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Forearm tension

robertsaundersrobertsaunders Brookline, MA✭✭✭✭ 2007 Gitane DB-255
edited May 2007 in Gypsy Picking Posts: 244
When I work up the speed of my tremolo picking on two or three strings at a time and sustain it until the point where I'm tired, I feel it in my forearm, not the wrist, though I'm keeping as much of the energy as I can focussed in the wrist. Is this okay?

Comments

  • Joli GadjoJoli Gadjo Cardiff, UK✭✭✭✭ Derecho, Bumgarner - VSOP, AJL
    Posts: 542
    Indeed, the muscles of your fingers, wrist... everything in your hand is somehow, some way attached, linked to your forearm, directly with a muscle of with a tendon.
    Move your fingers and look at your arm, you'll see them working !
    But also, these muscles are a little bit like your biceps, they get tired rapidly.
    John McLaughlin said that when he works a lot and feels his muscles very tense, he likes to rest them holding a small bottle containing a warm liquid. It relaxes your muscles but keep them warm.
    Just give it some rest, it's not a workout !!! :D
    - JG
  • MichaelHorowitzMichaelHorowitz SeattleAdministrator
    Posts: 6,180
    The tremolo should be pretty relaxed. If you're feeling tension I would stop right away. Build speed slowly, making sure it's relaxed. At faster tempos the motion gets smaller.

    Sometimes you have to dig in a bit to get more volume...but in general I'd avoid that. Especially when first starting.
  • robertsaundersrobertsaunders Brookline, MA✭✭✭✭ 2007 Gitane DB-255
    Posts: 244
    I do tend to go all out when correcting technique. I used to study drums with all the rudiments and exercises. The speed-building concept is similar to this, but there was usually a point where I felt a quantum leap in improvement...sort of a revelation, a "eureka" moment. I'm hoping this will be the same, so I get impatient. The single-string tremolo is particularly hard because it's like trying to bat a baseball out of tree with a thirty-foot pole: uncoordinated jerking and bumping into things.

    Thanks for the replies.

    -Rob
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