Gemma Freeman
Manu Chao's bass player is Jean Michel Dercourt aka Gambeat.
Channel bass, aka red drum or redfish, feed on small fish, crabs and clams.
Yes. There are many fish called bass. Some, like the largemouth, smallmouth and spotted bass, are actually large members of the sunfish family. The striped bass, white bass, yellow bass, and white perch (aka, waccamaw, in the south) are true basses, in the family Morone. There are many of sea bass, including the grouper family, black sea bass, sand bass, among others.
There are a lot. Some of my favorites include:stringed: contrabasso (aka double bass)bass guitaroctobassbass violwhamolabrass: tubabass tromboneeuphoniumwoodwind: bassoonbaritone saxpercussion: piano (typically uses both bass clef and treble clef)timpani
The genus Morone, commonly known as temperate bass, includes several species such as the striped bass (Morone saxatilis), white bass (Morone chrysops), and yellow bass (Morone mississippiensis). These fish are primarily found in North America, inhabiting freshwater and brackish environments. They are popular among anglers for their sporting qualities and are also important in commercial fisheries.
contrabass(aka double or upright bass)
In a string orchestra, the instrument with the lowest pitch is the Bass (also called Double Bass, String Bass, Upright Bass, and Contrabass)
God aka a young Eric Clapton
Spiderbait are Kram - Drums\Vocals Whitt - guitar Janet - Bass\Vocal
MANY people play the cello. (Including me, Yo-yo mo, Rostropovich, Ha-Na Chang. etccc~)
The main difference between a Jazz bass and a Precision bass is in the pickup design. A Jazz bass has a couple of thin, straight that sit perpendicular to the strings. A Precision bass on the other hand traditionally has one or more split-pickups sitting somewhere between the end of the fretboard and the bridge, usually closer to the end of the fretboard. This split pickup design puts the half of the pickup underneath the thicker strings closer to then fretboard and the half under the two thinner strings closer to the bridge, making the low strings sound fatter and the high strings sound brighter. When it comes to the necks of the two basses, the difference is in the feel. Precision basses have thicker necks, usually a little more U shaped. Jazz bass necks are a little more C shaped. I personally feel that Jazz necks are more comfortable, and easier to play at faster speeds, but to each his/her own. Of course with all the different possible combinations available in the making of a bass guitar, it is tough to say what definitively sets the two types of basses apart sonically. One might say that a Jazz bass tends to sound a little mellower than a Precision, but that probably wouldn't be true if the Jazz had a maple fretboard and the Precision was equipped with a rosewood one.
Luigi Paulino Alfredo Francesco Antonio Balassoni (aka Louie Bellson)Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louie_Bellson