As a relative GJ newbie I have been fooling around with picks.
So I did a glance over "search" here to see what people said about picks and found things like "these feel good" , "I really like these" etc etc but very little about the differences of tone between picks. Some of that may be because it's expensive to start comparing so many picks but my guess is people have experimented some. I have been using a tortoise shell like pick I picked up from **** and like it, I also tried out a Django pick from Michael and between these 2 had not touched my Wegen's in months. Just before an acoustic jam I pulled out the Wegen's and to my surprise they were not as mellow as the former 2 picks but much brighter and realized they would carry better in a jam. Using an amp and pickup changes that dynamic but for straight acoustic I realized in my past jam situations I would have been heard better using a Wegen. On the other side of this I would probably record with the tortoise shell type pics which sound less harsh but again that depends on the song. BTW my Wegen 2 and 5 mil's sounded similar to each other.
Anyway looking to see what others have discovered.
Comments
The search for the perfect pick, or the resignation that it simply doesn't exist, seems to be a part of the journey. I have lots of friends who freak out over picks I hate and I myself have fallen in and out of love with at least a dozen different and expensive picks. Sometimes I play them and wonder what I was thinking, but sometimes it is like hanging out with an old friend.
Enjoy the journey.
Anthony my technique could certainly be better, I can't play my fastest stuff at full volume except sweep stuff, I still need to bring it down a notch. I noticed in the short time we played at DF in Mill Valley you were very loud playing rhythm and I commented on that, it may also be because you were facing me and the room was very live. When i play with Patrick Ciliberto (Gonzalo's ex rhythm player) I have far less of that issue though it is still occasionally there. We are usually not in a live room and we don't face each other directly so that may be part of it.
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As far as the volume of my guitar blasting you in the face, that was due to 4 things -
a) My guitar IS really loud
b) I play loud
c) You were kneeling right in front of my guitar hearing it head on. and
d) I was excited to see someone who actually had a Manouche style guitar with some real playing experience after sitting in relative silence due to the way the workshop played out... so I was probably hitting the strings extra hard.
Cheers !
Anthony
no problems, I still have to work on my volume, not sure i'll get there though as I have some tendinitis. I was excited too to see someone who could play as there were no advanced players in that class. I had only wished we could have hung out some. Certainly considering going back next year as Santa Barbara is a reasonable day trip.
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Threadjack question: clearly it will change in a jam, but has anyone noticed a penchant in European players to have the lead player to one side or the other on stage? I've never really looked for this detail, maybe I'll pay attention in the future.