Inflames626
New member
So I've never settled on The Pick. I think it's a struggle all guitarists have throughout their lives, some more than others.
I've noticed the boutique wood pick trend and others. I thought maybe you guys could post your favorite picks.
I started with Fender Mediums with the glossy plastic. Then moved on to Claytons, then Dunlop Tortexes, then metal Dunlop TeckPicks.
I tend to use Clayton Metallics metal picks now--more or less 1 mm or so in thickness. The intention is to have more of a Dimebag style slashing effect with palm muted down picking, almost as if the presence is being boosted. Material doesn't seem to matter much. I feel like metal picks last longer than plastic picks and don't fray on the edges, either. (Although IME Dunlop TeckPicks will produce uneven edges and burrs with lots of use. These will catch on the strings and the pick will have to eventually be discarded.)
Lots of metal guys seem to prefer Dunlop Jazz picks. I actually prefer larger, triangular picks (Dorito picks as my brother used to call them). I feel like I can get a firmer grip and I don't like choking up on the pick very closely because the strings tend to painfully catch cuticles.
I dig in fairly hard with the pick at a 45 degree forward slant between thumb and index. I hold the pick fairly far back, which makes higher speeds more difficult but makes each attack cleaner and more pronounced. These days probably 16ths at 170-185 is as fast as I can go--maybe 160 bpm for sustained playing (I do five minute drills to simulate a song for endurance and 8 bar bursts at upper tempos to build speed).
I may try the special picks Chris Broderick invented with the finger loop to keep from dropping them, but honestly grip isn't as much of a problem for me as finding a pick with the right combination of firmness, give, and finding the proper location to hold the pick so it's neither too stiff nor too rigid.
Thanks.
Edit: a large triangular pick will also give you 3x as much pick since you can alternate between points. I have more issues with smaller, rounded picks.
I've noticed the boutique wood pick trend and others. I thought maybe you guys could post your favorite picks.
I started with Fender Mediums with the glossy plastic. Then moved on to Claytons, then Dunlop Tortexes, then metal Dunlop TeckPicks.
I tend to use Clayton Metallics metal picks now--more or less 1 mm or so in thickness. The intention is to have more of a Dimebag style slashing effect with palm muted down picking, almost as if the presence is being boosted. Material doesn't seem to matter much. I feel like metal picks last longer than plastic picks and don't fray on the edges, either. (Although IME Dunlop TeckPicks will produce uneven edges and burrs with lots of use. These will catch on the strings and the pick will have to eventually be discarded.)
Lots of metal guys seem to prefer Dunlop Jazz picks. I actually prefer larger, triangular picks (Dorito picks as my brother used to call them). I feel like I can get a firmer grip and I don't like choking up on the pick very closely because the strings tend to painfully catch cuticles.
I dig in fairly hard with the pick at a 45 degree forward slant between thumb and index. I hold the pick fairly far back, which makes higher speeds more difficult but makes each attack cleaner and more pronounced. These days probably 16ths at 170-185 is as fast as I can go--maybe 160 bpm for sustained playing (I do five minute drills to simulate a song for endurance and 8 bar bursts at upper tempos to build speed).
I may try the special picks Chris Broderick invented with the finger loop to keep from dropping them, but honestly grip isn't as much of a problem for me as finding a pick with the right combination of firmness, give, and finding the proper location to hold the pick so it's neither too stiff nor too rigid.
Thanks.
Edit: a large triangular pick will also give you 3x as much pick since you can alternate between points. I have more issues with smaller, rounded picks.
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