I come from a predominantly alternate picking background and I've been playing around with the downstroke idea for descending arpeggios for a few weeks. The truth is, I just don't have the speed with downstrokes to do anything useful. What do people think about using a sort of hybrid approach to Gypsy picking, whereby I use the standard downstroke approach for ascending arpeggios, but alternate picking for descending arpeggios. I think if this is acceptable, I could definitely achieve a more realistic speed.
Does anyone else use this as an approach?
Comments
I asked Gonzalo Barguera about this in a lesson and he implied that you basically mess with the licks so they don't make you do high speed descending arpeggios. for example, when playing a descending arp, you can add passing tones, like a half or whole step above the chord tone you're playing. this basically switches your picking around so it's down up down up and so on moving from string to string. Stephan wremble calls it the "above approach".
Also, with practice, you can get much faster with the all down strokes on an arp. I can do it faster then I ever thought I would be able to since I began practicing it that way.
As for why all the down strokes, gypsies simply like the way down strokes sound in terms of projection so much that they do it this way. As you learn more of the licks, or phrasing tendencies in the style, you will find that the down strokes to start any new string tends to work rather intuitively with them.
one other thing, Paul Mehling of hot club sf told me to not worry so much about the all down strokes stuff, and just make sure you're playing every note as loudly as you can.
I go with something somewhere in the middle.
"one other thing, Paul Mehling of hot club sf told me to not worry so much about the all down strokes stuff, and just make sure you're playing every note as loudly as you can. "
Was he implying that you can still start new strings with an upstroke provided you play it loudly?
I"m at the point where I want to decide one way or the other as to whether to spend all that time changing from alternate to downstroke picking. I can sense it's going to be a lot of work. Whereas, if I were to just stick to alternate picking for descending arpeggios I would be able to learn licks more rapidly and increase my vocabulary faster.
Also, don't forget the impact that changing your right hand will have on your note choice/rhythm and the kind of things you will play. These things are only part intellectual/aural, and owe a lot to the physical approach of the player. Your brain makes many of the decisions, but it also reacts and responds to the situations that your particular technique pushes you into.
Jon
I think what paul Mehling was trying to instill in me was an understanding that I should pick loudly, which tends to force you to organically do more rest stroke picking. I practiced this way without knowing about the gypsy picking book or anything, and after a few years, my picking just naturally became rest stroke dominant.
It's been in the past 2 years that I've practiced speeding up playing a descending arp with only down strokes. I can go about 4 times faster than I could 2 years ago, though when soloing, I tend to add passing tones to my descending arps so they, as I mentioned, flip the picking around.
Cheers !
anthony
Should I avoid this and go for strict down strokes on new strings approach, even if this means I'm playing down strokes on weak beats and upstrokes on strong beats?
I always figured that it would make sense to have more accent on the strong beats... which I guess in some way is incompatible with ALL patterns using a strict downstroke on new string approach.
One other question I had: I noticed watching some top players that they don't anchor their right hand anywhere, it appears that even when picking solos they have a floating hand as they would with playing rhythm. is this true or just an illusion? I've always used my pinky and ring finger to anchor my hand by resting them either on the body of the guitar or on the strings(when playing low notes). Should this be avoided in GJ, or is it acceptable? I seem to remember hearing that Stochelo does it too. Am I wrong?
In general, the principal is to use downstrokes whenever you switch strings. Also, the right hand isn't anchored at all.
Second the gypsy picking book recommendation. In general, I hear time and again that everyone uses it.
As for the "posting" or anchoring of your pinky and or ring finger, I respectfully disagree that you don't do it. In fact, I've asked several people about this and they say that if you watch close enough, even the greats will anchor just a little bit. It's just way more subtle and you barely notice it.
In general, I don't find allowing the pinky to anchor affects the ability to rest stroke pick. you just have to get the hang of not posting really firmly and rigidly, but allowing your post to almost float and relax more.
Everyone is going to do it a little different (as evidenced in the Dinette thread). As long as the general idea is there, it will happen. It's finally really setting in for me.