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
For strummy strummy stuff I just use a dunlop .75mm (or whatever it is, the dark grey one).
For more flatpicking stuff, I use a brand whose name totally escapes me, supposed to be a poor mans bluechip. It's all white, if that helps.
I'm not locked in here with you, you are locked in here with me.
Fingerstyle with a little nail
Fingerstlye with thumb pick
Completely depends on what the music/style demands, and whether I'm amplified or not.
My current go to selection is the Dunlop Flex Triangle 1.14, and the D’Andea Celluloid Heavy (& sometimes Medium Heavy).
If I lose the thumbnail, I use a thumbpick, (worn high on the thumb nearly on the knuckle)
If I lose a finger nail, I tend not to play (acoustic) at all until it has grown a couple of mm
I cannot and do not like, playing with "fleshy bits"
just because you do, doesn't mean you should.
Strum using thumb and first finger.
I'm not locked in here with you, you are locked in here with me.
Just remember that @bertie's definition of fleshy bits may be different
just because you do, doesn't mean you should.
I do keep my nails at a particular length, just barely extending beyond the fingertip so that (when picking single notes) I can use all-flesh, or rotate my wrist a bit for some nail, or - a party-trick effect that I over-use shamelessly - flesh and nail with the tip of the finger and the nail, being a few mm apart, sounding separately but very close together. It sounds a bit like using a shark-tooth pick, sort of the acoustic equivalent of stepping on the overdrive pedal. Purists would be horrified. Classical players would probably shoot me. (It's the sort of silly thing that flamenco players do all the time and make work. Who knows? Maybe it's an actual proper technique with a fancy Spanish name!)
I'm not locked in here with you, you are locked in here with me.
Strumming varies depending on what I'm playing. Either thumb or back of the hand for downstrokes and a brush up with fingers for the up stroke.
None of the above is set in stone and can vary depending on the song and can in fact be a a combination of the above in the same song.
Picking and strumming with a Herco flex 75.
I sometimes strum with the back of my finger nails (down) and back of my thumbnail (up).
I taper my nails from shorter on the bass side, to longer on the treble side. It looks pretty horrendous but produces the best sound for me. You can angle your fingers to get more or less nail, which in turn gives more room to vary the tone you produce.
I saw a video ages ago where Michael Watts (who posts here from time to time) explained it. It's not on his channel anymore but this one is quite similar.
I found polishing them as he suggests also made a huge difference.
I can't help about the shape I'm in, I can't sing I ain't pretty and my legs are thin
But don't ask me what I think of you, I might not give the answer that you want me to
Never use a thumbpick.
Mostly I favour light or medium gauge
Dunlop or EB "tortoiseshell" - I file the "blade" down to a symmetrical point - just find it better, not explanation just do
If I find em a bit tight, I drop em in hot water for a few seconds, get em a bit malleable and "fit"
just because you do, doesn't mean you should.
Preferred pick is a Jim Dunlop (0.88mm, grey dimpled one) but recently been using a range of smooth, smaller, thinner ones acquired as freebies.
Fingerpicking typically with flesh of thumb and nails of fingers or with a pick and fingernails, depending on style of music.
I was "worried" you were recommending those "pick/thumbpick" hybrid things - bloody awful
EDIT
HOW MUCH ??
ah there's 8 in a pack........................ somebody must to smaller packs
just because you do, doesn't mean you should.