Office freebie
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Re: Office freebie
Surprise bonus.
I actually tried using a plectrum the other night.
It did not go well.
I actually tried using a plectrum the other night.
It did not go well.
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Re: Office freebie
Especially slippery ones on a warm night.
I can see why they were giving away stacks of them now.
I can see why they were giving away stacks of them now.
- Drew Stephenson
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Re: Office freebie
You've all got it wrong! Any pick thin enough to complement a spludger is about five times too thin for playing any string instrument known to man. You should all buy these and experience picking heaven https://www.djangoguitars.com/WegenGyps ... 5white.htm
- Sam Spoons
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Re: Office freebie
Sam Spoons wrote: ↑Wed Jun 22, 2022 9:28 pm You've all got it wrong! Any pick thin enough to complement a spludger is about five times too thin for playing any string instrument known to man. You should all buy these and experience picking heaven https://www.djangoguitars.com/WegenGyps ... 5white.htm
The heat's got to you and you've really flipped this time.
Hard and thin for me. Anything that thick and I just get a dull plunking sound that I hate.
Reliably fallible.
Re: Office freebie
My granny used to put two of those in a glass of water for keeping her teeth in at night.
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- shufflebeat
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“…I can tell you I don't have money, but what I do have are a very particular set of skills. Skills I have acquired over a very long career” - (folk musician, Manchester).
Re: Office freebie
I'm a keyboard player and I love picks/plectrums because the only way I know how to get anything remotely musical out of a guitar requires one on my part. I prefer smaller ones though!
- Eddy Deegan
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Re: Office freebie
It is my experience that promotional and other free "picks" are nothing of the sort. They are simply triangular shaped pieces of plastic, which are completely unsuitable for playing the guitar. Any I receive go straight into the bin.
RockinRollin' VampireMan
Re: Office freebie
Wonks wrote: ↑Wed Jun 22, 2022 10:18 pmSam Spoons wrote: ↑Wed Jun 22, 2022 9:28 pm You've all got it wrong! Any pick thin enough to complement a spludger is about five times too thin for playing any string instrument known to man. You should all buy these and experience picking heaven https://www.djangoguitars.com/WegenGyps ... 5white.htm
The heat's got to you and you've really flipped this time.
Hard and thin for me. Anything that thick and I just get a dull plunking sound that I hate.
TBF I have moderated my stance a little over the years and use Wegen Bluegrass pics for some stuff, they are very stiff but only 1.4mm thick so a little brighter than the Gypsy pics. The Gypsy pics are designed for a specific style of guitar and music though and nothing else sounds quite right.
- Sam Spoons
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Re: Office freebie
shufflebeat wrote: ↑Wed Jun 22, 2022 10:26 pm My granny used to put two of those in a glass of water for keeping her teeth in at night.
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Re: Office freebie
I like an inflexible pick. If I can bend it, it's no good for me. In the mainstream there is the Dunlop Jazz III which a lot of players use.
Once in inflexible pick land the material makes a difference. It's a while since I used one, but the Jazz III used to available in red or black. They were different materials and did sound different. What makes the most difference I've found is how sharp the point is. The sharper the point, the brighter.
I notice on the site Sam linked the picks are available with different degrees of sharpness.
Once in inflexible pick land the material makes a difference. It's a while since I used one, but the Jazz III used to available in red or black. They were different materials and did sound different. What makes the most difference I've found is how sharp the point is. The sharper the point, the brighter.
I notice on the site Sam linked the picks are available with different degrees of sharpness.
It ain't what you don't know. It's what you know that ain't so.
Re: Office freebie
Jazz III FTW. The Ultex version is my standard pick, though I still haven't settled on the perfect strumming pick. I can't play rhythm with it.
Re: Office freebie
I'm a big Brian May fan and own a Burns replica of his Red Special guitar. I always play it using an old sixpence, just as Brian does, for authenticity when attempting Queen songs... but it works very well on non-Queen music and brings out harmonics and overtones in arpeggiated chords and such-like that my plastic plectrums cannot achieve.
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Re: Office freebie
Forum Admin wrote: ↑Mon Jun 27, 2022 11:17 am I'm a big Brian May fan and own a Burns replica of his Red Special guitar. I always play it using an old sixpence, just as Brian does...
