On
Joscho Stephan's performance of Nuages at http://de.youtube.com/watch?v=xV8QvglnJ9U he alternates between fingerpicking and plectrum use. Watch the end of the first bridge, while he is accompanying the fiddle player. He seems to pull his pick up into his palm or between a couple of fingers, play open-handed for a while using several right hand fingers, and then recover the pick and resume picking.
Any idea where the pick is going? I've been experimenting with a few methods, but none seem really promising. Obviously with practice all sorts of physical tricks are possible, but this would have to be very reliable -- dropping the pick is quite embarrassing
. I have tended to stick my pick in my mouth, or use pick-and-fingers techniques, but neither really lets me do what I want. Thanks for any suggestions. -- Trevor
Comments
I have always uncurled my pick hand fingers a little while pulling the pick down (with my thumb) from the index finger onto the 2nd finger (longest one) as I close up the 2nd finger to catch the pick "flat" between the 1st and 2nd finger joint" as I curl up that finger. You then have all but the 2nd finger to pick with.
Rocky
But it looked to me like Joscho was doing something that allowed all four fingers to remain mobile. He was first doing a kind of rasgueado with his lower fingers, and then sort of Travis/Atkins picking with the others, and then back to Gypsy plectrum. It didn't look like any fingers were out of use. (Hard to tell on YouTube of course.)
Because I've done a lot of classical playing, I would love to find a way to keep i/m/a usable (ideally the pinky too) and yet be able to switch quickly back to a pick. Mostly I wind up using pick-and-fingers (which makes harmonics difficult) or the old stick-the-pick-in-my-mouth-and-hope-I-don't-swallow-it technique. :P But if there is some slight-of-hand way to train my hand that will give me p/i/m/a plus pinky plus pick, then I want to work on it.
Oh Well. Different equipment requires different adaptations!
Rocky
I'm wondering if I could put a little band around one finger (picture an elastic cigar band) and just slide the pick in there. I was hoping somebody would say "Oh yeah, Joscho uses the PickMaster RingFinger PickHolder Deluxe Model B, don't you?" Alas, I am guessing that great dexterity is involved. I still think that a solution should exist, however.
All my life I've been torn between fingers and picks, always feeling that I'm losing something when I go one way or the other. It's one reason we envy piano players and fiddle players and saxophone players -- for them, the notes are right there, and they can just play what they hear. For us it's a bit more like playing bagpipes or koto or gamelan -- first you have to surmount the mechanical difficulties of the instrument, before you can get to the music. That's true of all instruments of course, and I shouldn't discount the fact that we don't have the intonation challenges of the violin; but sometimes, I feel we are forced by physics to focus too much on chops.