"Tony Done" <
tony...@bigpond.com> wrote in message
news:jfmsa0$g56$1...@dont-email.me...
Bingo. Now you're on to the process, just about, one must admit.
Backstroking is a good thing. That's one tried and true method to
"speed-dial" notes on the same string.
Another flamenco-style trick is to "upstroke" the string in question. That
is, use the tips of the fingers to pull up on the string in rapid
succession. On a nylon-string guitar, this is pretty easy to do, and at
least a semblance of satisfactory quasi-excellence can be achieved with a
modicum of dedicated attention to detail. With a steel-stringed instrument,
practice and more practice is the operative imperative.
Then again, one can always simulate a flat-picking maneuver using
fingernails only. You simply pinch your thumb and index finger together and
then use the nails of each finger for picking the string: index nail for
downstrokes, thumbnail for upstrokes. Works quite well.
This is exactly the "picking" style I employ for my version of "Apache,"
below--and for all of my solo, acoustic, instrumental 6 and 12-string guitar
interpretations, for that matter, when a flat-picking sound is required.
An obvious advantage is that one can seamlessly integrate sharp single-note
plucking activity (embracing such genres as Bluegrass, Country, Classic
Rock, Bluess and so on and so forth) with a traditional fingerpicking style.
No plectrums need apply...
http://inyo.coffeecup.com/site/music/apache.html
My solo, acoustic 6-string guitar version of the classic instrumental,
"Apache"--#2 US Billboard for Jorgan Ingmann, 1961. Although it should be
noted that Amercian Country Music legend Sonny James actually sang a version
of the song, with lyrics--hitting #87 US Billboard (Pop Charts), 1960.
"Apache" was composed by UK musician Jerry Lordan in 1960--the first
recorded version was by a then-popular UK guitarist named Bert Weedon. Soon
after, a group by the name of The Shadows got hold of the tune--they were
the back-up group for singer Cliff Richards; they were looking for a hit.
Somebody suggested "Apache" as a B-side to "Quartermaster's Stores." That
song went nowhere, but the reaction to "Apache" was instantly phenomenal.