Inkless Wells

Inkless Wells

Paul Wells on all the latest out of Ottawa—along with the occasional post about jazz. Follow Paul on Twitter: @InklessPW

Video: Joel Quarrington's bass revolution

by Paul Wells on Friday, May 14, 2010 1:55pm - 7 Comments

In the last print edition of Maclean’s, I had a profile of Joel Quarrington, the principal double bassist of the NAC Orchestra, who won a classical-music Juno a few weeks ago for his CD Garden Scene. Principal-chair players in every section in every prominent Canadian orchestra are formidable musical talents, but Quarrington’s influence and the respect he commands among peers goes further than that. Also he’s a funny guy.

But what’s most interesting is the way he’s adopted an unusual method for tuning his bass, at intervals of a fifth instead of a fourth. This turns out to have effects on the instrument that would have been hard to predict, so while I was interviewing Quarrington I shot some video. This’ll help readers see, hear and understand what I’m trying to describe. So here’s Joel Quarrington:

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  • jbro

    thanks for that, paul. and joel!

    i was fortunate enough to attend a master class with joel in 1992 or so. it was kind of mind blowing to see him whip around in 5ths tuning.

    always fun and inspiring to hear someone refuse limitations, or accept new ones – especially on bass. cheers guys.

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/Halo_Override Halo_Override

    Aside from the issues of practicality and concern with tone, switching tunings can also do a lot to refresh a player's relationship with their instrument. (At least, if they're a poor player like me. Beyond a certain level of skill such strategies might not have the same impact…)

    Thanks for checking back in with music postings every once in a while. :)

  • dede

    This is very frustrating. There's not enough played back to back for me to compare and the science of it baffles me. More please.

  • dede

    Listening again now and the fifths instrument sounds more like a violin in its capacity to mimic voice … if that makes any sense … more human voice somehow anyway.

  • Gaunilon

    I didn't realize bass guys normally tune in 4ths. Violinists generally tune in 5ths.

    As to the physics, if I recall correctly a perfect 5th is a 3:2 frequency ratio, whereas a perfect 4th is a 4:3 ratio. The former is simpler, thus more pleasing to the ear as a final transition. It is also more likely to overlap with its higher harmonics.

  • http://intensedebate.com/people/PoliticalPundit PoliticalPundit

    Great Demo Paul! The music speaks thousand times louder than words!!

  • jdumont

    This rocks like Apocalyptica! As a percussionist, I like the bottom end and this kind of string playing is remarkable, cool to watch and fun to listen to! What more can you ask for? Thanks for the post, Paul.

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