I'm very rich so like to play with a five pound note. It makes rapid picking difficult but I can always pay someone else to do that on my behalf.
Otherwise, Jim Dunlops of various thicknesses depending on the whether (I can find them or not).
Some days are a .73 day while others require an .88, thankfully I've not needed to hunt out anything beyond that for a while.
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- shufflebeat
Longtime Poster - Posts: 9108 Joined: Sun Dec 09, 2007 12:00 am Location: Manchester, UK
“…I can tell you I don't have money, but what I do have are a very particular set of skills. Skills I have acquired over a very long career” - (folk musician, Manchester).
Re: Office freebie
shufflebeat wrote: ↑Mon Jun 27, 2022 12:48 pm
I'm very rich so like to play with a five pound note. It makes rapid picking difficult but I can always pay someone else to do that on my behalf.
I remove the metal strips from multiple £50 notes, melt them down and cast them using a mould I made from a sixpence, thus getting the benefit of both the above choices.
Reliably fallible.
Re: Office freebie
Classy.
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- shufflebeat
Longtime Poster - Posts: 9108 Joined: Sun Dec 09, 2007 12:00 am Location: Manchester, UK
“…I can tell you I don't have money, but what I do have are a very particular set of skills. Skills I have acquired over a very long career” - (folk musician, Manchester).
Re: Office freebie
I used to have a cup full of Jazz IIIs. I preferred the red ones, which were made of nylon I think. A friend seeing the cup asked "Do you think you have enough picks?" The obvious answer was "Yes." I wasn't going to run out in the foreseeable future.
I now use Dugain picks :
https://www.dugainplectrums.com/
It was a friend recommended these. He had tried the wooden ones, but found they wear down quite quickly as he plays hard. He had graduated to agate. Really. It appears Dugain don't offer stone picks any more, but they do offer stainless steel :
https://www.dugainplectrums.com/metaldu ... -pick.html
I use the Minidug and I recently got one made out of 'Synthetic R' whatever that is. I tried the different types of plastic -- acrylic, acetate and delrin. Acetate was good, but it wore down quickly, so I used delrin for a while. That also wears down eventually, so I'm trying synthetic R which is "very, very resistant". If it still has a point after a year I would concur that it is indeed "very, very resistant".
There's also a new material -- galalith or milk stone. This is what used to be plastic before plastic. It's made of milk. Really. Tons of milk used to be used to make this before oil based plastic. It's probably what Django used, and I noticed it's what some of the picks on the Wegen picks site are made from.
I now use Dugain picks :
https://www.dugainplectrums.com/
It was a friend recommended these. He had tried the wooden ones, but found they wear down quite quickly as he plays hard. He had graduated to agate. Really. It appears Dugain don't offer stone picks any more, but they do offer stainless steel :
https://www.dugainplectrums.com/metaldu ... -pick.html
I use the Minidug and I recently got one made out of 'Synthetic R' whatever that is. I tried the different types of plastic -- acrylic, acetate and delrin. Acetate was good, but it wore down quickly, so I used delrin for a while. That also wears down eventually, so I'm trying synthetic R which is "very, very resistant". If it still has a point after a year I would concur that it is indeed "very, very resistant".
There's also a new material -- galalith or milk stone. This is what used to be plastic before plastic. It's made of milk. Really. Tons of milk used to be used to make this before oil based plastic. It's probably what Django used, and I noticed it's what some of the picks on the Wegen picks site are made from.
It ain't what you don't know. It's what you know that ain't so.
Re: Office freebie
I buy my most commonly used picks (Herco Flex 75s) in boxes of 100. I'm currently close to running out on my 4th box (since the mid 80s), which means that each pick lasts me just over a month before I either lose it or decide it has become too worn to be any good.
RockinRollin' VampireMan
Re: Office freebie
BJG145 wrote: ↑Wed Jun 22, 2022 12:36 pm A set of "spudgers" or "pry tools" has been delivered to my desk, for cracking open laptops and tablets. And it includes a couple of snazzy guitar picks...I'm having those...
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Very generous.
I do fingerstyle playing, and really do not any more picks.
Love this thread!
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- Rene Asologuitar
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