Coordinates | 28°36′36″N77°13′48″N |
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name | John Myung |
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background | non_vocal_instrumentalist |
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birth name | John Ro Myung |
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birth date | January 24, 1967 |
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origin | Chicago, Illinois, U.S. |
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instrument | Bass, Chapman Stick, guitar, keyboard, violin |
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genre | Progressive metal, progressive rock, jazz fusion |
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occupation | Musician |
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years active | 1985–present |
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associated acts | Dream Theater, Platypus, The Jelly Jam, Explorers Club, Gordian Knot, Nightmare Cinema, Nicky Lemmons and the Migrane Brothers |
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notable instruments | Ernie Ball Music Man Bongo Yamaha RBX6JM Tung Wingbass II
}} |
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John Ro Myung (; born January 24, 1967 in Chicago, Illinois) is an American bassist, Chapman Stick player and a founding member of the progressive metal group Dream Theater. He is considered a virtuoso player who is widely recognized for his technical proficiency.
In a poll conducted by MusicRadar in August through September 2010, he was voted the greatest bassist of all time.
Background
Born in
Chicago to
Korean parents, Myung grew up in
Kings Park,
Long Island,
New York. He played the
violin from the age of five until he was asked to play
electric bass in a local band when he was fifteen. He accepted, assuming the violin and bass were similar due to the number of strings. After graduating from high school he and his high school friend
John Petrucci enrolled at the
Berklee College of Music, where they met future bandmate
Mike Portnoy. The three of them formed the band Majesty with another friend from high school, keyboardist
Kevin Moore and vocalist
Chris Collins. The band would later change its name to
Dream Theater.
Though Dream Theater is his primary focus musically, he has appeared in a number of other projects through his career. His first non-Dream Theater venture was in the pop-prog band Platypus with Rod Morgenstein, Ty Tabor and ex-Dream Theater bandmate Derek Sherinian. He is also a member of The Jelly Jam, which consists of the same line-up as Platypus, but without Sherinian. Apart from his membership in these bands, he has appeared as a guest on numerous records. He also played keyboards in the spoof band Nightmare Cinema as Juice Malouse.
Myung's main influences include Chris Squire, Steve Harris, Geddy Lee and Cliff Burton, and their respective bands Yes, Iron Maiden, Rush, and Metallica.
Myung is married to Lisa Martens Pace, the bass player in the defunct all-female heavy metal band Meanstreak. Two other members of the band, Rena Sands and Marlene Apuzzo are married to current and former Dream Theater members: John Petrucci and Mike Portnoy, respectively.
Myung is a Christian and open about his religion in interviews—Jordan Rudess confirmed this in a post on his forum.
Up until the addition of Mike Mangini, Myung had the distinction of being the only member of Dream Theater to have never performed vocals.
Personality
Myung has a reputation as the "mysterious" member of Dream Theater, as he is very quiet and seldom draws attention to himself in videos or concerts. This has led some fans to jokingly wonder if anyone has ever heard him speak. However, he does speak in DVD commentaries and on his instructional video, as well as to fans he meets at live shows. His mysterious personality was emphasized when, at a show in
Germany, he
tackled Dream Theater singer
James LaBrie, much to the confusion and amazement of both the audience and the rest of the band; this move later became known as the "Myung Tackle." It would later be revealed in the band's biography
Lifting Shadows that he was dared to do it with "a couple hundred dollars and nobody thought that he would do it."
Myung is also famous for his practicing principles. Both Kevin Shirley (on the Metropolis 2000: Scenes From New York DVD) as well as former keyboardist Derek Sherinian (on his website ) have said that Myung is the only musician they know who "cools down" (opposed to "warms up") before a show. He also has been seen to practice just minutes before the band goes on stage. In a forum post, John Petrucci said that, when he and Myung were at Berklee, the two had an agreement to practice at least six hours every day.
Songwriting
Dream Theater has long been known for its group writing process, so it is sometimes difficult to identify which member of the band authored a particular song or song section (although, on some DVD commentaries, the band members have identified certain parts as, e.g., "a John Myung riff"). With respect to lyrics, Myung wrote the lyrics to one song per album from
Images and Words to
Metropolis Pt. 2: Scenes from a Memory, though none of Dream Theater's releases after
Scenes From a Memory has had any lyrics written by Myung. Mike Portnoy once commented in a chat session that this is probably because Myung's lyrics usually needed some work by the rest of the band to fit to the song. As a result, the band eventually imposed an unwritten lyric rule that required lyrics to be "properly formed, phrased, constructed, etc. to go with the melodies," and, "since then, John has kind of backed off." In April 2011, it was confirmed by
Jordan Rudess that Myung has written lyrics for the upcoming eleventh album.
