carpenter
Oud Junkie
   
Posts: 248
Registered: 8-30-2005
Location: Eugene OR
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Mood: brimming with hope
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Educating my hands
I'm picking away, feeling mighty proud of myself, and notice I'm using pull-offs and hammer-ons now & again. Is this acceptable oud technique? (It
could always be the Need for Speed on my part ... a holdover technique from other instruments?) It sure sounds to me on recordings like the Big Guys
are risha-ing every note; mastery or illusion? Bad habits die hard, and I'd like to nip this one in the bud - if it's truly a bad habit.
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arsene
Oud Junkie
   
Posts: 366
Registered: 5-19-2007
Location: Rotterdam, NL
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I'm pretty sure I've heard hammer-ons and pull offs before on oud. If only I could think of an example. But I'm pretty sure you can even use it as an
ornamentation technique.
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Brian Prunka
Oud Junkie
   
Posts: 2956
Registered: 1-30-2004
Location: Brooklyn, NY
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Mood: Stringish
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It is a legitimate technique, but it shouldn't be a crutch. Which is to say, the music should dictate the technique, not the other way around.
That said, the oud tends to be a very idiomatic instrument, and a lot of phrasing is encouraged by the technical tendencies of playing it, so use your
own judgment. I definitely use a lot of hammer ons and pull offs, even when I think it's less than ideal. I still try to practice phrases both ways,
but on a gig, they come out. Maybe eventually . . .
one thing, from a technical perspective, if you are going to use pull offs and hammer ons, make sure you're definitively sounding the note.
especially with pull offs, they can be nearly indistinguishable from a plucked note if executed properly (i.e., really pulling the string with your
finger, not just lifting it off).
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