Another Playing Style
Posted: Thu Jun 19, 2014 11:39 pm
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5HDgrnkgpto
I’ve seen recorded interviews of Chet with remarks about players whose styles were different from his. For one, he spoke of Johnny Smith as a guitarist he admired. Smith was a flatpicker, which interests me because while viewing fingerstyle as best I do see where a flatpick can be useful. For example, there’s a video of Chet accompanying Anita Carter on “Makin’ Believe,” and right after his solo section, he plays soft rhythm strokes for several bars. That video shows him doing that with the underside of his hand for that sound. Why would he do that? I think, because it’s not easy to soft stroke chords with a thumbpick. However, a flatpick, loose in the hand, is ideal for that sound.
Like many others, I was a flatpick player prior to understanding much about Chet’s approach, never at the level of Johnny Smith but enough to realize multi-part solos with just a flatpick are difficult, difficult because in common chord forms bass notes and the notes needed for melodies and notes for sounding the chord are generally too far apart for the pick to execute them. You have to learn muting techniques for strings in between, find at least some forms with desired notes closer together, generally keeping the 3rd in there somehow, and figure out ways for open strings to continue sounding while changing fretboard positions. Of course, fingerstyle playing overcomes a great deal of this by enabling the selection of notes on strings that aren’t next to each other. But it seems to me that developing one’s ability both ways is a good thing.
Anyway,the above link is to a recent attempt. Criticisms welcome.
I’ve seen recorded interviews of Chet with remarks about players whose styles were different from his. For one, he spoke of Johnny Smith as a guitarist he admired. Smith was a flatpicker, which interests me because while viewing fingerstyle as best I do see where a flatpick can be useful. For example, there’s a video of Chet accompanying Anita Carter on “Makin’ Believe,” and right after his solo section, he plays soft rhythm strokes for several bars. That video shows him doing that with the underside of his hand for that sound. Why would he do that? I think, because it’s not easy to soft stroke chords with a thumbpick. However, a flatpick, loose in the hand, is ideal for that sound.
Like many others, I was a flatpick player prior to understanding much about Chet’s approach, never at the level of Johnny Smith but enough to realize multi-part solos with just a flatpick are difficult, difficult because in common chord forms bass notes and the notes needed for melodies and notes for sounding the chord are generally too far apart for the pick to execute them. You have to learn muting techniques for strings in between, find at least some forms with desired notes closer together, generally keeping the 3rd in there somehow, and figure out ways for open strings to continue sounding while changing fretboard positions. Of course, fingerstyle playing overcomes a great deal of this by enabling the selection of notes on strings that aren’t next to each other. But it seems to me that developing one’s ability both ways is a good thing.
Anyway,the above link is to a recent attempt. Criticisms welcome.