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Deering Banjo 'Alaska' picks

03 Apr 04 - 09:45 PM (#1153868)
Subject: Deering Banjo 'Alaska' picks
From: GUEST,Wayne M.

Deering Banjo sells a finger pick they call the "Alaska" pick. Anyone here ever used'em?


04 Apr 04 - 01:54 AM (#1153944)
Subject: RE: Deering Banjo 'Alaska' picks
From: Dave Hanson

Alaskaround.
eric


04 Apr 04 - 03:01 AM (#1153946)
Subject: RE: Deering Banjo 'Alaska' picks
From: Strollin' Johnny

Yep, they were useless. Still kept falling off and a nuisance all round. I've used Alaskas, Pro-Piks, National nickel-steel picks and the standard Jim Dunlop plastic picks, and the Dunlops were by far the best.

I've given the all up in favour of fibre-glass or gel overlays at our local beauty-salon. Costs about the same as a set of strings and I get them done every three weeks. VERY hard-wearing (I've never broken one and I'm a hard-player) and so, so convenient - no rooting around in little ex-sweetie or ex-tobacco tins, no losing them, no clumsy bugger treading on them when you accidentally drop them on the floor) - and you get the nice sweet 'ping' that only the fingertip/nail combination can give.

I'm a guitar-player but I know at least one banjo-player who gets his nails done the same way.

Johnny :0)


04 Apr 04 - 01:45 PM (#1154217)
Subject: RE: Deering Banjo 'Alaska' picks
From: Roger in Baltimore

Wayne,

I'm a nail biter. The Alaska picks require that you have come nail to hold them in place.

I've used all the ones Stollin' Johnny mentions. The Pro-picks were comfortable and gave me some string feel as well as a clearer sound. I've given up on most everything however and go for the "soft" sound of skin on steel. I usually play a loud dreadnought so I get along OK unless I am in a group, then the Pro-picks come out.

Maybe I should get on down to the nail boutique and try them out.

Roger in Baltimore


04 Apr 04 - 01:49 PM (#1154224)
Subject: RE: Deering Banjo 'Alaska' picks
From: Strollin' Johnny

Hey Roger, a good idea. Also gives you the opportunity to listen to all the latest ladies' gossip - amazing what you can hear while having your nails done by a pretty young lady!

Johnny :0) :0)


04 Apr 04 - 02:11 PM (#1154244)
Subject: RE: Deering Banjo 'Alaska' picks
From: Big Mick

Rog, it works very well, but can be a pain in the arse to maintain. Also, you must be a bit careful with your instruments and go for a more controlled attack when you are strumming. This is because your nails are very hard and will dent the top of the guitar. They work wonderfully though, on fingerstyle techniques. I quit having it done some time ago, but I am thinking about going back to them.

All the best,

Mick


04 Apr 04 - 03:36 PM (#1154293)
Subject: RE: Deering Banjo 'Alaska' picks
From: GUEST,Wayne M.

Thanks everyone! I play a Deering orange crate without picks in a drop thumb pattern so I keep the nail on my middle finger trimmed for the up-picking but I'd also like to try frailing and I need a nail for that. I'll take Johnny's advice and try a plastic pick.


04 Apr 04 - 05:30 PM (#1154340)
Subject: RE: Deering Banjo 'Alaska' picks
From: Uncle_DaveO

The name of this pick is not "Alaska", but "A-Laska".

I've tried them for frailing/clawhammer, and they were useless. The frailing/clawhammer stroke pulls them off the finger.

The points were too long for me. The instructions say you can cut them back with fingernail clippers, but I found it not to be so. The contour in the around-the-finger direction combined with the contour in the protruding-from-the-finger direction always forced the pick away from the fingernail clipper (or vice-versa).

Dave Oesterreich


04 Apr 04 - 06:04 PM (#1154358)
Subject: RE: Deering Banjo 'Alaska' picks
From: Richard Bridge

I'd like to try Pro-Piks - but where can I get them in the UK?


04 Apr 04 - 07:20 PM (#1154416)
Subject: RE: Deering Banjo 'Alaska' picks
From: BanjoRay

You can probably get Pro-Piks from Dave Bresnan at Frets Unlimited, in Fazakerly, Liverpool, or maybe from Andy Perkins' shop in Kent
His Website.
I've used silk gel nails from a nail salon for clawhammer banjo. My verdict is that they're totally perfect and are still great even when your nail's grown for three weeks, because there's a good seal between the fake nails and your own. They don't fly off and land in someone's beer like the stick-on ones do.
Cheers
Ray

link repaired by clone


05 Apr 04 - 03:34 AM (#1154600)
Subject: RE: Deering Banjo 'Alaska' picks
From: Strollin' Johnny

Down-strokes with any kind of finger-pick (other than Alaskas which are designed to represent the shape and poition of a nail) are virtually impossible because they sit on your finger 'upside-down' in comparison with a nail - they catch in the strings and end up on the floor in my experience. They're OK for finger-picking but no good for frailing.

Go down the silk/gel or fibreglass overlays route - don't worry about feeling like a big daft tart when you go to the manicurist for the first time - she'll soon get used to you. I've had some wonderful conversations with young Claire about her visits to Nashville, New Orleans, worshipping at Elvis' graveside, all sorts of muso stuff.

Bye now,
Johnny :0)


05 Apr 04 - 09:16 AM (#1154792)
Subject: RE: Deering Banjo 'Alaska' picks
From: DonMeixner

For years I have played Clawhammer ith Dunlop .025 steel finger picks on. I simply turn the one on my right middle finger upside down. This notion is out of the Pete Seeger 5 String Banjo book.
It works fine for me.

HOWEVER

I am going to try the artficial acrylic nail route to see if I like the freedom of not having to look for picks in between tunes at Coleman's Authentic Irish Pub.

Don


05 Apr 04 - 09:34 AM (#1154810)
Subject: RE: Deering Banjo 'Alaska' picks
From: McGrath of Harlow

The metal ones are better, and the work pretty well. If they are adjusted right they stay on remarkably well, and make a clean sound. You only need a short little bit of nail to hold them, about as much as you probably have on your fretting hand. They're the only fingerpicks that feel like real nails, allowing you to strike the strings up or down, and giving you feedback through your real finger nails.

Only hassle is putting them on, and keeping them organised, because they get flattened if you sit on them, and since your fingers are likely to be different shapes, you really need to know which is which.

And the largest size is particularly useful as a thumb pick with some kinds of playing - the angle at which you strike notes is the same as it would be with a real nail, and completely different from the case when you use a normal thumb pick.

And Dave - if you're trying to shorten a plastic Alaska pick I'd recommend using a nailfile rather than a clipper. (For the metal ones, a real file would do the job.

Here's an enthusiastic write up of them that came up via Google just now. (And they are officially called aLaska piks, just to fool everybody...)


05 Apr 04 - 11:27 AM (#1154901)
Subject: RE: Deering Banjo 'Alaska' picks
From: Strollin' Johnny

Don, you genius, that's a brilliant idea for the down-stroke with the middle finger. Why didn't I think of that? Excellent!

But yes, it's far better not to have to bother with picks at all. When I used them I had to look very carefully at them and get them on the right fingers - you could hear the feet-shuffling and audience-hum increasing in volume as the punters got bored with watching a daft old duffer peering at his hands! :0)

Cheers,
Johnny :0)


06 Feb 12 - 01:07 AM (#3302882)
Subject: RE: Deering Banjo 'Alaska' picks
From: GUEST,Todd P

I was watching the Salute to the cornfield, Roonnie Stoneman says she uses super glue to keep from losing her picks, lol


06 Feb 12 - 06:31 AM (#3302982)
Subject: RE: Deering Banjo 'Alaska' picks
From: matt milton

I LOVE the alaska picks. They're the only ones I can use, because they're like false fingernails. The picks that go on the underside of your finger - standard fingerpicks - always seemed counter-intuitive to me.