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Originally Posted by mr. beaumont
Consider a Fender Medium pick.
Take a guy who holds a pick the way most beginners are taught to and plays on a guitar in a store.
Another guy then takes the same pick, a Fender Medium, but holds it an angle like George Benson does, and plays the same guitar.
The very different result has to do with the different angle of pick attack and not with the thickness of the pick. It's the same pick, same thickness, but the result of a narrow edge, a blade, hitting a string is different than a flatter plane hitting it. The resistance is different and its displacement through the finger / thumb is different.
An angled pick is very different than the same pick without the angle, or at a much lesser angle.
Comparisons of thickness can only be useful when the pick attack is the same. I don't think anyone has worked out the comparison of say, a Fender Medium at 45-degrees versus 15-20 degrees versus coming in flat. (Or a Jazz III or a Primetone 246, and so on.)
I think Benson uses a Fender Medium. I think our own Philco used a Fender Thin for his superb video on Benson picking. J C Stylles definitely uses a Fender Medium in his tutorial on Benson picking.
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05-30-2014 06:18 PM
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Originally Posted by GuyBoden
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I would NEVER teach someone to pick in a way that the pick face hits flat...I don't know any teacher that would.
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Originally Posted by Richb
OK, in terms of sounds... It reminds me my alter ego in Youtube.
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Originally Posted by MarkRhodes
I know there are some other "Benson" pickers on this list who would agree that the Fender Medium (particularly the faux tortoise shell ones) are a thing of wonder.
I can only imagine it's a strange piece of luck that this modest plectrum embodies everything that this particular technique requires.
1 Big enough to grip just the corner.
2 Flexes and moves between your fingers but doesn't bend.
3 Has the exact perfect point and edge shape
4 Allows sweeping in either direction
5 Sounds great…with a little snap
6 Can be turned on an angle….even 90 degrees…….and still make a sound.
7 Cheap.
Actually Mark…in that vid I made I am using a Blue Chip Large Jazz .035 but as soon as I finished the vid I went back to a Fender. A year and 2 guitars later I'm still using a Fender Medium.
To add to this discussion I would add that the string gauge and pick gauge are connected.
Especially re the Benson technique.
I use flat wound TI Benson strings, so from .014 to .053. They are very thick on the bass strings and when they age a bit they don't vibrate very much. The pick just glides over them and on to the next string. There is no digging in or string movement to complicate the equation. The note is very short. This is a big part of the whole technique. It all works together. Not very "modern" though.
This set up is specifically for Bebop lines with an old school sound.
For other styles (that I deal with everyday in my recording work…..acoustic, Nylon string, 12 string, Rock and Blues) I just slightly change the grip and go back to a traditional technique.
And I also change plectrums to get different sounds and attacks.
Different horses for different courses and all that!
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Originally Posted by M-ster
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Originally Posted by GuyBoden
I had a vivid image of an Olympic diver bouncing on a diving board in preparation for a dive. It reminded me of the pick on the string. If I could “bounce” on the string—effectively sensing the equal force between the string and my hand—all I’d need to do to make the string sound would be to give up my resistance. Like the diver on the diving board, I could let the springiness of the string do more of the work. Rather than being propelled away from the string, I would cease meeting the string with equal force, and instead, give up. Let the string win. By imagining the string almost cutting up through the pick (on a downstroke), it felt as though the string played itself and I was there to create just enough friction to get things started.
Julian Lage
Digging deeper: The diving-board effect
Premier Guitar 2012 June
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Originally Posted by M-ster
The most common of all picks. I started on those, moved on to others (for decades), and am now back to using them again.
About 12 cents each.
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Originally Posted by ecj
I think if I took the money I spent trying other, more expensive, picks over the past few years, I could've bought enough of these to last me all my days.
By the way, does anyone who uses a Medium to pick Benson style ever wear a pick out?
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Originally Posted by fep
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Originally Posted by MarkRhodes
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Originally Posted by ecj
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Picks are like socks in the dryer.......
they hit hit the floor then promptly warp in to some other dimension....
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Originally Posted by MarkRhodes
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Originally Posted by TonyB56
When one uses a thin pick, you must squeeze the thumb and index finger together because the pick flexes so much. You have to PUSH the pick through the string.
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Originally Posted by Petimar
I like the tone I get from it.
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Originally Posted by MarkRhodes
I solved this problem by using a STYLUS brand pick which is designed to train the muscle memory to gauge the proper depth of picking. The pick has a cone shaped tip that will hang on the string and stop you if you insert the pick too deeply into the strings. If I remember correctly, it was developed at Berklee College. I used one exclusively to practice for a long time and trained myself to just touch the string with the tip of the pick.
It definitely forced me to focus on the finer points of picking and helped my technique.
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Originally Posted by MarkRhodes
The Guitar Craft picks are made of Delrin. For a given thickness, they are firmer than picks of other materials, at least in my experience. Dunlop also sells some delrin picks.
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Originally Posted by monk
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Originally Posted by Kiefer.Wolfowitz
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Originally Posted by MarkRhodes
They feel thicker. So the point feels rounder. They also sound quite different.
The white ones sound different and feel different as do the black ones.
But the brown ones actually have a specific sound. It's a real high pitched scrape when striking the string at an angle.
It's actually a "good" sound.
Anyway they are so cheap it's possible to have a bunch of all the different colours and find your preference.
I've also tried all the bigger triangle Fender Mediums….Martino used to use a heavy one of those.
The shape of the tip (wideness) is not suitable for playing at an acute angle so they don't really work for that.
But they feel great to hold.
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Originally Posted by Philco
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Originally Posted by monk
I had a stylus pick back in, what, the 80s? (Are they still made and sold?) That's when I wanted to play super fast like hard rock / metal players. I don't recall what happened to mine. (It cost around 15 bucks, I think, so I just had the one.) But with a Medium pick held at an angle, the pick can't get in too deep between the strings, so getting 'caught' isn't a big problem for me. (God knows I've got enough other problems...)
O, here's the link to one at Amazon:
Amazon.com: Stylus Pick Kit - The Ultimate Speed Picking Method: Music
Comes with a CD; I don't think mine did. Maybe a cassette back then, but I don't recall that.....
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Another thing that some players do, if using a 351 type pick, is use the shoulder of the pick to pluck the string rather than the tip. This provides a wider, rounder surface that glides more easily over the string and gives a fatter tone than when using the tip.
Robben Ford has stated in interviews that he grips the plectrum in this manner. The late Clarence White reputedly did so and several contemporary bluegrass guitarists do the same.
I prefer a heavier pick for the same reasons that others have expressed herein, the larger mass creates a bigger note over a thinner pick just as heavier strings sound fatter than thin strings.
Regardless of the gauge of strings or thickness of picks we choose individually, control and relaxation are the goals that we are striving for. Developing a technique that serves our needs, completely, requires examining the mechanics of picking on a microscopic level when we practice. Personal choice of plectrum and strings will establish the parameters we have to work with individually.
I think that making a firm choice (of plectrum and strings) and sticking with it long term while solving the physical mechanics will yield more consistent results than changing picks and strings every few weeks. Experimentation is good up to a point but it must be realized that the tools don't do the work by themselves.
Best Regards,
JeromeLast edited by MarkRhodes; 06-02-2014 at 01:37 PM. Reason: Grammar
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