Thursday, November 21, 2024
BassBass Lessons

Bass Teacher REACTS to JOY DIVISION – “She’s Lost Control” – and it’s a heavy one…


FULL-ALBUM Reactions, Lessons & More ???? https://www.patreon.com/LowEndUniversity
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➡️ I first stumbled onto Peter Hook’s unique bass-playing style hearing New Order for the first time recently, and going backwards to Joy Division has made things start to click. “She’s Lost Control” draws lyrical inspiration from such a heavy story recounted by the late Ian Curtis, and I felt that every pertinent emotion was channeled through this song. Somehow, the bass parts were the melody, the atmosphere, and the intensity all in one fell swoop. I discuss the compositional misdirection that happens after the bass intro, the imaginative soundscapes used to build tension, how the song cleverly transitions into a major-key feel, how the lyrics are storyboarded into the music, and much more.
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0:00 Intro
2:34 Reaction / Analysis
15:01 Final Thoughts
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???? MORE REACTIONS:
▶️ NEW ORDER: https://youtu.be/OM6zC-ccs-k
▶️ THE CURE: https://youtu.be/BzfE7yyi5zM
▶️ THE SMITHS: https://youtu.be/ScZz5Cw_ZO0
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Mark Michell is an internationally-touring and recording bass player known for his work with Scale the Summit, Tony MacAlpine, Tetrafusion, Watermox, and more. Michell is a published educator and author for Hal Leonard, the world’s largest music publisher, and has taught bass clinics around the globe for many years. He founded Low End University in 2015, and has since enrolled over 2,500 students through his lessons program. Alongside his educational endeavors, he played on many Billboard-charting album releases and is sponsored by Jackson Basses, EMG Pickups, and Dunlop.
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???? Original Video from @joydivisionofficial: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=s4prQ11orEM

???? GEAR ????
Jackson Spectra JS3QV: https://sweetwater.sjv.io/q4LnAY
EMG 40 Soapbar Pickups: https://sweetwater.sjv.io/AW1oyR
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Panasonic Lumix G7: https://sweetwater.sjv.io/OrvR9A
PreSonus Revelator io24: https://sweetwater.sjv.io/21LrQD
Shure SM7B: https://sweetwater.sjv.io/4Pxer1
Shure SE215: https://sweetwater.sjv.io/Y9vgqO
Gator Frameworks 2000: https://sweetwater.sjv.io/759mG3
Elgato Key Light: https://sweetwater.sjv.io/q4Ln2n
Rosetta Galaxy Projector: https://amzn.to/3XBIsem
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???? CONNECT ????
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#joydivision #sheslostcontrol #reaction #peterhook #lowenduniversity
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Copyright Disclaimer Under Section 107 of the Copyright Act 1976, allowance is made for “fair use” for purposes such as criticism, commentary, news reporting, teaching, scholarship, and research. Fair Use is a use permitted by copyright statute that might otherwise be infringing. Non-profit, educational, or personal use tips the balance in favor of fair use. The original work played in this video has been significantly transformed for the purpose of music education.

#Bass #Teacher #REACTS #JOY #DIVISION #Shes #Lost #Control #heavy #one..

Originally posted by UC3TqK2sSktlk7CmXGpw7_Cg at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bjswakZ12dI

50 thoughts on “Bass Teacher REACTS to JOY DIVISION – “She’s Lost Control” – and it’s a heavy one…

  • JOY DIVISION are a genre for themselves. And this is one of the most memorable bass lines in rock music.

    Reply
  • Hey man, you were so mesmerized by the major chords, that you missed the syncopation that's going on at the same time.

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  • If I watch Peter hook and the light playing live now,he has 2 bass guitars one playing low notes ( his son) and Peter plays high stuff..

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  • It was just what thousands of British bands were doing that weren't famous in the aftermath of punk when they couldn't play all that well and kind of jammed songs to a bass riff… Even PIL did that.. bands were doing very similar things in bedrooms and village halls in practices and little gigs up and down the country. Some got signed and some didn't. In Britain who gets signed never has much to do with talent in terms of being more talented than contemporaries. There was many bands who did this sort of stuff.

    Reply
  • You should have a listen to the song ‘dirty linen’ by Fairport Convention. Dave Pegg is a great bassist 🙂

    Reply
  • Surely a reaction to a PIL song is essential for anyone investigating any punk or post punk music where the bass plays a strong role. I would recommend the song 'Poptones' from their second LP 'Metal Box' (aka 'Second Edition').

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  • You should scrutinize These days – Hookys funkiest moments. Generally there is not much to dissect musically about Hookys bass lines except that he never plays accompany. It's all lead basically and he thinks in terms of playing the lead melody and that may seem like he's not a very profound bass player. But it all comes together in the most interesting ways, it's almost pop.

