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Beat Building Jams
skeleton
Chapter 23
Bassline Construction
Build a bassline in layers: root notes, chord tones, scale tones, passing tones. Each layer adds melodic interest.
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A great bassline does not happen all at once. This exercise builds one in layers, starting with the most harmonically safe notes and gradually adding melodic risk. By the end, you have a bassline with intention behind every note choice.
What You Need
- Any DAW
- A chord progression (use one from another exercise, or write a simple 4-chord loop)
- A bass instrument (synth, sampled bass, or audio-to-MIDI from a sung line)
The Exercise
- Start with a chord progression. Loop it. 4 bars is enough.
- Layer 1 — Root notes. Play only the root of each chord, on the downbeat. This is your foundation. It should sound solid but boring.
- Layer 2 — Chord tones. Add the 3rd and 5th of each chord. Place them on beats 2, 3, or 4. Now the bass outlines the harmony.
- Layer 3 — Scale tones. Fill in with notes from the key that are not in the chord. These add movement between chord tones.
- Layer 4 — Passing tones. Chromatic approach notes, half-step slides into target notes. These add tension and release.
- Each layer should be a separate MIDI region or take so you can compare the bassline at each stage of complexity.
Alternative approach: Sing your bassline. Record it. Use audio-to-MIDI conversion. Compare the intuitive sung version to the constructed version.
What to Listen For
- At which layer does the bassline start to feel “alive”? Layer 2? Layer 3?
- Are there spots where fewer notes work better than more? Restraint is part of the skill.
- How do passing tones create momentum toward the next chord change?
- If you sang the bassline instead of constructing it, what did your instincts add that the method missed? What did the method add that your instincts missed?
Source: Scott Hampton
This Course
- 1. One-Sample Beat
- 2. Found Sound Beat
- 3. Kick Displacement Grid
- 4. Body Percussion Beat
- 5. The Four-Track Limit
- 6. Blind Recording Collage
- 7. Deep Sampling
- 8. Genre Flip
- 9. The Tetris Approach
- 10. Motif as Engine
- 11. FX Processing as Fill Material
- 12. Reverse Reverb
- 13. Every Four Bars, Something Changes
- 14. Transitions and Energy
- 15. Moodboard Beat
- 16. 12x Deep Listening
- 17. Pattern Recreation
- 18. Drumming Rudiments for Producers
- 19. Contrast and Color
- 20. Random Sample Pack Challenge
- 21. Double-Speed Drop
- 22. Rolling for Chords
- 23. Bassline Construction
- 24. Sources and Further Reading
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