Musicians
Related: About this forumI cannot get my fingers to work in hammer-ons
I was teaching this young man who comes for lessons no charge at Duncanpup school of hey lets Jam. I was teaching him diminished or major 7 or 9 and minor 7 yet where I was trying to take this 11 year old future virtuoso is pull offs and hammer-ons.
He said I cant get my pinky or his ring finger to cooperate on pull offs or hammer-on he is just a great kid.
And he is a pleasure to work with and he always makes my day him and his mom left awhile ago he is great kid.
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Docreed2003
(18,045 posts)That will train those pesky ring and pinky fingers!
MOMFUDSKI
(7,080 posts)breakfast and then a walk. Now you are teaching a young man the fine art of music. Wow. Im starting to think you may just be a good guy.
ProfessorGAC
(71,475 posts)I haven't taught guitar or piano in a long time. Now that I'm retired, I probably should be given I have plenty of time.
Keep up the good work.
One suggestion: give him a reason to use the pinky more. Simple stuff like playing D at the 7th fret (3rd & 4th strings) using the pinky on the 10th.
Still just a D chord but requires that pinky to stretch & apply some force. Just don't hit the low E string.
OldBaldy1701E
(7,105 posts)Diamond_Dog
(35,783 posts)4dog
(527 posts)Do they still make silk-and-steel for guitars?
duckworth969
(966 posts)So, its not possible to completely separate their work.
Pinky hammer-ons are tough, pull-offs in general are hard to play cleanly.
I find playing scales from the top note to the bottom note can help. Forces you to lead with the pinky.
The mandolin player Chris Theile (sp?) recommends as a strengthening exercise to lead every scale or melody with the ring finger, even it means more shifting than usual.
Or dont use the first and second finger at all! 😳
https://youtube.com/shorts/02NQ2UdSH-M?si=vQ0XFaN1qWZ3qOv4
ShazzieB
(19,319 posts)Don't feel bad - you almost got the spelling perfect, and it's a very unusual name. But anyway....he is an absolutely amazing mandolin player, so I'm sure his advice is good.
I just watched the video, and wow...I swear that man has magic fingers!
Eko
(8,850 posts)I start on the low e 1st fret and fret it with my 1st finger play that and keep it down then low e 2nd fret 2nd finger play that and keep moving up using the 3rd then 4th then I move and do the same thing on the a string then d string all the way up and then back down keeping my fingers down when ascending. A harder one is the same thing but you keep your fingers down at all time till you need it so when you get to the a string your 2nd, 3rd, and 4th finger are still on the e string on the 2,3, and 4th fret and stay there till you have to use the finger on the next string so when you go to the 2nd fret a string your 1st and 2nd fingers are on the 1st and 2nd frets of the a string while you 3rd and 4th fingers are still on the e string 3rd and 4th fret and keep going all the way up.