Hi. Just received the book. Thanks. Excellent book. I
have your book on Gypsy picking, which is also
excellent. I come from a bebop mainstream jazz
background, like yourself. And my picking technique is
similar to Jimmy Bruno's technique, moving from the
elbow. Which is vastly different from the Gypsy
technique. And I also have a video by Paul Mehling
about picking technique. In that video, he
demonstrates rotating the wrist as welll as the rest
stroke.
I have a question, if you wouldnt mind. How is the
great speed as demonstrated by these great Gypsy
players, achieved? Is it the rest stroke in
combination with a wrist rotation? I am able to
achieve lots of speed by moving from the elbow. But in
videos I have seen of the great Gypsy players, it
seems to be sometimes a "pushing" of the rest stroke,
or maybe a wrist rotation. Its hard to tell. Jimmy
Rosenberg appears to almost push he pick into the
string. Sometimes I think that Stochelo Rosenberg, who
seems so incredibly relaxed, does both, a push or a
wrist rotation.
How do these guys accomplish this great speed and Is
there a video that might demonstrate the proper way?
Comments
thanks, glad you like it!
There's really no trick to it, other then becoming extremely proficient at the rest stroke technique. Once you get familar with all the idiomatic fingerings and picking patterns in the book, it's just practice, practice, practice.
Again, just lots of practice. You can check lots of videos here
: http://www.djangobooks.com/archives/vid ... ncoop.html
This video also has lots of close up footage of the right hand: Bireli Lagrene
-Nelson
The main thing the throws people off is timing. That's were the metronome comes in. Most people having trouble with speed are actually not too slow, but too fast! They're rushing everything, causing them too miss notes. In most cases all you need to do is make sure your eighth notes are timed right, and you'll be able to play a lot faster.
Good luck!
'm
Here's a quote from an interesting site: www.musicalfossils.com
(especially for us poor creatures who didn't start playing at the age of 5).