Bass Player

EUGENE ABDUKHANOV

- Instagram: @jinjerbass

Jinjer’s metal maestro.

My story is either very trivial or vice versa – it’s not that common. I come from a family with absolutely zero musical background, so honestly it is hard to say where the roots of all evil come from. Maybe I was just inspired by grunge music in my early youth so much that it made me think I could self-express by means of music too. Who knows... but by the age of 16, I made a few friends who were playing in local bands and at some point I just thought, well, maybe I should try this myself. Everyone kept saying that bass was easy to play, and I was green enough to believe it. So in my first year of university, during winter holidays, I went to work at a constructi­on area, made some money and bought my first bass. The funny thing is, I tried to compose music on the first day.

That first bass guitar was a slightly customised and upgraded Soviet Ural instrument. I gradually made my way from Soviet trash into cheap Chinese basses, then my first really good axe was a five-string Spector Euro, which I used to record the debut Jinjer EP. Then I got my hands on a custom bass by Stas Pokotilo, a Ukrainian luthier whose guitar I have been using for five years.

Currently, I mostly play my signature bass, an Achilles by Overload Guitars and a custom JNJR bass by Pokotilo. Both are five-string multiscale semi-active guitars. As for effects, I have been using Helix by Line 6 for a few years, but recently I got a bunch of pedals

from Darkglass and we managed to build a new chain and new concept of sound for the upcoming album. It features the B7K Ultra and a secret ingredient – a guitar overdrive pedal by Dunlop.

I have also had a couple of Coffee Custom Cabinets for years now, a 2x12 and an 8x10, which I use for big and small stages respective­ly. Markbass amps are my absolute love! I have a Mark III, a small but very powerful touring machine that perfectly fits my main requiremen­ts – small, loud, versatile, and it has the tone.

There a few wonderful bass players in metal who had an impact on me as a musician, but there is one who definitely stands out – Ryan Martinie. He’s the man. If you pick every young bass player in modern rock music who is somehow well recognised in the musicians’ community, it’s 100 percent sure that there is a bit of Martinie in him or her.

For me, bass is not about how many notes you play, but how well you pick every single one, even if there is only one in a bar – although it took years for me to realise that it truly works this way. In metal, you can show off as much as you want by playing 16th triplets under layers of guitars and blastbeat drums, hiding all your bad timing, poor dynamics, lack of groove and originalit­y. A simple, catchy and groovy bass-line, performed clean and with musicality, will really show who and what you are much better.

“For me, bass is not about how many notes you pick, but how well you pick every single one”

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