Instruments
Myung began playing bass at the age of 15 after having played violin for a number of years. His first bass was a "Memphis" brand Precision bass copy, but he quickly upgraded to a salmon-colored four-string
Fender Jazz bass. He also began to develop a unique playing style high on the neck, adding counterpoint lines and melodies to the band's material which are not typically heard in traditional "rock" music. He was also a heavy user of effects not typically heard on the bass guitar to better bring out his distinctive style.
Early Dream Theater gear
For
Dream Theater's debut album
When Dream and Day Unite, Myung played a heavily-modified Ernie Ball/MusicMan Stingray four-string bass, as well as his four-string Fender Jazz Bass, with the Stingray seeing the vast majority of local
New York City-area live performances in this period (1988–1992). The Ernie Ball/MusicMan Stingray four-string was customized with an added front pickup sending a traditional clean bass sound to a clean amp, while the bridge signal was sent to a full-time "effected" amplifier, much like his influences
Chris Squire and
Geddy Lee and similar to "The Wife", a modified
Fender precision bass used by
Billy Sheehan, except Sheehan's bridge pickup was notch filtered to achieve a more guitar like sound.
Myung used a 4-string Spector NS-2 for most of the recording of Images and Words in 1992 (although he may have used a 5-string or 6-string bass for songs such as "Take the Time", which features a low-C#).
Switch to 6-string basses
He made the technically challenging switch to 6-string basses for Dream Theater's subsequent tour of America, Europe, and Japan, using several high-end Tobias "Basic"-model basses. At least two, a Cherry Sunburst (seen on the "Live In Tokyo" VHS/DVD release) and "Transparent Red" (seen in the "Take The Time" video) Maple body-and-neck with Rosewood fretboard can be seen and heard on various Dream Theater music videos and on the
Live At The Marquee EP released in 1993. Myung continued to use Tobias basses throughout the "Images And Tour" and "Music In Progress" tours from 1992 to late 1993. He has used six string basses almost exclusively ever since.
Tung endorsment
For Dream Theater's
Awake album, Myung became the primary endorser of Tung basses, which were produced by a small company formed by ex-Tobias
luthier Nicholas Tung. Myung owned at least three of the only 100 instruments constructed, two "Wingbass II Bolt-on" six-strings (one Natural and one Sunburst, both with Figured Maple tops, Ash bodies and Maple necks with Rosewood fretboards), and one "Wingbass II Hybrid (a "half neck-through") with Spalted Maple top, Ash body, and Maple neck with Birdseye Maple fretboard). The natural-finish Wingbass II bolt-on became his main live instrument for the "Waking Up The World" and "
A Change of Seasons" tours, although he used the other two in his "Progressive Bass Concepts" instructional video. During this period, Myung also used a
Hamer acoustic bass for "unplugged" radio shows and live performances. For amplification, he was using
Mesa Boogie Strategy 400 power amps, a
Mesa Boogie Bass 400+, and a modified
Mesa Boogie Triaxis guitar preamp with several transistors swapped out for ones that would support the lower range of a bass guitar.
Switch to Yamaha
After the Tung company ceased production, Myung began endorsing
Yamaha instruments, using its
TRB and
John Patitucci six-string fretted and fretless basses live for Dream Theater's
The Fix For '96 &
An Evening of New Music with Dream Theater while working with Yamaha's Artist Custom Shop on what would become his signature instrument. Based on the more "rock"-oriented RBX body style, prototypes of the
RBX6JM along with his TRB basses were used for the recording of 1997's
Falling Into Infinity. A bolt-on bass with alder body with flame-maple top available in either "Ruby Red" or "Turquoise Blue" with a maple neck, ebony fretboard, gold hardware, 35" scale, and "Infinity" dot inlay on the fretboard, various Red and Blue
RBX6JM models were his main studio and live instruments along with his TRB fretless from 1997–1998's
Touring Into Infinity, 1998's
Once In A LIVEtime double-disc live CD and
5 Years In A LIVEtime video, 1999's
Metropolis Pt. 2: Scenes from a Memory, following tour and 2001's
Metropolis 2000: Scenes From New York DVD and
Live Scenes From New York three CD live set. Myung's amplification and speaker endorsement changed at this time to
SWR Sound Corporation, as can be seen on the
Metropolis 2000 DVD. However, Internet-released "
Webisodes" of the making of 2002's
Six Degrees of Inner Turbulence double album showed an expansion of Myung's studio gear with the use of a
Hamer 8-string bass, as well as a
Music Man Stingray 5 five-string bass. The usage of this bass on the entirety of disc 2 of
Six Degrees of Inner Turbulence would lead to changes to his Yamaha signature bass.
