Query failed: connection to localhost:9312 failed (errno=111, msg=Connection refused).
It looks like you're new here. If you want to get involved, click one of these buttons!
Subscribe to our Patreon, and get image uploads with no ads on the site!
Base theme by DesignModo & ported to Powered by Vanilla by Chris Ireland, modified by the "theFB" team.
Comments
On an electric I just hear a volume increase. Truth be told I always reach for a Dunlop Gator grip or any other plastic/nylon plectrum first
I tend to go for the ebony variants - a nice woody feel, pretty hard, wear nicely and not as scrape-y as other woods. I do go through one every two rehearsals, though, and one every gig. It's quite the expensive habit.
It's a good idea to buy a range of different picks/plectrums and trust your ears to tell you which gauge and material best suits the guitar but also different musical styles.
I have 4 acoustics and I use different plectrums for each guitar as they all respond differently.
Personally I trust Dava picks as you can actually change the way they interact with your guitar by simple changing where you hold the pick.
*An Official Foo-Approved guitarist since Sept 2023.
I think far too many acoustic guitar players ignore pick selection. You can make one guitars sound like a few dozen simply by mixing up your pick usage.
I've known people bring guitars back to the shop because they didn't find the guitar bright enough when they got it home. We play the guitar for them with a selection of picks and also without a pick and it's often a revelation to them.
100% - as well as how they hold it, the way they address the strings, their whole picking arm positioning and technique. And then the same magnitude of variation again with string selection. It's always my first thought when I hear or read people saying this guitar is too bright, that guitar is too bassy etc...what have you actually done to try and get anything else out of it?
Lot of players out there who obsess about tone in the electric side of their playing but seem to work on the basis that an acoustic guitar just has a sound and they're not responsible for pulling anything out of it. There are so many guitars out there that have never produced anything near what they're capable of tone or volume-wise.
Rather than shelling out for Bluechip picks, try Wegen picks. I find the 1.4mm really compliments my guitar (and my technique) and has lasted years (with considerable use).
There are so many variables to consider though (choice of strings, pick material, style of song etc.). If I want a mellower tone I have a John Pearse pick that must be about 2mm. Buy a few and see what works I suppose.
Havent tried John Pearse. Is that the casein one?