After many long nights of practice and various books including Michael's and Stephane's, I felt I have finally got a grasp on the gypsy style of picking. Fast licks are no longer a problem and phrasing is much easier.
However...recently I have found that despite my relaxed wrist, the underside starts to ache/hurt after playing for an hour+. The problem I have is that I am trying to keep it very relaxed but when trying to pull off a quick run or a roll, my wrist naturally tenses up. After doing 3 or 4 of these within a song or jam and after a bit of playing, I feel a certain amount of stiffness and pain. At first I thought that, due to it being mild pain, it was just my muscles getting used to the movement, now I'm thinking very differently
Does anyone have any thoughts on this? Is it a case of learning gypsy picking starting from scratch once again :?
I want to try and sort this out once and for all!
Thanks,
Harry
Comments
If you're having problems tensing your right hand - go to school on Jimmy Rosenberg's right hand. He keeps it so loose - just gently bent - his hand actually looks like a pendulum. A lot of guys with tense hands will make a fist when they play at speed but his hand is so loose he doesn't even tuck his fingers in - they just stick out & flop around even when he plays fast. Hell, I bet his fingers even lend inertia to his swinging hand. If so, it probably helps him play more evenly at speed... which he certainly does.
Here he is playing ridiculously fast with a lot of power... and yet he is still loose... stellar form. Figure out how to do that and I bet your wrist pain will go away.
http://www.metacafe.com/watch/1199799/j ... gia_brown/
I am a great fan of Jimmy's playing and will have a closer look at his picking technique as he is the master of fast picking! I like the videoing of my hand idea and may while give this a try in the next few days and post back the results. The pain is holding me back from moving on/practicing properly.
Could it also be the fact that I am playing for large amounts of time (intensely for 3 hours a day, often in a jam situation?)
Just a thought.
I doubt it is relearning completely just a minor change. If you have to consciously think about relaxing while playing the moment you are thinking of something else you are likely not relaxed more often than you think
When I read a post like this I'm always curious if you guys are active outside of guitar playing? Do you go to the gym, enjoy sports, (tennis, throwing a ball, climbing, etc) I can see how this gypsy picking/strumming technique could be too much for a weak wrist/elbow/shoulder/back which don't get a workout (ie: strengthened) through other range of motions - like always running on perfectly flat pavement, the repetition is going to invite injury.
STOP playing for a while, chill out, do something else, then slowly get back to playing slowly. If you have to stop playing for a week, a month, or two its better that developing chronic problems. You should also play new fast licks slowly for far longer than you might expect before you bring them up to speed, so be patient.
Good luck
good luck
cheers
Phil
Regards,
Harry
My guitarist friend developed carpal tunnel from overpracticing.
Now he uses a sort of a "sock" which he puts over his wrist when he plays.
I've even seen him do this at his concerts when he performs.
The sock I've seen for sale at the local drug store and even some musical outlets.
Best bet would be to check with a good chiropractor.