Posted on Leave a comment

I Practiced at Home With a Double Bass Mute for a Month — Did I Get Noise Complaints?

Hi, I’m Toru Hoshino, a bass teacher.

In this article, I (living in a one-room apartment in Tokyo at the time, in 2017) tested whether practicing upright bass at home with a double bass mute would actually get me complaints from neighbors.

This article is for:

· Anyone curious about trying a double bass mute

· Anyone worried that practicing upright bass might bother their neighbors

If that’s you, I hope this is useful — read on.

To give you the conclusion up front: no, I didn’t get any complaints.

Contents

The Double Bass Mute

You attach the mute to the tip of the bridge like this.

Even just this mutes the sound quite a bit. It might be hard to tell from a description alone, so I recorded myself bowing an open string with and without the mute.

Before muting:

After muting:

These were recorded with an iPhone placed about 30 cm (roughly a foot) from the instrument, using the default voice memo app.

In the end, whether you’ll get complaints or not really comes down to your specific living situation. Even with a mute on, the bass still puts out a noticeable amount of sound, so it’s not the case that “if you use a mute, you’ll never get a complaint, guaranteed.” That said, as someone who practices daily in a Tokyo apartment while staying mindful of my neighbors, here’s what I keep in mind.

I hope this gives you a useful reference point if you’re thinking about practicing upright bass at home.

What I Keep in Mind When Practicing With a Mute

Practice When Neighbors Are Likely Out

My neighbors seem to be out at work on weekdays, so I practice during weekday daytime hours.

No Playing at Night

I try to wrap up by around 7 PM, since I’d rather not draw attention to myself.

Treat It as Short-Session Practice Only

When I have a free 30 minutes or so, I’ll work on intonation or repeat a phrase a few times.

When I can carve out two or three hours, I head to a rehearsal space where I can actually play at full volume.

Does a Mute Fully Eliminate the Sound?

No, not completely. For reference, the unplugged acoustic sound of a Yamaha SLB series silent bass is far quieter than a muted acoustic upright.

If your neighbors are particularly sensitive to noise, they may still complain.

That said, a lot of people who buy a mute end up saying “huh, it’s not as quiet as I expected,” so I’d recommend trying one out at a music shop before buying.

Want Personalized Feedback on Your Playing?

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 →

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *