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Tuesday 28 December 2010

FINGER NAILS for Guitar (guitar tips)

FINGER NAILS for Guitar (guitar tips)

Fingernails have been and will always be a major concern for the committed guitar player. Vihuelists, lutenists, and guitarists from as far back as the sixteenth century have been debating about the issue. Therefore, when a student brings up the issue, he is adding his impressions to this centenary arena. Many guitarists prefer the no-nails approach to guitar playing, still, they will find interesting material to read further down.

The often misused term of nail approach generally refers to the right hand finger stroke that is actually a mixture of fingertip and fingernail. Using only nails tends to produce a thin, plastic sound, using only flesh produces an opaque sound, one of that lacks in brilliance. Thickness of every individual's nails, as well as the width and curvature of the nails, are all the factors that have a direct influence on the sound quality produced by a guitarist.

It takes a few years to become experts with one's own nails. "The guitarist must eventually master his nail care or he will simply never be a master". This does not mean that one has to walk around polishing his nails (this is a typical guitar competition stupid attitude). What this means is that the guitarist must develop a conscience where he is very aware of how closely related nails and sound are. Nails are to the guitarist what vocal chords are to the singer. Still, the best comparison is the painter's brushes. That is how important fingernails are.


 
    the painter's brushes

Hare some of the the painter's brushes. They speak eloquently. The guitarist must be able to change the angle of attack to the strings in order to produce a wide variety of sound.
Just as it is true that some people are blessed with the perfect fingers, hands, inner ear, etc.,  it is also true that some people are blessed with perfect nails. It is not easy to describe the perfect nail because the way to see them is that they are more or less perfect according to the playing position that we use. We'd be more or less lunatics if we tried to play at a perpendicular angle with the strings if our nails are too thin or  hooked downwards (Williams, Parkening approach). Usually, playing with the right hand fingers perpendicular to the strings, means that we are twisting the right hand wrist sideways beyond health line. Malformations to the hand occur if we persist on this approach.

 Nails for Guitar

These are the nails I recommend. Rounded or sliced to an angle with the shorter part towards the heart. The second one is the most professional way to go about the nails. This filing allows for great contact with the flesh prior to the nail attack plus, it is almost impossible to get hooked with the strings and the fingers will be helped in the stroke starting from the main knuckle of the hand.Study your fingernails thoroughly and do not assume that you will use the same shape your whole life. With the years,  fingernails get thicker, your body changes and so does your overall sitting position and, ultimately, the angle of attack will also change.

 right hand nails

Hare this is a close-up picture of typical right hand nails. Players often use different shapes according to their level of playing or the repertoire they are playing. The way I use my nails is: very well polished  -if you practice more than 3 hours a day (you better not practice more than that or the next web pages you will be visiting are a shrink's pages), you should polish them again, using an ultra fine nail polisher  picture below (a piece of cardboard can do the job)--, longer-to-shorter (a, m, i) and slightly shorter on the playing side and, possibly, clean. 
One week before concerts I file my nails a little shorter than usual and let them grow keeping them polished all the way through the concert. Some pieces may require the use of the right hand little finger as well as the use of the left hand thumb (Do not worry, you will know when to use the left hand thumb to stop notes) so these nails and fingers should be cared and trained also. (Rasgueados may require the use of ch -little finger- although I use this fingernail mostly to keep a consistent look on my right hand...it is already difficult to explain long nails on a guy, let alone 4 fingernails and not all 5 of them ...).

  thumb-nail and pro nail kit



The THING you see down here, is neither a joke nor the trademark. I clarify this because some visitors may be asked me if I "was joking".  I also may be asked back: "you mean about the thing or the trademark?".... I recommend  that you use your common sense and stay away from the thing if you are not sure about what you are about to do. I designed this device for severely hooked fingernails. Experience has proved that mastering your filing skills will solve most of your fingernail problems.
 


using pro nail kit for guitar



A little history of FINGER NAILS for Guitar

Miguel de Fuenllana's vihuela method Orphenica Lyra (1554) is the earliest record of the nail-no nail issue. Fuenllana spoke of redobles (ways of plucking the strings with the right hand) and put 4th a preference for the use of the flesh. Miguel de Fuenllana said that what using the nails gains in technical security, it loses in the artist's ability to transmit beauty. "Only the finger, the truly lute builderliving thing, can communicate the intention of the spirit." What gives real value to this man's comment, is that he was blind from birth, and the years have tought me that the blind, develop their hearing to unsuspected hights. When music is their profession, hearing is the universe.

The lutenist Alessandro Piccinini (1566-C.1638) in his book Intavolatura di liuto...(1639), et di chitarrone (1623) recommended the use of the nails. "The player should touch the string with the flesh, push the string towards the belly of the instrument and slide the nail obliquely across them." His discription of how to shape the nails is similar to the modern guitarist's approach. -Guitarists from the Tarrega age on, are generally referred to as modern-

Thomas Mace (c.l612-c.l706) in his book on the lute Musick's Monument (1676) expressed a preference for the flesh but conceded that there was an advantage to using the nails. "The mellow sound of a lute played with the flesh is lost while playing in consort, while the use of the nails allowes it to be heard." However, he greatly preferred the sound of the flesh. 
lute playerThe baroque guitarist Francesco Corbetta (1615-1681) used nails.
Silvius Leopold Weiss (1686-1750) said that the lute was usually played with the flesh, but the theorbo (similar to the lute but with a longer fingerboard) and chitarrone were plucked with the nails "and produced, in close proximity, a course, harsh sound.
Frederico Moretti (1799) and Fernando Ferrandiere (1771-1816) laid the foundation for the early nineteenth century guitarists in their respective books Principios para tocar la guitare de seis ordenes (Principles to play the 6 strings guitar) and Arte de tocar la guitarra espanola  (The art of playing the Spanish guitar) both published in 1799. Of Moretti's book, Femando Sor said, "It is a torch which serves to light the errant steps of guitarists."  Moretti supported the use of the flesh.  Ferrandiere opted for the nails.

Femando Sor (1778-1839) was one of the most celebrated guitarists and composers of his day. His  compositions are still a big part of the repertoire. On this issue he said, "Never in my life have I heard a guitarist whose playing was supportable, if he played with the nails."
Like writers before him, Sor complained about the sound created by the nails. He felt that it had an unpleasant tone and created too much noise. He also thought that "very few gradations of sound quality could be produced" using the nails. The one redeeming lute playerfactor was that "nails facilitate rapid passages".  In deciding these issues, Sor pointed out that every player was the real deciding factor: "When I direct you to observe this or that precept, never rely on my authority merely, but inquire the reason; and if I have none sufficiently convincing to satisfy you it should greatly diminish the confidence with which you honour me in regard to the science.
Dionisio Aguado (1784-1849) in his Nuevo Metodo para guitarra (New guitar method) of 1843 described a technique very similar to that of the modern guitarist. He explained how to play using both the flesh and the nail approach with a strong preference for the nails. Aguado himself played with the nails, as did his teacher Manuel de Popolo-Vicente Garcia. Aguado believed the use of the nails gave the guitar a unique sound and hence best brought out its true character. The use of the nails allowed for a great deal of timbre variation as well as rapid and clear playing. 
The next major figure in the guitar's history was Francisco Tarrega (1852-1909) who, having never written a method book, has become an important pedigogical figure primarily through the writings of Emilio Pujol (1886-1982). Tarrega's teacher, Julian Areas, used the nails, as did Tarrega up until the last nine years of his life. In 1900, Tarrega withdrew from doing concerts and started to play with the flesh. Pujol described Tarrega's use of the flesh as giving a clear sound because of the "width, smoothness, and firmness of the body that set the strings vibrating. This certain touch must be developed". Pujol added, echoing Fuenllana, that "the flesh best transmits the feeling of the soul ...such an unresponsive medium as nails interferes, somehow with the direct contact of the artist's sensibility to the string.
At times, Pujol became very emotional about the subject. "The tone of a string struck with the fingertip possesses an intrinsic beauty, which affects the deepest feelings of our sensibility, just as air and light permeate space. Its notes are incorporeal as might be the notes of an ideally jazz_ensambleexpressive and responsive harp. It has, as well as this intimate character, some of the Roman strength and Greek balance. It recalls the gravity of an organ and the express! veness of a violincello. The guitar ceases to be feminine and becomes an instrument of grave virility. Finally, this style stands for the transmission, without impurities, of the deepest of our emotions."  Despite the tone of this last statement, Pujol ends his treatise. El dilema del sonido en la guitarra (1960) (The guitar sound dilemma), on a very balanced note by summing up the qualities of each approach, and he left the decision with the reader. He said the nails give the player more ability to get timbre variations, clear harmonies, vibratos, speed and articulation. The nails also allow playing with a minimum of effort with the right hand. He said that the flesh gives uniformity, sobriety and volume, clear pizzicatos, loud scales, and an etherial rather than a metallic tremolo. The flesh approach, requires more strength and effort to displace the string because of the increased resistance (of the flesh), hence virtuosity is more difficult. Virtuosity is used as synonim with speed and Mistake.

Andres Segovia (1893-1987) played with the nails in Aguado's style. When asked for his opinion on Tarrega's use of the right hand without nails, he replied; "It is absolutely stupid. You reduce the volume of the guitar, and the difference of timbre and colour.Tarrega has renounced the real nature of the guitar, which is the richness of its timbres, the different colours of the guitar."  It is because of Segovia's influence, most guitarists now play with the nails. The issue was never solved by evolution nor voted on by a majority, but was decided by the work and popularity of Segovia and his followers. It is this large following that accounts for the almost unanimous use of the fingernails by guitarists today.



So i suggest you tobuy pro nail kit for creating a better FINGER NAILS(FingerNails) for Guitar. I thinks It's a great guitar tips
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