
An 80s electro-funk bass is tight, punchy, and percussive, with a strong low end and a snappy filter movement. Think early electro, boogie, and old-school hip-hop — simple notes, big groove, no excess.
This sound is perfect for the UB-1 Mini because it focuses on classic analog fundamentals.
Why:
Square waves deliver a thick, hollow funk bass that cuts without sounding harsh — a staple of 80s electro.
You want the bass round but punchy, not whistling or acidic.
This defines the electro-funk character.
Effect:
Each note opens quickly, then snaps back — creating that classic “duh-wah” funk movement.
Notes should stop cleanly.
No long tails — electro bass is precise and rhythmic.
Use glide sparingly for slides between notes — classic electro flavor.
Electro-funk bass should be stable, not wobbly.
The UB-1 Mini shines with light external processing.
If it grooves without chords or leads — you’ve nailed it.
Too dull?
→ Increase filter cutoff slightly
Too sharp?
→ Lower envelope amount or resonance
Not punchy enough?
→ Shorten amp decay and filter decay
A real 80s electro-funk bass is:
Don’t over-program it.
Let the rhythm and filter envelope do the talking.
This setup will give you a tight, authentic 80s electro-funk bass on the Behringer UB-1 Mini — perfect for electro, boogie, hip-hop, and funk-influenced tracks.