A lot on YouTube, but I don't know what would be best, since I didn't start there. Scott's Bass Lessons are okay, sometimes. Learn some general basic music theory from one source or another, and try to get a hold of a cheap keyboard. It's an excellent learning tool, too. Singing also helps internalize music and fosters improvisation as well.
Once you learn your chords and scale patterns, write them out every so often. Learn them by rote memory and by ear, but also remember to express freely and take risks, if you learn that, while continuing to learn music theory and the vocabulary of the genre you're playing, then you're great.
Oh, great. Then you learn the physical instrument, apply the basic theory to it, learn it's musical role in the genres you want to play and the language the players use. That make sense?
A lot on YouTube, but I don't know what would be best, since I didn't start there. Scott's Bass Lessons are okay, sometimes. Learn some general basic music theory from one source or another, and try to get a hold of a cheap keyboard. It's an excellent learning tool, too. Singing also helps internalize music and fosters improvisation as well.
Once you learn your chords and scale patterns, write them out every so often. Learn them by rote memory and by ear, but also remember to express freely and take risks, if you learn that, while continuing to learn music theory and the vocabulary of the genre you're playing, then you're great.
Idfk, lol. I'm only good at specific questions.
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Oh, great. Then you learn the physical instrument, apply the basic theory to it, learn it's musical role in the genres you want to play and the language the players use. That make sense?
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Try Ben Levin's channel he has a good theory course, I think. Also, just learn a shit ton of songs and use theory to recognize the patterns.