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Bass Guitar Technique Analyzer

Bass guitar technique analyzer. Upload a video of your playing and AI grades it like a teacher, spotting a collapsed wrist, poor muting, and tension, plus the fix.

Choose the type of analysis you want to perform on your video.

Only models with video understanding are shown. Access depends on your subscription tier.

Supports YouTube, Vimeo, and direct video file URLs. YouTube links work best with Gemini.

What is Bass Guitar Technique Analyzer?

Bass Guitar Technique Analyzer is an AI tool that grades your bass playing from a video the way a teacher would, breaking your hand mechanics down and showing you exactly what to fix. You upload a clip of yourself playing and the AI reads your posture and instrument hold, your fretting hand (placement, curvature, one-finger-per-fret), your plucking hand, your hand synchronization, your muting and note control, your tone, and your economy of motion before scoring it out of 100. Most self-taught and intermediate bassists hit a wall where clean notes or speed stall and can't tell why, because the cause is usually a habit they can't feel, like a collapsing wrist or sloppy muting that lets strings ring. Filming helps, but you still need a trained eye to know whether your string noise comes from poor muting, anchoring problems, or a wrist that's fighting you. This tool gives you that eye on demand. It spots the common faults (a collapsed wrist, excess tension, poor muting, flat fingers, anchoring issues) and then does the most useful thing a teacher does: it hands you the one fix that matters most. Technique faults tend to cascade from a single root, so fixing the right one first is how you keep improving and play clean without strain.

How Bass Guitar Technique Analyzer Works

Upload a video of yourself playing with a clear view of both hands and your posture. The AI reads your fretting hand first, checking that fingers sit behind the frets, stay curved, ideally one finger per fret, with a supported wrist rather than a collapsed one. It studies your plucking hand for efficient finger or pick technique and controlled raking, then checks whether your two hands land together for clean notes. It pays close attention to muting and note control, since unwanted string noise is the most common thing that separates clean bass from sloppy bass, and it judges your tone consistency and economy of motion. It watches for tension and anchoring problems that cap speed. From all of this it names the specific faults, rates how severe each is, and isolates the single highest-leverage fix, explaining why it's the root cause and prescribing a couple of slow, targeted drills. Adding notes about the line, your level, and whether you play fingerstyle or pick makes the read sharper.

Benefits of Bass Guitar Technique Analyzer

  • Get a teacher-style read on your bass technique in seconds without booking a lesson.
  • See a breakdown of your fretting hand, plucking hand, muting, and posture so you know where you're held back.
  • Find out whether a collapsed wrist or sloppy muting is causing your string noise and capping your speed.
  • Get the single priority fix rather than a confusing list, because bass faults usually cascade from wrist position.
  • Receive slow, targeted drills tied to your fix so practice builds good habits instead of grinding in bad ones.
  • Track progress by uploading a new clip after working on the fix and comparing the score and breakdown.
  • Catch tension habits early so you play more comfortably and reduce the risk of strain over the long run.

Tips for Best Results

  • Film with a clear view of both hands and your wrist, since muting and fretting are read from the hands.
  • Tell the tool the line or exercise, your level, and fingerstyle or pick so it grades against the right context.
  • Add notes about where you get string noise, stall, or feel tension so the analysis can target it.
  • Play at a comfortable tempo rather than your fastest, because a collapsing wrist shows clearly at a steady pace.
  • Work on only the one priority fix at a time, since changing several habits at once is overwhelming.
  • Re-upload a fresh clip after practicing to see whether the priority fault improved and the score moved.
  • Film a busy line when you want the cleanest read on muting, since string noise hides in simple parts.

Popular Use Cases

  • Self-taught bassists who suspect a technique habit is capping their progress but can't see it.
  • Beginners learning what clean muting and a relaxed fretting hand actually look like.
  • Intermediate players stuck at a plateau who want the one root fault holding back their speed.
  • Players whose notes buzz or whose strings ring out and who want to know exactly why.
  • Students between lessons checking they're applying the change their teacher asked for.
  • Adult learners reviewing their practice with a structured, jargon-light breakdown.
  • Anyone returning to bass who wants an honest read on whether old habits have crept back.