🎙️ The Double Bass: Naming the Structure, Standing in the Sound | iServalan™ | Continuum Approach

EPISODE · Dec 17, 2025 · 4 MIN

🎙️ The Double Bass: Naming the Structure, Standing in the Sound | iServalan™ | Continuum Approach

from Continuum Music Studio · host Sarnia de la Maré FRSA

  This essay accompanies an audio episode from iServalan and forms part of a wider approach to learning music through listening, movement, and attention.🎙️ The Double Bass: Naming the Structure, Standing in the Sound Before we talk about difficulty,before we talk about strength,before we talk about whether this instrument is “too big” — we meet it properly. Because the double bass is not something you wrestle into submission.It is something you learn to stand beside. And to do that, we need shared language. Not memorised.Not tested.Simply understood. So when I name something,you know where we are. The Body of the Double Bass Let’s begin at the top. At the very top is the scroll,often larger and more pronounced than on smaller string instruments.Below it sit the tuning machines — metal gears rather than wooden pegs —designed for the greater tension of thicker strings. These sit in the pegbox,which leads into the neckand then into the fingerboard. The fingerboard is long.Unfretted.There are no visual shortcuts. This is an instrument that asks for listening,orientation,and trust in the body. Where the fingerboard meets the body is the nut. This block of wood is at the top of the fingerboard and is cut to hold the strings in place, with slight indents that are smooth and no deeper than half the size of the string. Below the nut the bass opens out into its wide, resonant form. The front is the top plate,carved to move a great volume of air.The f-holes are larger here,because the sound they release is larger. The bridge stands beneath the strings,taller than on a cello,balanced — not glued —holding immense tension through equilibrium alone. The strings pass down to the tailpiece,anchored by the tailgut,and finally to the endpin,which connects the bass to the floorand to gravity itself. Inside, unseen but essential,are the bass bar and the soundpost,shaping, supporting, and focusing the sound. You don’t need to hold all of this in your head.You only need to recognise the terrain. That’s enough. The Bow The double bass bow may look different —French or German grip —but the principles are the same. There is a stick.There is bow hair, usually made of horse hair and occasionally synthetic hair for vegan bows.There is a point where the hand meets the bow called the frog, a weighted adjustable oblong shape,where the arm transfers weight. The opposite end is called the tip. The frog and the tip are often used in instructions so it is good to remember those. The bow is not about pressure.It is about gravity,released. Standing or Sitting With the Bass Unlike the cello,the double bass asks you to stand —or to sit high enough that standing logic still applies. The bass leans into you.You do not lean into it. The endpin should be adjusted so the instrument feels present, not looming.If you feel you are reaching upward constantly, something is wrong. Your feet are grounded.Your knees are free.Your spine is upright but not rigid. This is not an instrument for collapse. Taking Up Space: The Vertical Orb Just as with the cello,string playing requires space. But here, the space is vertical. Imagine an orb around you —taller now,stretching from the floor beneath your feetto the air above your head. Your feet belong to this orb.Your pelvis.Your spine.Your shoulders.Your elbows.Your hands.The arc of the bow. Nothing should feel pinned.Nothing should feel apologetic. The double bass does not reward shrinking.It rewards presence. If you make yourself small,the sound struggles. So you claim your space. Calmly.Quietly.Without force. You are allowed to stand here. What Comes Next Now — and only now —do we have what we need. Not repertoire.Not technique drills. But the tools. A named structure.A grounded stance.Space to move.Room to breathe. Now we can make a noise. Our noise.Our sound. And once that sound exists,the world will listen. Our other streaming sitesiServalan™Music, listening, and the Continuum Approach: Exploring sound across genres, eras, and performance cultures — from Baroque to punk, hip-hop to minimalism — without hierarchy or haste.🎧 Podcast & essays: 🎻 Music Schoolhttps://iservalan.gumroad.com/l/concervatoire?https://iservalan.gumroad.com📚 Books & long-form work by Sarnia de la Maré FRSA:https://www.amazon.co.uk/stores/author/B0CWGX2DJ6🎨 Professional profile:https://www.a-n.co.uk/person/sarnia-de-la-mare-frsa-2/#iServalan #ContinuumApproach #MusicPodcast #RadicalListening #MusicAcrossGenres#PerformanceCulture #SarniaDeLaMaré

NOW PLAYING

🎙️ The Double Bass: Naming the Structure, Standing in the Sound | iServalan™ | Continuum Approach

0:00 4:56

No transcript for this episode yet

We transcribe on demand. Request one and we'll notify you when it's ready — usually under 10 minutes.

No similar episodes found.

Friday, August 8, 2014 - George Noory In-Studio Andy Dean Friday, August 8, 2014 - George Noory In-Studio Bloop Animation Morr Meroz Bloop Animation Studios is all about teaching animation filmmaking. On this channel we post tutorials, video essays and animated short films. My name is Morr. I wanted Bloop Animation to not only be a studio, but also a place to share the process of Acid Driver Joao A. Nathis Welcome to my podcasts series. Here you can find my recorded live DJ Sets, radio shows and live mixing using the finest Acid, Acid House, Classic House tracks, blended with Retro Funk and Techie aspects of Dance Music, including fresh tunes from myself and my label We Play Acid. Grab a sit, or just dance :) TomCattt Thomas Patton From the beginning music has prowled with accordion lessons at a young age, followed by sax, blues harp and more recently piano, vocals, song writing and recording. Thomas Patton (AKA TomCattt) credits his mother for his stage name "TomCattt” as she was big on nick names for those she held close to her heart. TomCattt's music is best described as easy listening and sometimes retro, yet with a contemporary mix and feel. Accompanied by the creative tracks of a number of gifted musicians, his first album Hiiyaaaaaaaaaaa inspires imagination and finds a way to impress with a unique vocal sound, compelling harmony and gripping melody. The lyrical content is in fact a living reflection of this artists emotional journey that followed leaving love, finding a new love only to lose love once again. Hiiyaaaaaaaaaaa was released on June 1st, 2013 and all are invited to Soundcloud, Bandcamp, ReverbNation and Cdbaby where "A Question" is free download and to enjoy TomCattt's website tomcattt.com.
URL copied to clipboard!