Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Stanley Sheldon (born September 19, 1950) is an American bass guitar player best known for his work with Peter Frampton. [1] [2] He is notable as an early adopter of the fretless bass for rock music. Sheldon was born in 1950 in Ottawa, Kansas where he joined his first band, The Lost Souls. [3]
Kenny Aaronson (born April 14, 1952, in Brooklyn, New York) is an American bass guitar player. [1] He has recorded or performed with several notable artists such as Bob Dylan, Rick Derringer, Billy Idol, Joan Jett and the Blackhearts, Foghat, Sammy Hagar, Billy Squier, New York Dolls, and Hall and Oates. [2]
Hard bop is a subgenre of jazz that is an extension of bebop (or "bop") music. Journalists and record companies began using the term in the mid-1950s [ 1 ] to describe a new current within jazz which incorporated influences from rhythm and blues , gospel music , and blues , especially in saxophone and piano playing.
Martin Motnik (born 10 November 1972) is a German bassist and studio musician, best known as the bassist for the heavy metal band Accept. He has also played in Darkseed , Eisbrecher . Motnik has made two solo albums that include instrumental songs varying in styles from melodic rock , jazz , and classical music.
He plays piano, bass guitar, electric guitar [7] and drums and often implements live instrumentation into his instrumentals, whether it performed by him or from a fellow instrumentalist. [ 8 ] [ 9 ] A lot of his productions credits often fall into the Trap music sub-genre of hip-hop, commonly using 16th/8th note hi-hats with slight variation ...
His 1977 Fender Precision was used as the basis for the 2011 Squier Matt Freeman Signature Bass. [ 1 ] He has also played Music Man Stingrays , Ibanez ATK's and Rickenbacker 4003 's in the past.
Hardbass or hard bass (Russian: хардбас(с), romanized: khardbas(s) [a], IPA:) is a subgenre of pumping house that originated in Saint Petersburg, Russia during the late 1990s, drawing inspiration from bouncy techno, hardstyle, as well as local Russian influences.
John Dalton was educated at Cheshunt Secondary Modern School at the same time as Harry Webb (who later found fame as Cliff Richard).Dalton's desire was to be a full-time musician, and in 1959 he joined Danny King and the Bluejacks as bass guitarist (although he claimed in a 2009 interview, [2] that he could not play a note when he joined).