According to Pat O'Brien one should never bend the right pinky,
as that locks the rest of the hand and particularly - the elbow.
Pat actually had me put masking tape on my pinky early on,
to prevent it from bending.
RT
On 3/5/2019 2:11 AM, Jurgen Frenz wrote:
It would be totally excellent if you'd find out where Besard made that
suggestion.
Thanks,
jurgen
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On Tuesday, March 5, 2019 10:40 AM, Alain Veylit <al...@musickshandmade.com>
wrote:
That's odd because I remember O'Dette's advice for the left-hand pinky:
plant it vertically on the string instead of laying it flat - which
requires more effort. That should mean his left-hand little finger can
bend... Not a conclusive proof for the right hand little finger but ...
For Renaissance lute, if I am not mistaken, the right-hand little finger
is supposed to be parallel to the sound board, just lightly brushing on
it, and it should remain extended.
Anybody with a good explanation as to how additional basses would alter
the right hand position? If I recall, Besard still argued for a mixed
technique, thumb-under for fast runs and thumb over for whatever else
(chords). I think it is logical that increasing dedication of the thumb
to the bass strings does account for the shift in right-hand position,
and when you think about it, it is not a small revolution in music
history...
On 3/4/19 7:12 PM, Richard Brook wrote:
Heard via the late great Pat OBrien Paul O’Dette couldn’t bend that finger down
by itself. Though I think Pat said in my case the fault was in my head, not in
the stars.
D ick Brook
On Mar 4, 2019, at 6:58 PM, Alain Veylit al...@musickshandmade.com wrote:
Good one Rainer - Anybody remembers the title of that American series from the
60s-70s where aliens live among us in disguise, and the only sure way to
identify them is that they cannot bend their little finger?
Worth mentioning also about right-hand technique, Jimmy Hendrix playing with
his teeth - frustrated leftie, you think?
On 3/4/19 12:19 PM, Rainer wrote:
On 04.03.2019 17:11, Alain Veylit wrote:
And then, there is Django Reinhardt... one big exception to the rules of guitar
playing. Experimenting with various techniques has probably always been a
popular habit among musicians, whether by choice or force.
And Aguado used the 4th finger of the right hand. Perhaps he was an alien :)
Rainer
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