. They say Haru Hara Haruko plays a guitar. SHE PLAYS A BASS. If your a music n00b, a Bass is a instrument similar to guitar but has 4 very thick strings. The moment when i snapped about this is when i saw the banner that said she uses a guitar. The reason why I'm getting so pissed at this is because i play Bass. So most FLCL fans are FLCL n00bs
- someperson
- Joined: Sun Apr 04, 2004 10:59 pm
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- Tsunami Jones
- is the best medicine.
- Joined: Mon Oct 06, 2003 8:31 pm
- Scintilla
- (for EXTREME)
- Joined: Mon Mar 31, 2003 8:47 pm
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- Location: New Jersey
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You know, I've always thought that "bass guitar" is a misnomer, and that the proper term is "electric bass" or just (more generally) "bass".Tsunami Jones wrote:Isn't it not a bass, but a bass guitar? Because is sure as hell ain't a lute.
I'm guessing that most people say "bass guitar" because, if you just say "bass", it's far too ambiguous. I mean, just imagine Haruko hitting Naota with, say, Takehito Koyasu.
(Or an acoustic (upright) bass. That would be a hell of a lot funnier, let me tell you that.)
- Tsunami Jones
- is the best medicine.
- Joined: Mon Oct 06, 2003 8:31 pm
Or even a large fish . . .Scintilla wrote: I'm guessing that most people say "bass guitar" because, if you just say "bass", it's far too ambiguous. I mean, just imagine Haruko hitting Naota with, say, Takehito Koyasu.
Here's a wikipedia page on guitars: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Guitar
- Edge22
- Joined: Mon Dec 13, 2004 3:20 pm
actually an acoustic bass is not an upright bass its an acoustic guitar withScintilla wrote: You know, I've always thought that "bass guitar" is a misnomer, and that the proper term is "electric bass" or just (more generally) "bass".
I'm guessing that most people say "bass guitar" because, if you just say "bass", it's far too ambiguous. I mean, just imagine Haruko hitting Naota with, say, Takehito Koyasu.
(Or an acoustic (upright) bass. That would be a hell of a lot funnier, let me tell you that.)
bass strings, I know this im a bass player. And whats is a Takehito Koyasu?
- Scintilla
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Um, the upright (double) bass is acoustic too. I don't see the problem.Edge22 wrote:actually an acoustic bass is not an upright bass its an acoustic guitar withScintilla wrote:(Or an acoustic (upright) bass. That would be a hell of a lot funnier, let me tell you that.)
bass strings, I know this im a bass player.
Anyway, thank you TJ for the link -- I found just what I was hoping for:
<a href=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bass_guitar>Wikipedia</a> wrote:The long-established manufacturers of electric basses have never used "bass guitar" to label their instruments. It could be argued that "bass guitar" originated in retail catalogues and the phrase has since gained popular currency among the masses.
- Tsunami Jones
- is the best medicine.
- Joined: Mon Oct 06, 2003 8:31 pm
That's very possible . . . although several dictionaries that I found labeled the bass in question as a guitar. Not to mention there are multiple types of bass instruments (bass horn, bass violin) so labeling it to differentiate it from those other insturments is rather helpful.Scintilla wrote:<a href=http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bass_guitar>Wikipedia</a> wrote: It could be argued that "bass guitar" originated in retail catalogues and the phrase has since gained popular currency among the masses.
Here's another history page: http://www.weedhopper.org/Bass_Guitar_History.asp
- Kai Stromler
- Joined: Fri Jul 12, 2002 9:35 am
- Location: back in the USSA
I play bass. I've played three of the four major variants: electric, acoustic, and acoustic upright, but never had the fortune (or cash) to play an electric upright -- which do exist and appear to have been invented exclusively for complicating the question of what version of the low-register Western stringed instrument gets called what.
Generally this is understood in context; there's no need to call a double bass/bass viol/bass fiddle anything but a bass in an orchestral or jazz setting, just the same way that a bass in a rock combo is assumed to be electric unless declared otherwise.
Ontopic:
It wouldn't be a problem if Haruka played a Fender, or an Ibanez, or something else generic, but the fact of the matter is that the Rickenbacker 4000 series is pretty much as iconic a bass as exists, and if people don't recognize it, but still pretend to buy into FLCL's rock'n'roll spirit, they are indeed, as the OP stated, n00bs.
However, the bigger problem is that this lack of recognition among FLCL fans -- and, actually, the existence of this thread -- is a symptom of a widespread problem that boils down to this: bassists don't never get no respect. We play a technical instrument that destroys the nerve endings of eight of our fingers permanently, and we get pushed to the back and told to shut up and play some numbskull line so that the other players don't get lost. "Drone on A for 12 measures -- just walk -- play 1-3-5-4" -- no matter the era or style, nothing ever changes. Stanley Clarke, Victor Wooten, and Lemmy had to start their own bands before anyone would give them the time of day. WHAT THE HELL.
[/mode="drama"]
--K
Generally this is understood in context; there's no need to call a double bass/bass viol/bass fiddle anything but a bass in an orchestral or jazz setting, just the same way that a bass in a rock combo is assumed to be electric unless declared otherwise.
Ontopic:
It wouldn't be a problem if Haruka played a Fender, or an Ibanez, or something else generic, but the fact of the matter is that the Rickenbacker 4000 series is pretty much as iconic a bass as exists, and if people don't recognize it, but still pretend to buy into FLCL's rock'n'roll spirit, they are indeed, as the OP stated, n00bs.
However, the bigger problem is that this lack of recognition among FLCL fans -- and, actually, the existence of this thread -- is a symptom of a widespread problem that boils down to this: bassists don't never get no respect. We play a technical instrument that destroys the nerve endings of eight of our fingers permanently, and we get pushed to the back and told to shut up and play some numbskull line so that the other players don't get lost. "Drone on A for 12 measures -- just walk -- play 1-3-5-4" -- no matter the era or style, nothing ever changes. Stanley Clarke, Victor Wooten, and Lemmy had to start their own bands before anyone would give them the time of day. WHAT THE HELL.
[/mode="drama"]
--K
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Coelem - Tenebral Presence single now freely available
- Malificus
- Dr. Malpractice
- Joined: Sat Aug 03, 2002 2:55 pm
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