I gave my niece, seventeen, my old Aria Pro II bass which I bought new in 1984 for $209.00. She made noises about wanting to play bass, so I found her a practice amp at a flea market, and passed on the Aria and associated stuff to get her going.
She got a few bass books for Christmas. One of the ones I gave her which impressed me so much I bought my own copy was BASS GUITAR FOR DUMMIES. I like the layout and readability and the way things are grouped together. And it comes with a CD of the tracks.
Anyway - I am still a beginner because I have always had bass as a second, third, fourth priority hobby compared to things which were easier or more immediately gratifying. I took a few lessons, back in the old days, with a boring teacher and some awful Mel Bay books. So I never stuck with it, but yet I always loved the sound of the bass, and want to make it more of a prime hobby for me now.
So I set my niece up for lessons with the son of a coworker of mine. He is a great young man, educated at music school and in his own band. He plays a four string Zon.
My niece was so excited about getting lessons. Her first was the other evening, and because her rich uncle (NOT) is going to foot the bill for them for a while, I was allowed to sit in on the lesson. I figure I can learn as much as she can, though hopefully her young brain can absorb it quicker than I can...
Well let me tell you - it was an amazing experience seeing a young lady learn from a great teacher. He began by showing her how to tune it, how to hold it, how to pluck with two fingers...the basics.
I could tell right away that the guy is a great, patient teacher. At the same time, my niece impressed me because she retained what he was telling her.
She was concerned about the fret buzz she was getting...we told her that it goes away with practice and as your hands get stronger. About twenty minutes later, he had her running a C scale up and down and I pointed out that the buzz was gone. She was shocked, because she thought she would never get it.
One of her school friends (self taught guitarist...you can imagine) taught her to play Smoke on the Water. Yesterday the teacher taught her how to play it the RIGHT way, and she was more and more excited about how things were progressing. It seemed to be real JOY on her face, as she did things that began to sound musical.
She's got her second lesson in a couple of weeks, and I will be sitting in again. We both can't wait. He left her with some written notes for practicing and told her to work on some finger exercises (four fingers/four frets, across the neck) to start building strength.
I guess my point of the post is to convince those of you who may be like me - a permanent beginner - to have hope and realize that with practice, things can begin to happen. And for anyone who is trying to encourage a young kid, especially one on bass, that you should help them find the kind of teacher who can light that spark.
EffClef