    Reply
  • I think that second bass is actually a guitar octaved down with effects. There are two great movies which deal with Joy Division – "Control", which is a straight biopic of the band (and excellent), and the bizarre and humorous (but no less accurate) "24 Hour Party People", which deals with the history of Factory Records. Both are well worth a watch. Hannett's peculiar way of recording – and more peculiar personality – is highlighted in the second movie, where he's excellently portrayed by Andy Serkis. So too is the change from Joy Division to New Order.

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  • Keanu was right…if you could only hear one song for the rest of your life, a Joy Division tune would be a solid choice.

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  • They didn't necessarily construct the sound around the lyrics and their theme. The way I hear it, most of the time the rest of the band didn't know what Ian Curtis was singing about, and they dealt with it as a sound and a mood, rather than trying to write music around his narratives. They were putting musical ideas together as they felt driven to, and he slotted words into their tunes, if anything, rather than the other way around. It was more happy accident than genius, at least that's what they've said in interviews and in the two movies Control and 24 Hour Party People.

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  • As a lot of songs those days, also this song was slight off tone, sometimes weird if you want to play along 🙂

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  • You're a little off with the story, it happened in a job centre, and he didn't know he had epilepsy when he wrote this, not a bad summary though. Someone might know more than me about this specific recording, but Hooky used a 6 string bass quite often, so that might be why they're hard to replicate with your missing string.

    Reply
  • A band with a unique approach to bass you might interested in is The Presidents of the United States of America. The bassist used a two-string bass with C# and G# strings only (christened a "basitar"), while the guitarist used a three string guitar with C# low, G#, and C# high strings (named the "guitbass"). All their strings were unusually heavy gauge.

    Reply
  • The ascending line is a guitar. Played by Bernard Sumner. Not a bass. Great song. Great influence on many bands to come.

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  • Oh god. The “reimagined” videos are all garbage. Just listen to the song, don’t watch any of these crappy lightweight new videos. Yuck

    Reply
  • Hook had bad gear, I think his Rickenbacker was a Honda? Between the bass and his amp, he had very little volume, to be heard he had a tendency to 'play the high notes". This could have been managed in the studio, but by the time they got to the studio, the songs had already been written that way. That was the sound of the band. On a number of songs he plays a 'melody' over an open string played like a drone, Love will tear us Apart – there best known song uses the A,D,and G individually as a drone during the course of the riff – a lot of people miss this, since they are not used to using a string above the ones they are playing on as a drone, it is typically lower strings. Again, this style was developed as a way to make a weak bass amp compete with a much louder guitar amp

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  • He strums open d on that main riff there a fantastic live version of this and transmission on YouTube. Way better versions of those songs

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  • Joy division is a tough listen every time. Mood music at its best. Check out a band called the sound and magazine for some more outstanding post punk with fantastic bass players

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  • I kinda know Peter Hook ????! He signed my vinyl sleeve of their timeless classic Closer. He also sent me a t-shirt through the post! A great bloke.

    ~ C was here in Sep 2024

    Reply
  • ngl, thats quite clearly a guitar, not a low bass. love the videos tho, you cover some amazing music that no other channel does

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  • Hooky used to play so high on the neck because when they first started playing his gear was so cheap the bottom end sounded diabolical. He tried playing further up the neck and Curtis preferred the sound, so they stuck with it.

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  • Just a little info… my father in law worked with Ian Curtis at the smaller place in Macclesfield, which you can see at the start of the film about Curtis called "Control" …
    when Ian leaves his house in Barton Street, crosses South Park Road to enter the building. It's an excellent movie and many of the other locations in the film are historically correct. They even moved modern cars, and parked older cars in the streets for example.
    He said that Ian was very conscientious with his work, but also had an intense, maybe depressed side to him. Being the generation above, he didn't know who Joy Division were untill later, but I definitely got from him good vibes about Ian, with him expressing that it was such a shame that he didn't get find the correct help with his mental health.

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  • Definitely a track that feels different depending on which recording you hear, this (the 1979 studio version), the 1980 synth heavy re-recording, and the live recordings. And then there's intense video footage of JD performing live. Difficult to pick a favourite.

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  • Control is the name of a 2007 biographical film about the life of Ian Curtis, singer of the late-1970s English post-punk band Joy Division.

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  • I first heard this song from girls against boys, so didn't hear joy division until much later. I didn't know the back story both from the band and song, so thank you for including this as well.

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  • Joy Division is finding a new audience these days!!! I think there was also a movie called Curtis about him. Oh and they do have a song called These Days if I remember right. I love Joy Division.

    Reply
  • A suggestion: Radiohead's "Where I End And You Begin" (the live "From The Basement" version).

    Reply

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