tjcurtin1
Well-known member
OK, I know that this is undoubtedly a newbie thing, but anyway...
I've been focusing on playing mostly acoustic lately, and I more often fingerpick. While working on flatpicking, I've gone from a thin to a medium, noticing the difference in sound and feel. However, with my first guitar came this monster of a pick - more like a piece of steel it felt like to me - and I wondered how anybody could possibly use such a thing! It felt like it would either break your finger or a string to use it. So it got tossed in a drawer, surely never to be used.
Well, while listening to a tune on the Harvey Reid/ Joyce Anderson 'Song Train' collection, I found myself wondering how he was getting this great percussive sound, when it occured to me to find that monster pick and try it. Wow, it worked! Not only that, but it gave the guitar a markedly different sound. And I found that in the meantime, I had developed my right hand enough so that I could actually use the thing without it flipping out of my fingers or sounding horribly choppy.
So now I know why they would ever make such a thing as a thick pick... a small thing I know, but one more enjoyable discovery in the guitar-playing process.
I've been focusing on playing mostly acoustic lately, and I more often fingerpick. While working on flatpicking, I've gone from a thin to a medium, noticing the difference in sound and feel. However, with my first guitar came this monster of a pick - more like a piece of steel it felt like to me - and I wondered how anybody could possibly use such a thing! It felt like it would either break your finger or a string to use it. So it got tossed in a drawer, surely never to be used.
Well, while listening to a tune on the Harvey Reid/ Joyce Anderson 'Song Train' collection, I found myself wondering how he was getting this great percussive sound, when it occured to me to find that monster pick and try it. Wow, it worked! Not only that, but it gave the guitar a markedly different sound. And I found that in the meantime, I had developed my right hand enough so that I could actually use the thing without it flipping out of my fingers or sounding horribly choppy.
So now I know why they would ever make such a thing as a thick pick... a small thing I know, but one more enjoyable discovery in the guitar-playing process.