Try GOLD - Free
P-Funky
Bass Player
|December 2019
P-Nut, as most people call 311 bassist Aaron Wills, is a man on a mission. We ask him about his plans to deliver the groove to the people
-

Pop, rock, pop-rock— whatever 311 do, people like it a lot. Ten million or so album sales since the Nebraska-raised quartet formed in 1988, the band have stamped their mark on American musical culture, without ever becoming too commercial. Together, the musicians—Nick Hexum (vocals, guitar), Doug Martinez (DJ), Tim Mahoney (guitar), Aaron Wills (bass), and Chad Sexton (drums)—have delivered 13 albums, the latest of which, Voyager, keeps the train a-rolling nicely with its radio-friendly textures.
Perhaps at odds with the band’s choice of music, bassist Wills—apparently nicknamed ‘P-Nut’ because of the shape of his cranium, although you’d have to ask him for details—is a monster of a bass player. He specializes in insanely complex funk lines straight from the Bootsy and Flea school, although of course he usually backs off to serve the songs. How did such a talent emerge, we want to know...
From the outside, being in 311 looks like a lot of fun.
It’s such a fun project, especially that it’s so long term and we get to do what we want as much as possible. That’s what our fans have given us—but I think we can still take more advantage of it. I listened to the new Tool and Baroness albums, and there’s so much room for creative expression in the present tense right now.
Are you happy with your new album?
Yes, I love Voyager, but as it was coming out, I was thinking, gosh, I wish we had a few more months on it. There were a few things I would have loved to have done, but it was all about hitting the summer tour in the States, and making sure that there was new music that we could play for our audience and not have it be the same set a few years in a row.
You play some pretty funky bass parts. How do they come about?
This story is from the December 2019 edition of Bass Player.
Subscribe to Magzter GOLD to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 10,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
MORE STORIES FROM Bass Player

Bass Player
Freekbass
The funk master talks us through five career high points.
1 min
Holiday 2021

Bass Player
ASHDOWN RM-800-EVO ll
What a lightweight! Kev Sanders tests the new head from Ashdown
3 mins
Holiday 2021

Bass Player
DUVOISIN Standard 5
Mike Brooks gives this Swiss-style five a road test…
3 mins
Holiday 2021

Bass Player
I WAS THERE!
A historic moment in bass world – recalled by those who were there to see it
2 mins
Holiday 2021

Bass Player
BAREFACED - One10T Cabinet
A new Barefaced cab? Kev Sanders feels the quality
3 mins
Holiday 2021

Bass Player
KRIST NOVOSELIC
It’s 30 years since the release of Nirvana’s era-defining album, Nevermind, and high time that we revisited this 2011 chat with the great bassist turned political activist, Krist Novoselic, a musician who witnessed a truly chaotic period in music history
11 mins
Holiday 2021

Bass Player
BASS PLAYER AWARDS 2021
After a year off thanks to the pesky virus, BP’s annual Lifetime Achievement Awards return—and this time we add a new category. Raise your glass to this year’s winners, Marcus Miller, Gail Ann Dorsey, John Taylor and Charles Berthoud.
22 mins
Holiday 2021

Bass Player
RUSH TO READ
Rush’s Geddy Lee will release an “epic” memoir in 2022
2 mins
Holiday 2021

Bass Player
STAYING POWER
Tal Wilkenfeld’s recent album Love Remains features a five-string in tenor tuning with a capo. Ellen O’Reilly finds out why…
5 mins
Holiday 2021
Bass Player
TONEWOODS EXPLAINED
Do woods really determine tones?
3 mins
Holiday 2021
Translate
Change font size