T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
558.1 | a few tips | VOX1::WOODBURN | | Wed Mar 30 1988 09:59 | 40 |
|
From reading your note I'm not sure how advanced you are at playing.
Regardless, here's the best way I know how to increase flat picking
speed. I've played folk and blue grass for a number of years and
this is what worked for me.
One of the best ways to gain speed in any kind of guitar playing
is to practice with a metronome. Practice picking your country
G, E, D, A, and C scales at a low speed. Use alternate (up-down)
picking. As you get more comfortable with picking, increase the
rhythm speed of the metronome. Many players would rather have a
bone marrow transplant than use a metronome. However, if you practice
with one for 45 minutes to an hour a day, your speed will increase.
Some other helpful hints:
* Don't use the pointed edge of your pick. Use one of the
rounded corners of the pick. Hold the pick close so that not very
much of it is exposed from under your thumb and forefinger.
Use a medium or heavy pick. Light picks just don't cut
it (no pun intended).
* Try to play every day. A little every day is better than
a lot one or two nights a week.
* Use medium or light strings. I find that I can move best
over light strings but I prefer the sound of mediums.
* Make sure that when you're trying to pick fast, your wrist
is the only thing moving. Your forearm should be still.
Your forearm should only move when your strumming.
Well that's it. Try these suggestions and see what happens. Buy a
cheap battery powered metronome and practice with it. If you do
it faithfully, you will get results.
Good luck and happy strumming,
Rob
|
558.2 | What works for one... | ZYDECO::MCABEE | Give me the roses while I live | Thu Mar 31 1988 00:48 | 25 |
|
...may not work for another.
I have to quibble a bit. It's a very small minority of bluegrass
pickers who use the round corner of the pick. Doc, Dan and Tony
don't, though Tony uses a homemade pick that's not as pointed as
most. You'll generally get a crisper attack and more volume from
the point. Having said that, I'll now agree that the round corner
might help with the speed.
If you use the corner, then light guage strings might suit you,
but mainstream bluegrass pickers mostly use mediums. They give
better volume and tend to help with pick control - especially if
you play away from the bridge.
The wrist_vs_arm debate has been raging for years. It really depends
on the individual. My wrist control is much better than my arm
control, so I tend to use mainly wrist for faster stuff. Doc Watson
says he uses more arm than wrist. Feel it out.
I second the nomination for the metronome. It's been proven to
work, if you practice properly.
Bob
|
558.3 | Picking At 800MPH | PCCAD2::RICHARDJ | | Thu Mar 31 1988 09:34 | 26 |
|
Thanks Rob, and Bob,
last night I tried the round corner of the pick,
and it did improve my speed. I've been playing guitar for about
twenty years, but most of it was finger picking on a classical
guitar. The first 4 years when I started to play guitar it was in
a rock band, with an electric guitar. After I stopped playing in
a band I needed to find a way of playing guitar by myself, and
get used to not having a base guitar and drums accompaniment,
finger picking was the way to go for me. Now I'm learning bluegrass
and I have to learn flat picking taking the rock picking experience
I had some sixteen years ago. The picking that these guys in the
bluegrass field do just blows me away.
Another thing you guys might help me with
is learning songs ? Right now I'm learning from tapes, trying to
pick up the songs by listening and trying to play along. I'm doing
OK, but the picking is so fast that I lose notes and I'm not able
to complete certain pieces. When I was learning to play a five
string banjo years ago, a book on bluegrass banjo explained how
it was impossible to write bluegrass banjo music in the conventional
form. Is this true also of bluegrass guitar ? I don't think it is,
but I can imagine that it would be difficult to read.
thanks
Jim
|
558.4 | How about 1/2 speed? | CSC32::G_HOUSE | Greg House - CSC/CS | Thu Mar 31 1988 12:23 | 10 |
| If you want to go from tapes, you might consider purchasing one
of those cassette players which will do 1/2 speed. In last months
Guitar Player, I remember seeing at least two different ones. They
aren't exactly cheap. I don't remember the price, since I wasn't
really interested, but I think it was around $100-$200. One has
the play/rewind switches hooked up to some little bars which you
can operate with your feet. Just a thought, might help.
Greg
|
558.6 | learning the stuff | VOX1::WOODBURN | | Thu Mar 31 1988 14:57 | 27 |
|
Jim,
As far as learning the stuff: Blue grass guitar runs are mostly
variations on country scales. Most bluegrass pickers play the
standard coutry scales with various chromatic notes thrown in,
especially on fast runs. Chromatic notes are notes in between the
standard scale notes (If you've played for 20 years you probably know
what chromatics are but for the sake of completeness...). Chromatics
give scales a "funner," "funkier" sound.
Also, there are a lot of books out there on blue grass guitar. Most
books have the music notation as well as tabulation. Most are easy
to read and will help you learn songs (like "Old Joe Clark" and
"Under the Double Eagle"). I have a few and can bring them in if
you're interested.
Buy a few Norman Blake albums ("Blackberry Blossom," "Whiskey Before
Breakfast") and listen. You should be able to pick up a lot of the
runs just by listening.
Don't give up on the metronome. That will give you the technical
ability in a relativley short time.
Happy picking,
Rob
|
558.7 | Bluegrass is one word | ZYDECO::MCABEE | Give me the roses while I live | Thu Mar 31 1988 16:09 | 17 |
| One additional note on building up speed - be patient. Do most
of your playing within your current speed limit. If you do too
much playing at the ragged edge of your ability, you'll develop
sloppy picking habits. Slow and clean beats fast and sloppy.