In 2002, Myung and Yamaha unveiled the RBX-JM2, an updated version of his signature bass that echoed the redesign of Yamaha's entire RBX-series of basses. Changes included a modified body shape with more "modern" lines and carvings, finishes in either "Inca Silver" or "Plum Purple" in flat as opposed to glossy paint, slightly tighter string-spacing, a maple neck/rosewood fretboard with "Yin-Yang" inlay at the 12th fret, 34" scale as opposed to the 35" scale that the RBX6JM had, and most importantly a single Seymour Duncan Music Man-type Humbucking pickup, by all accounts an influence from his usage of a Music Man Stingray to record a good portion of Dream Theater's last album as well as the Stingray that was his primary bass on the band's first album. This was used on Dream Theater's Train of Thought and Octavarium albums, the tours supporting them, as well as the vast majority of the Six Degrees Of Inner Turbulence tour (the prototypes for the second version arrived for him to test early in the tour), the Summer 2002 tour co-headlining with Joe Satriani, the Summer 2003 tour co-headlined with Queensrÿche, and the Gigantour heavy metal festival Dream Theater co-headlined with Megadeth. Myung did not play the Production model of the RBX JM2 he had a second pickup added between the Music Man Style Pickup which was made by Seymour Duncan an the bridge. There were also a few controls added. He stated that also the body shape and the woods were slightly altered for the Bass he was using.
Switch to Music Man
During the recording of
Systematic Chaos in 2006, Myung was seen using various MusicMan basses (most notably an Egyptian Smoke Bongo 5 HH as well as a
Sterling H/SC, which can be seen a few times during in-studio videos and the EPK for this new album). At the beginning of the 2007 "Chaos in Motion" tour, he was spotted playing a MusicMan Bongo 5 HS in his signature "Inca Silver" (Flat Gray) finish on stage as opposed to his signature Yamaha instrument. This was the first time since before
Images and Words that Myung had toured with MusicMan instruments. On July 23, 2007, a posting on the Music Man online forum by the owner of Music Man, Sterling Ball,
stated with certainty that "I am speaking for both myself and the entire Music Man family in welcoming a wonderfully talented bassist and good guy, John Myung of Dream Theater. John has fallen in love with the prototypes that we made of the Bongo 6 and is now playing them exclusively. He is so in love with them that he wont let me tweak them. He is playing the first proto and has two others from the same batch. This is historic for us to have hit the nail on the head for an artist without any input, visit, or promise." He also stated that, for the first time since John was endorsed by Yamaha over 10 years ago, "It is not a signature bass it is part of the regular line." However, several years ago, Sterling Ball had stated that there was no chance of a six-string Bongo unless a "high-profile artist asked for one," so John Myung's desire for a six-string Music Man
can be seen as the genesis of the six-string Bongo. Myung is currently (as of May 2008) playing the 2 original six-string prototypes on Dream Theater's "Progressive Nation 2008" tour, a Flat Silver model very close the "Inca Silver" color on his signature Yamaha and a Black model both with Humbucker/Single Coil pickup combinations, as well as a single humbucker Flat Silver. On July 26, 2007, both he and
John Petrucci visited the Music Man factory to test some new instruments that were being made for them—in this visit Myung can be
seen with an Egyptian Smoke six-string with a H/SC pickup configuration. In an Interview in 2010 which was made due to his election for the greatest bass player of all time he states that he is working with Musicman on a modified Bongo with different types of wood which sometimes may be available for the public.
