Helloo guys,
i'v been practicing gypsy jazz for about 6 months coming from a blues/jazz background , i'm having issues with keeping the pick fixed between my thumb and index finger while playing La pompe, it slips sideways even when i apply some tension to keep it fixed but i dont know if you encountered this issue, i'm sure i myself is doing something wrong, mostly used to alt picking position before starting this new technique.
using a Vladimir Muzic Three-ator pick
Comments
I wish I had a definite answer for you because it used to happen to me and then it just stopped and not sure why. Lots of practice I guess. Check out all the technique vids from the pros. Always use proper technique and it will work itself out I believe. Don't need any rosin or fancy picks etc.
Good luck and be patient and enjoy the process!!! You will get there.
Hold the pick just a touch tighter than what's needed so it doesn't fly out of your fingers.
You can also try scratching the surface of your pick with a knife or something to make it rougher or glue a small piece of sandpaper on it to improve it's grip
Two Festival Django Reinhardt's ago at Samois, Max Baggerman (rhythm player for the Thomas Baggerman trio) showed me how he had reshaped his pick that coincidentally happened to be the same pick I use: Wegen Big City. He reshaped it so that the pick was circular rather than shaped like a teardrop. So you just cut off the pointed end and round it out with sandpaper so that the distance from the outer edge is the same all around, as the rounded edge is originally (so that end doesn't change).
It took me more than a year before I finally got around to do this myself, and what a difference it made! The pick simply never slips anymore!
I prefer the 1.8, but the Wegen Big City comes in two other sizes that work too (2.2 and 1.4). It's a matter of personal preference. I'm certain that the seven holes in the pick also help the pick hold its place. But the big difference came when it was reshaped to be circular.
One caveat, however. I can't really comment on how this would work for solo playing, because I don't do single note solos. But I've seen solo players who use the side of the pick when playing, and for those folks, I see no reason why this shouldn't work.
But as previously noted, there are a lot of other things that go into right hand technique that could affect the outcome of what happens to the pick while playing, but you really should give this a try. It might possibly end all your frustration with pick slippage.
Even so, the amount of pick between my fingers and the strings does not change. In other words, I have the same amount of pick space revealed between my thumb and forefinger and the strings. If the pick does rotate, it doesn't seem to rotate away from the strings or toward the strings. It appears to remain stationary.