Aaack, no, I can't. I have bilateral CTS and it's impossible for me to move my fingers that fast.
N
o, no, no — you misunderstand! Tap the quarter notes. If you're hearing 16th notes, multiply x 4 or 8 if you're hearing 32nd notes.
It's simple math. I should have been more clear.
Back to the bass. When Stanley Clarke's first solo album came out, I was 20. After my friends and I heard
Spanish Phases... and picked our jaws off the ground, we came to our senses and figured out that it was possible for human beings to play pizzicato like that — he could (we could play that fast with a with a bow—kind'a have to for Beethoven's 6th). Though none of us developed his mastery of technique (or ever needed it), we taught each other to shred decently — just a matter of training our right hands.
If you've never heard this, prepare to be blown away.
Stanley Clarke - Spanish Phases For Strings & Bass on YouTube Except for the occasional electric bass solo in fusion bands where showing off was what one did, I never played like that. The only blisteringly fast recording I ever made was on nylon stringed guitar — analog tape where it couldn't be faked. I never owned an electric I could play as fast