ICONIC
Bass Player|November 2020
Jazz maestro Christian McBride looks back at his storied career
Andy Hughes
ICONIC
The great Christian McBride is equally at home with a stand-up bass—playing jazz with legends like Chick Corea, Diana Krall and McCoy Tyner—and the electric instrument, in connection with soul titans James Brown and Aretha Franklin as well as rock stars such as Paul McCartney and Sting. A prolific solo artist, he has a sizeable discography of his own behind him as well as countless sessions; his latest album, The Movement Revisited: A Musical Portrait Of Four Icons, is out now.

Christian, does your double bass playing inform your electric technique?

Actually it’s the other way around, because I started on the electric bass. When I moved to the double bass, I just carried on doing a lot of the things I had been doing on the electric, not knowing that I was not supposed to be doing those things at all! I think it helps to be a rebel sometimes. Naivety can work for you sometimes—because if you don’t know the rules, you don’t know you’re breaking them, which for musicians, is often a useful thing to happen.

Given that your father Lee Smith was also a double bass player, why didn’t you start with that instrument yourself?

Simply because there wasn’t one available to me. When I joined my middle school in Philadelphia, which was a really good school, I was enrolled in the orchestra, and of course I had to play an orchestral instrument. Double bass was not my first choice—I actually chose the trombone—but I was really bad at it, so the brass instruments teacher recommended that I switch to double bass as he knew I already played electric bass.

Was there a transition period while you got to grips with the differences between the two instruments?

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