I've been playing fingerstyle guitar for years and I'd been following the recommendation of many guitarists to anchor the picking hand by resting my pinky on the guitar top. However, this doesn't seem to be the preferred technique for flatpicking: I notice most flatpicking guitarists let their picking hand float over the strings without keeping any fingers anchored to the guitar top. My difficulty: in attempting to mimic this technique my picking hand feels a bit too "free", and I have trouble with accuracy as I speed up. Is this just a question of needing to practice more until I get more used to it? Or is there some way I should be resting my arm or wrist on the guitar that would make my picking hand feel more secure?
Comments
- Get a 9 volt battery and grasp it in the last three fingers of the right hand. Hold the pick between the thumb and forefinger. Practice picking while holding the battery in this manner using simple patterns moving from string to string i.e., starting on the 6th string, pick open, first fret, second fret, third fret - then go to the next string. Use all down strokes to begin with and make sure your pick ends up resting on the string below with the point of the pick pointing towards the top of the guitar (not out way from the top). Do this slowly at first for 10 minutes a day. You will quickly gain control of the floating right hand - plus develop a nice "rest stroke" gypsy picking style.