There is a school of thought (members: Jean Baptist Besard, Stewart
McCoy) which says that you play the Eb chord without bending your first
finger, just placing it centrally between the second and third courses.
Works for some people. The same would apply to E major (2nd finger
plays both cs):
--b---
--c---
--c---
------
--e---
------
But squash you can, and sometimes it's a good idea (all 3 fs played with
2nd finger):
--h--
--d--
--f--
--f--
--f--
--d--
Happy squashing,
Martin
Sean Smith wrote:
It's extremely helpful for playing that Eb chord where the 1st finger
covers the 1st frets of the 2nd and 3rd courses. Some folks even play
all three 2nd frets of the big G chord. The latter doesn't quite work
for me, though.
Sean
On Jul 11, 2008, at 6:48 PM, Herbert Ward wrote:
Some people have fingers that
bend backwards somewhat at the last joint.
Is this helpful for lute playing?
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