I'm a few months into the rest stroke technique and while I can definitely play louder, it's come at the expense of a very noisy tone. There's a lot of extraneous sound, either from the string I'm coming to rest against, or a background buzzing of open strings. This isn't due to mechanical problems with the guitar, but is clearly noise that I am introducing.
Have other people had the experience of a "noisy" period when learning this technique?
What can I do to get a cleaner tone? Of course, the answer is always practice, practice, practice...but I'm wondering if there are any specific techniques to try. For instance, in the book you discuss brushing the strings with the backs of your right hand fingers to get a sense of where your hand is in space; do you also do this to damp out strings that shouldn't be sounding?
Comments
Good luck!
'm
Agreed, raising the action a lot helps a lot against noise. In my case I squeezed a creditcard under the bridge of my guitar for about two weeks to get familiar with that high action before I brought it to my luthier. He couldn´t believe that I was in earnest with that high action but I insisted. I am very pleased with that high action now.
But still I have another problem that billmcn mentioned, too. It is the noise of open strings. I think this has nothing to do with the action. I am not speaking about hitting an open string with the pick, but often there is noise from the open string after I lifted my finger from the fretboard, like a "pull off"-effect.
Is there anything I can do/practice against this kind of noise?
Best
Barengero
I'm fortunate to have a guitar tech genius work on my guitars....he's really experienced with Selmers and does the best bridge work I've ever seen.
I had an open string sort of buzz like that....sort of a fuzzy sound. Sometimes that can be the first fret buzzing. But if your action is high then it's probably the bridge. If the slots aren't cut right they can cause the string to make some funny Sitar like sounds...that's probably what's causing the problem.
Good luck!
'm
Unfortunately for me, I think I learned to dampen strings very well with this technique, which is worthless for playing Django Jazz.
I'm still working on damping now, using whatever flesh is convenient on both right and left hands while I try to keep my Gypsy picking technique relatively orthodox on the right hand. I sympathize with the forum members above on this problem.
Neil
After having the action up over 4mm, I'm down to about 2.5mm with only a little string buzz. What is left is the good kind of buzz, when I want it. If a string buzzes too much while playing, pick a little closer to the bridge (thanks Tom!). Besides being easier to play, the lower action seems to help on the aforementioned open string noise resulting from an accidental pull off as well.
Craig
Though I've been coveting Selmac clones for a while now, I hadn't seriously considered buying one. I know that about 95% of the tone comes from the player, and the Taylor flatop I have right now, while definitely unsuited to this style, is a quality instrument. A solid player could get a great gypsy jazz sound out of it, and it seems lazy and self-deluding for me to try and buy the right tone. On the other hand, I'm not a solid gypsy jazz player yet, and I don't have the experience of playing the rest stroke on a variety of instruments, so a mismatch of guitar to style may be more of a confounding factor for me that someone more experienced. Buying a Gitane may be lazy, but some strategic laziness on my part may be useful, because to master this style I need all the help I can get.
I'm also not sure how much of this is due to the Selmac clone per se, and how much is just a difference in set-up. I might be able to get the same effect by playing with the action on my Taylor, though the Gitanes had the right sound with an action that felt as easy as what I'm currently used to, so there's probably something to be said for having the whole instrument crafted for a particular style.
Obviously, to a large extent I am just rationalizing a decision to buy myself a new toy. But not entirely, I think.