Here's a regimen I'd recommend. Choose a set of scale exercises
and tunes that cover a good range of technique (tough string crossings,
cross-picking, hammering, etc.), and play them every time you practice.
Find a tempo (on the metronome), for each piece, that lets you play
it 'perfectly' and increase the tempo one metronome count per day.
If you start to get a little sloppy, just hold off on increasing
the tempo until it's smooth again.
Homespun Tapes has some bluegrass tapes and videos that would probably
be helpful, or at least fun to listen to.
Bob
|
558.8 | Pick Of The Picks | PCCAD2::RICHARDJ | | Fri Apr 01 1988 13:46 | 12 |
| RE: to all
Thanks to all. I feel I'm on the road now. I've been using the back
end of a pick similar to the small gibson's that someone had mentioned,
its working quit well. I've been wondering, do mandolin players use
a guitar pick or do they have a smaller pick ? As far as learning
the stuff, I'm gonna have to get in on some of the jam sessions
the Fiddler's Choice, has every now and then. Most of the music,
I've been taping is from 90.5 WICN, Worcester, on saturday mornings.
If anyone wants bluegrass music, thats where to get it.
Thanks
Jim
|
558.9 | Dan does it this way | NEXUS::DICKERSON | | Fri Apr 01 1988 14:47 | 8 |
| re .2 above I must disagree. Dan Crary is a strong believer
in using the round edge of a pick. He explains his reasons
for this in his book/cassette course ( which, by the way is
a pretty good intro to flatpicking).
Regards
Doug Dickerson
|
558.10 | Say what?? | ONID::LACHIUSA | Natural Stupidity | Fri Apr 01 1988 16:10 | 3 |
| re .8
What is the "Fiddler's Choice" ??
|
558.11 | Fiddlers Choice | PCCAD2::RICHARDJ | | Mon Apr 04 1988 09:37 | 7 |
| re: 8
Sorry for not providing all the info. The "Fiddler's Choice" is
a music store up or down in Jaffery N.H. which specializes in
acoustic instruments. They have hand made fiddles and mandolin's.
There right in the center of Jaffery, very easy to find.
Jim
|
558.12 | more tips for flatpickers | SNFFLS::MADDUX | Hedonist for hire - no job too easy | Mon Apr 04 1988 13:39 | 30 |
| One other point - ensure that you're playing correctly (i.e. with
good TONE and control) before you work on velocity. The most important
key to bluegrass is that the instrument should be played smoothly, and control
and tone are the real keys to that smooth sound.
"I'd lot rather hear someone play with control and tone, than hear a bunch of
notes go by fast without any musicality" - T. Rice.
Listen carefully to Doc, Crary, Rice, Steve Kaufman, especially
Mark O'Connor - they not only get the velocity, but each note is clearly
enunciated - you get the full beauty of the instrument with each passage.
I still marvel at the richness that Rice get's out of his instrument,
regardless of the tempo.
Another key to bluegrass (started to say 'the other ' but there
are about a thousand things to learn) is to work out the arrangement to
a fiddle tune, then stick with it. That's where the velocity comes in,
and you maintain the control and tone that you've developed at the slower
speeds. Chromatic scales with a metronome are invaluable throughout the
range of the instrument.
Pat Flynn often mentions the importance of the "5 T's" of music -
Touch, Tone, Timing, Taste, and Tuning.
Pick up a copy of FRETS and start reading Crary's column regularly.
Look me up when you're in Colorado Springs.
Mike.
|
558.13 | Lot's of good stuff in Frets | IND::BAUER | Evan Bauer,SWS NYO, 352-2385 | Tue Apr 05 1988 14:50 | 10 |
| A second on the value of Frets magazine for the bluegrass player
-- in addition to Dan Crary's column, they have had a number of
"clinic" articles with Tony Rice, Norman Blake, and others over
the last couple of years. They have a back issue service or maybe
you can find someone in your area with copies to lone. I could
xerox a couple or three of Crary's column's for you and send by
US Mail if you haven't a closer or more useful source.
- Evan
|
558.14 | that's spelt like "Loan Star" son... | IND::BAUER | Evan Bauer,SWS NYO, 352-2385 | Tue Apr 05 1988 14:52 | 1 |
|
|
558.15 | Where | PCCAD2::RICHARDJ | | Wed Apr 06 1988 14:14 | 4 |
| RE:13
Where do you buy this Frets Magazine in Mass ?
Jim
|
558.16 | | FROST::SIMON | Blown away in the country...Vermont | Wed Apr 06 1988 15:39 | 10 |
| re: Where do you buy this Frets Magazine in Mass ?
Look in your favorite Music Store. Most larger bookstore also
carry it in their magazine section. It's a guitar player
sister magazine as is Keyboard. You can also subscribe for a
year for about $16 or so.
-gary
|
558.17 | B. Dalton! | CSC32::G_HOUSE | Greg House - CSC/CS | Wed Apr 06 1988 22:33 | 4 |
| I believe that they carry 'Frets'. It's a nationwide chain, seen
in better malls everywhere...
Greg
|
558.18 | | ZYDECO::MCABEE | Give me the roses while I live | Wed Apr 13 1988 19:51 | 10 |
| re .8 There are so-called mandolin picks which are smaller than
most guitar picks, but I don't know any mandolin players who use
them. I use the same picks on guitar, mandolin or banjo - heavy
guage guitar picks. One of the best mandolin players I've ever
known uses triangular, slightly rounded tortoise shell picks. They're
about 1/8 inch thick - no kiddin' - and they don't flex at all.
re .9 Dan usta use the point. Things keep evolving.
Bob
|