The short of it is that the pinky-side of my right palm is addicted to the bridge of the guitar in order to mute the strings. For example, on any guitar I've ever played if I hit an A on the 5th fret of the high E string, there's a significant A overtone resonating on the A and D strings. Instinctively, my right hand moves in to mute them and now I'm out of position.
I've been studying Stochelo's videos in particular because I dig his tone. He'll hit that same high A and his left hand will be nowhere near the lower strings and his right hand appears to stay away from the bridge for the most part. In the Samois video, he plays with a relatively flatter wrist, so it's harder to tell, but in the video with Romane he has more angle to his wrist so you can see that he's not using it for muting.
Some of the stuff I'm muting comes from sloppy style and could be avoided with better technique, but some of it comes from sympathetic vibrations on strings which aren't touched.
Can anyone help me understand why the gypsy pickers don't seem to be doing much active muting, yet I rarely hear these overtones which are so pronounced on my acoustic instruments?
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Say you were to play that A on the sixth string fifth fret with a rest stroke the open A string wouldn't ring because the pick is resting against it.
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I don't have a traditional gypsy guitar, so maybe you can tell me about yours... if you play a perfect rest-stroke on the 5th fret of the high E string and then immediately mute it, do your A and D strings not continue to ring a significant sympathetic harmonic? Sometimes letting it ring is cool, but sometimes I want to mute it and that's where the right-hand muting instinct comes in after years of alternate picking.
It's probably not very distracting in a band-context, but it's pretty noticeable when I play in silence. Maybe I have to get out more...