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What Is an Upright Bass? A Beginner’s Guide to the Instrument

This article is written by Toru Hoshino, a jazz bassist and instructor based in Japan who teaches online lessons to students worldwide. In this article, he gives a beginner-friendly introduction to the upright bass — what it actually is and how it’s different from playing electric.

Not nearly as many people play upright bass as play electric bass or guitar, so a lot of people simply aren’t sure what the instrument actually is. Here’s a quick rundown.

Contents

What Is an Upright Bass, Exactly?

Upright bass
Double bass
Contrabass
Bass fiddle

There are a lot of different names for it, but they all refer to the same instrument:

An upright bass standing in a room

In classical circles, it’s usually called “double bass” or “contrabass.” In rock and rockabilly circles, “upright bass” is common. In jazz, people often just call it “the bass.”

Parts of the Instrument

Here’s a diagram of the main parts:

Diagram labeling the parts of an upright bass

How Big Is an Upright Bass?

Measuring with a tape from the floor up to the top of the scroll, as shown in the photos, it comes out to roughly 190 cm (about 6 feet 3 inches).

Measuring the height of an upright bass with a tape measure

Measuring near the scroll of an upright bass

The strings are strung like this:

Strings on an upright bass

When you pluck a string, it vibrates the body. That vibration travels through the top plate, down through an internal rod called the sound post, and the whole body resonates to produce the sound.

Close-up of the upright bass body

Here’s a look inside the body and the sound post:

Inside view of an upright bass showing the sound post

And here’s what it sounds like. It might not come across fully on a phone recording, but the acoustic sound pressure is huge — hearing it live is genuinely powerful.

A Few Notable Parts

This is the bridge, which supports the tension of the strings.

Close-up of the bridge on an upright bass

This is the endpin at the bottom, which you adjust to match your height.

Endpin at the bottom of an upright bass

This is a pickup, sold separately. It’s basically a microphone that picks up the string vibrations, and I use it when I need to run through an amp in a larger venue.

A pickup attached to an upright bass

Tuning an Upright Bass

I tune mine using a standard clip-on tuner or a tuning fork.

Tuning an upright bass with a clip-on tuner

The tuning is the same as electric bass:

The open E string matches the open 4th string on electric bass.
The open A string matches the open 3rd string on electric bass.
The open D string matches the open 2nd string on electric bass.
The open G string matches the open 1st string on electric bass.

Diagram showing the E, A, D, and G strings from thickest to thinnest

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: How much does an upright bass cost?

Prices vary enormously — anywhere from around $700–800 on the low end up into five figures or beyond.

More expensive instruments are generally better quality, of course, but if you’re a beginner, it’s genuinely hard to judge what’s worth paying for. I’d recommend starting with something aimed at beginners.

Q: How do you transport an upright bass?

Whether I’m walking, taking a car, or using public transportation, I always move the bass in a case.

Personally, I use a case like this:

An upright bass in a padded case

…and I strap it onto a dedicated set of wheels often called a “bass buggy” to wheel it around.

A bass buggy used to transport an upright bass

Q: How do you practice?

I practice at home in my apartment, but only during the day out of consideration for my neighbors. I’m lucky to have an understanding landlord.

When I practice at night, I use an electric upright bass instead — it doesn’t put out much volume, so it’s convenient for practicing quietly.

Q: Why play such a huge instrument?

I actually started out on electric bass. Once I got into jazz, more and more of the people around me were upright players, and honestly, I kind of just got swept up in it.

These days, though, I genuinely love it for that deep low end — that’s what keeps me playing it.

So that’s a quick rundown of what an upright bass actually is.

Want Personalized Feedback on Your Playing?

Upright bass brings its own set of challenges — posture, hand position, intonation — that are genuinely hard to self-diagnose without someone watching you play.

This is exactly the kind of thing that’s hard to fix alone — and where having a teacher makes all the difference.

At Line on Bass, I offer an online lesson service where you send me a video of your playing, and I give you specific, detailed feedback — every single day if you want.

Students from around the world are using this to fix exactly these kinds of issues and steadily improve their jazz bass skills.

Check Out the Lesson Service →

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