Favourite plectrum?
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- light rail coyote
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- Dogma Hollow
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I don't really have that problem, probably more due to different guitars/techniques. My main acoustic is a Martin, and it's pretty bass-heavy. Thicker picks make it sound really boomy, at least with the way I play, so I use thins.light rail coyote wrote:I hate thin picks, you loose all the picking dynamics. because a thin pick absorbs so much the energy in how much it flexes, your picking and strumming will all sound the same.
- light rail coyote
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- Mike
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Not really. A Plectrum gives you a completely different attack and tonality than using your fingers even if you're using your fingers like a pick.
If can't understand that I really feel for you as a guitarist. It's like the whole Bass with pick or fingers debate, both are equally valid, and that's because they SOUND DIFFERENT.
If can't understand that I really feel for you as a guitarist. It's like the whole Bass with pick or fingers debate, both are equally valid, and that's because they SOUND DIFFERENT.
I use the orange .60 dunlops. I used to use really heavy ones, (2mm at one point, like a nickel) and then moved down to mediums, always hated thins, find the .60mms to be in the middle leaning towards medium. A tad more flexible, but not wussy. Fender make some as well that are identical.
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- stewart
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if you drop plectrums, try my double sided ticky-tape trick (mentioned above somewhere). works a treat. i used to get cramps in my right hand from clenching the plectrum too hard onstage (adrenalin) but no longer. it's cheating a wee bit, but means i can get to the end of a set without crying.Reece wrote:aye. i prefer me fingers on acoustic but you'd never get the attack i like on a electric with fingers.
i'm more comfortable using fingers though, i tend to drop plectrums and do things like completely miss strums sometimes 'cause my hands are both as useless as each other.
I used to hate thin picks, but I've really started to love them. Mind you, thin to me is anything less than .75mm. I feel it gives me more attack on single notes, and helps with leads a little bit. The really thin, like .1 mm are the picks I find unuseable, but down to about .3 mm I enjoy.
However, Dunlop Jazz IIIs are the best picks ever made. 1mm or something like that.
However, Dunlop Jazz IIIs are the best picks ever made. 1mm or something like that.
- BobArsecake
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If you do drop it though you'll never be able to pick it up! For the floor is stronger than man D:stewart wrote:if you drop plectrums, try my double sided ticky-tape trick (mentioned above somewhere). works a treat. i used to get cramps in my right hand from clenching the plectrum too hard onstage (adrenalin) but no longer. it's cheating a wee bit, but means i can get to the end of a set without crying.Reece wrote:aye. i prefer me fingers on acoustic but you'd never get the attack i like on a electric with fingers.
i'm more comfortable using fingers though, i tend to drop plectrums and do things like completely miss strums sometimes 'cause my hands are both as useless as each other.