Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
Bassetorius is a French music resource website for learners of “modern music.” According to the site description, it focuses on music learning and the life of musicians, offering articles, tools, and collections of video courses, such as ear training, harmony courses, backing tracks, and more. It feels more like a music learning resource library and navigation site than an online course platform with clearly defined classes, schedules, and teacher support.
The site covers a wide range of topics: bass, guitar, drums, vocals, jazz, music theory, audio and effects, music apps, downloadable materials, and more. The bass section includes choosing an instrument, tuning, fingering techniques, slap, walking bass, backing tracks, and other topics. The guitar section covers instrument selection, tuning, left- and right-hand techniques, chords, solos, and maintenance. The drum content includes electronic and acoustic drums, rudiments, rhythms, fills, solos, and equipment setup. The music theory section includes harmony analysis, chord charts, ear training, rhythm reading, and musical mathematics.
The crawled text does not show any clear information about fees, subscriptions, course purchases, or payment methods, nor does it mention completion certificates, certification systems, or exam pathways. Therefore, it should not be regarded as a career-certification course product.
Its strengths are detailed categorization and broad coverage, ranging from beginner topics such as choosing an instrument and organizing practice, to practical scenarios such as preparing for jam sessions, recording, and using online ensemble tools like Jamulus/Sonobus. It is suitable for musicians who want to look up information as needed. There are also entries for PDFs, sheet music examples, accompaniments, and songbooks, making it fairly practical. The drawbacks are the lack of a systematic learning path, lesson schedule, teacher introductions, assignment feedback, and customer support. The content is mainly in French, which makes it less friendly for Chinese-speaking users.
It is suitable for self-directed learners of bass, guitar, drums, vocals, or jazz/improvisation, as well as amateur musicians preparing for jams or looking for accompaniments, songbooks, sheet music examples, and music apps. It is less suitable for users who need Chinese-language explanations, regular teacher guidance, learning supervision, or certificate-backed credentials.
The page does not provide information on access performance from mainland China, and the site uses a French domain with hosting information indicating OVH. Actual access speed, video availability, and the reachability of external links cannot be determined from the text alone, so this is marked as unknown.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on bassetorius.fr official site.
bassetorius.fr is an France Resource Sites provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Limited (proxy recommended). Click "Visit Official Site" to reach bassetorius.fr directly.