Other instruments
Myung also has used a 12 string Grand
Chapman Stick, an instrument primarily intended to be played by "tapping" the strings much as a pianist plays a keyboard, as well as strumming them or fingerpicking. To date, Myung has only used the Stick on four Dream Theater songs in the studio and live: "New Millennium", "Trial Of Tears", "Take Away My Pain" from
Falling Into Infinity, and "Misunderstood" from
Six Degrees of Inner Turbulence (although it has been brought into the studio for every recording session since and was the original instrument that the "Home" bassline was performed on until being switched to bass). He did, however, use the Stick on several tracks on
Sean Malone's first
Gordian Knot including "Srikara Tal" and "Redemption's Way." Myung also used a fretless bass on the
Dream Theater song "Through Her Eyes".
Amplification
Currently (as of May 2008) onstage, Myung uses all rackmount units for his sounds. As of the August 2005 issue of
Bass Player magazine detailing his on-stage equipment, he used two Demeter HBP-1 preamps, a Demeter VTDB-2B mono tube direct box, Demeter HXC-1 optical compressor, Ashdown ABM RPM-1 EVO II preamp and ABM APM 1000 Evo II power amp, a Pearce BC-1 preamp, Framptone 3-Banger (for switching between preamps and their different settings) and Mesa Big Block 750 amplifier. Myung does not use speaker cabinets onstage. Instead, he uses direct boxes that feed the signal from his instruments into the front-of-house mixing board. Many fans and viewers of their live DVDs complain that his signal is distinctly quieter than the rest of the band's when playing live compared to studio recordings, sometimes causing his solo sections to be almost inaudible.
Effects
On the Chaos in Motion Tour he used a Demeter VTDB-2B mono tube direct box, a Demeter HXC-1 Compressor and a Demeter HBP-1 Preamp for his direct signal. He also used two Mesa Bigblock 750 amplifiers and a Mesa Bigblock Titan V12 amplifier connected to a Mesa 2x12 cabinet and a Mesa 4x12 cabinet. All this is controlled by a Mesa high gain amp switcher. Furthermore he used a DBX 166xl compressor as well as some Furman units and a Shure wireless system. The only rackmount effect unit he used was a Eventide DSP 4000. In All this can be seen on a picture which is shown on the Mesa homepage. In addition you can see a MXR Phase 90 and a MXR double shot distortion pedal on his pedalboard. A Framptone AB Box as well as a Korg Racktuner and his Midi Footcontroller which is made by Custom Audio Electronics are also mounted on his pedalboard. Myung used to use a 4x10 Mesa Cabinet and 2x12 Mesa Cabinet. On some pictures you can see two Mesa Roadking heads next right to his cabinets. These might be also used to create his sound.
Apart from the various preamps that he uses for overdrive and distortion, the only "effect" Myung uses is an Eventide DSP4000 Ultra-Harmonizer for chorus, harmonization, and time-based effects: "I dig the Hyper Quad setting on the Eventide. It makes for a great wide, spatial effect that really brings my bass sound to life, especially live."
In 2011 he was seen in the studio using the Fractal Audio AXE FX as well as his mesa bigblock heads.
Equipment over the years
1998: Custom Build Noisegate, Rocktron Rack interface, Voltage Controlled Amplifier, Steward 4 Channel DI, Mesa Boogie Amp Switcher, modified Mesa Triaxis. Mesa M2000, Mesa Bass 400+, Mesa Abacus, Mesa Strategy 500, Mesa 2x10 wedge monitors, Mesa 1x15+4x10 Cabs, DBX 166, Yamaha spx900
2002: SWR SM900 Heads, Demeter Isocabs, two Pearce BC1 Preamps
2005: Ashdown RPM1 Preamp, Pearce BC1 Preamp, Mesa Bigblock 750, Ashdown PM1000 Poweramp, Eventide DSP4000, Demeter HBP-1 preamps, a Demeter VTDB-2B mono tube direct box, Demeter HXC-1 optical compressor
2007: Two Mesa Bigblock 750, Mesa Bigblock Titan V12, Eventide DSP4000, DBX 166XL, Demeter HBP-1 preamps, a Demeter VTDB-2B mono tube direct box, Demeter HXC-1 optical compressor, Mesa Powerhouse 4x10 and 2x12 Mesa Amp Switcher, Mesa Rectifiers
2010: Smaller setup for the tour with iron maiden an in south America. Eventide DSP4000, Demeter HBP-1 Preamp, Mesa Bigblock 750, Mesa M9, DBX 166XL, Mesa Amp Switcher
2011: In the studio Axe Fx, Bigblock 750
Technique
Myung mainly uses a two or three finger picking style in his playing. He also uses
slapping and popping on some songs and also uses
Tapping and
Harmonics in his bass playing. His tapping technique is demonstrated most prominently in the bass solo in "Metropolis part 1: The Miracle and The Sleeper". He uses his chorus effect to help the harmonics to ring out in his playing and sometimes plays chords consisting mostly of harmonics. This is heard most prominently in the intro riff of "Lifting Shadows off a Dream", the beginning of "The Glass Prison" and the end of "The Shattered Fortress" (which both use exactly the same riff). He uses tapping and fingerstyle on his Chapman Stick throughout "New Millennium". He occasionally uses a pick as well, namely on "These Walls" and the ending of "The Dark Eternal Night". For the song "These Walls" he played with a pick in the studio but later used fingerstyle when playing live.
