Picks are usually gripped with two fingers—thumb and index—and
are played with pointed end facing the strings. However, it's a matter
of personal preference and many notable musicians use different grips.
For example, Eddie Van Halen holds the pick between his thumb and middle finger (leaving his first finger free for his tapping technique); James Hetfield, Jeff Hanneman and Steve Morse hold a pick using 3 fingers—thumb, middle and index; Pat Metheny and The Edge also hold their picks with three fingers but play using the rounded side of the plectrum. George Lynch also uses the rounded side of the pick. Stevie Ray Vaughan
also played with the rounded edge of the pick, citing the fact that the
edge allowed more string attack than the tip. His manic, aggressive
picking style would wear through pickguards in short order, and wore a
groove in his Fender Stratocaster, Number One, over his years of playing. Jimmy Rogers and Freddie King had a special kind of technique utilizing two picks at once.
Noted 80's session guitarist David Persons is known for using old
credit cards, cut to the correct size, angle, and thickness and using
them without a tip.[5]
The motion of the pick against the string is also a personal choice. George Benson and Dave Mustaine,
for example, hold the pick very stiffly between the thumb and index
finger, locking the thumb joint and striking with the surface of the
pick nearly parallel to the string, for a very positive, articulate,
consistent tone. Other guitarists have developed a technique known as circle picking,
where the thumb joint is bent on the downstroke, and straightened on
the upstroke, causing the tip of the pick to move in a circular pattern,
which can allow speed and fluidity. The angle of the pick against the
string is also very personal and has a broad range of effects on tone
and articulation. Many rock guitarists will use a flourish (called a pick slide
or pick scrape) that involves scraping the pick along the length of a
round wound string (a round wound string is a string with a coil of
round wire wrapped around the outside, used for the heaviest three or
four strings on a guitar).
The two chief approaches to fast picking are alternate picking and economy picking.
Alternate picking is when the player strictly alternates each stroke
between downstrokes and upstrokes, regardless of changing strings. In
economy picking, the player will use the most economical stroke on each
note. For example, if the first note is on the fifth string, and the
next note is on the fourth string, the pick will use a downstroke on the
fifth string, and continue in the same direction to execute a
downstroke on the fourth string. Some guitarists learn economy picking
intuitively and find it an effort to use alternate picking. Conversely, some guitarists
maintain that the down-up "twitch" motion of alternate picking lends
itself to momentum, and hence trumps economy picking at high speeds.
for more info go to wikipedia
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