Setup and tuning
Until his switch to Music Man John was using d'Addario XL roundwounds later he switched to the d'Addario Prosteels. He used gauges .032, .045, .065, .085, .105, .130. Live he likes to set his strings higher to "be more physical". In the Studio he likes the strings to be lower. Most of the songs are in standard 6 string tuning but for some songs he uses different tunings (according to a forum post in John Petrucci's Forum):
Tunings !! Songs
|
BEADGC |
Standard tuning for most songs
|
CEADGC |
As I Am, Honor Thy Father, In the Name of God, A Nightmare to Remember
|
DEADGC |
Endless Sacrifice, A Rite of Passage
|
Bb-Eb-Ab-Db-Gb-B |
The Root of All Evil
|
AEADGC |
These Walls
|
AEACGC |
Panic Attack (on the album 3rd string was at C only for the intro, and the 6th string may have been Bb)
|
Discography
Dream Theater - The Majesty Demos (1985)
Dream Theater – When Dream and Day Unite (1989)
Dream Theater – Images and Words (1992)
Dream Theater – Live At The Marquee (1993)
Dream Theater – Awake (1994)
Dream Theater – A Change of Seasons (1995)
Dream Theater – Falling Into Infinity (1997)
Dream Theater – Once In A LIVEtime (1998)
Platypus – When Pus Comes to Shove (1999)
Dream Theater – Metropolis Pt. 2: Scenes from a Memory (1999)
Platypus – Ice Cycles (2000)
Gordian Knot – Gordian Knot (album) (2000)
Dream Theater – Live Scenes From New York (2001)
The Jelly Jam – The Jelly Jam (2002)
Explorers Club – Raising the Mammoth (2002)
Dream Theater – Six Degrees of Inner Turbulence (2002)
Dream Theater – Train Of Thought (2003)
The Jelly Jam – The Jelly Jam 2 (2004)
Dream Theater – Live At Budokan (2004)
Dream Theater – Octavarium (2005)
Dream Theater – SCORE (2006)
Dream Theater – Systematic Chaos (2007)
Dream Theater - ''Chaos in Motion (2007–2008)
Dream Theater – Black Clouds & Silver Linings (2009)
Dream Theater – Wither (2009)
Dream Theater - A Dramatic Turn of Events (2011)
Videography
Dream Theater – Images And Words: Live In Tokyo (1993)
Dream Theater – Awake In Japan (1995)
John Myung – Progressive Bass Concepts (1996)
Dream Theater – 5 Years In A LIVEtime (1998)
Dream Theater – Metropolis 2000: Scenes from New York (2001)
Dream Theater – Live At Budokan (2004)
Dream Theater – When Dream And Day Reunite (2004)
Dream Theater – SCORE (2006)
Dream Theater – Chaos in Progress: The Making Of Systematic Chaos (2007)
Dream Theater – Chaos in Motion (2008)
Dream Theater – A Rite Of Passage (2009)
References
External links
Dream Theater site
Category:Dream Theater members
Category:1967 births
Category:Living people
Category:American heavy metal bass guitarists
Category:Berklee College of Music alumni
Category:Chapman Stick players
Category:American musicians of Korean descent
Category:People from Long Island
Category:American Christians
Category:Musicians from New York
Category:American people of Korean descent
bg:Джон Миунг
ca:John Myung
de:John Myung
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