Blue Chip, Tortoise and Apollo are the nicest sounding. I preferred the BlueChip because it seems to have the least pick noise. Smoothest. A tie for me between the other 2. Thanks Joe!
Everything matters... It is just a question of how much. The player, the instrument, the setup, the strings, the room, the mic, the PA/amp (both the equipment and settings), the humidity level, pick material, pick shape, pick thickness, pick bevel... When you divide 100% of your tone across all of these factors (and others) the numbers for many of these items get small. That said, small things add up. We play for our own enjoyment and for the enjoyment of others. Anything that increases your enjoyment is worth considering. Full disclosure: 1) I have a quart jar full of picks including Wegan, Bluechip, Red Bear and many others. I just ordered a tone slab. 2) I am a crap player and my opinion doesn't matter, Do whatever you want.
The "milk protein/formaldehyde is actually what Casein is made of -pronounced "Case-in", Wegen - Michel is Dutch and I believe his name is pronounced "Vey-gen". I use both Blue Chip picks and Wegen 346 large triangles. Frankly i don't believe the audience would tell the difference between picks, but "might" possibly hear a slight difference in "EQ" bsed on the thickness and mass of various picks, but it is the player who feels best with the pick or picks who experiences the difference.
everyone compares picks like they sound different... but do they really? i mean, if we couldn't see wat pick he was using would we evn hear a diff? i rather doubt it. to me, the only diff' is how they feel in my lil'hand :)
But they do sound different in blind tests... just like your thumb and a pick sound different. They're obviously more similar than your thumb, but they do have different EQ, attack, and string noise.
Blue Chip, Tortoise and Apollo are the nicest sounding. I preferred the BlueChip because it seems to have the least pick noise. Smoothest. A tie for me between the other 2. Thanks Joe!
Give the dunlop primetone 1.4 large triangle pick a try! Definitely a favorite of mine
Everything matters... It is just a question of how much. The player, the instrument, the setup, the strings, the room, the mic, the PA/amp (both the equipment and settings), the humidity level, pick material, pick shape, pick thickness, pick bevel... When you divide 100% of your tone across all of these factors (and others) the numbers for many of these items get small. That said, small things add up. We play for our own enjoyment and for the enjoyment of others. Anything that increases your enjoyment is worth considering.
Full disclosure: 1) I have a quart jar full of picks including Wegan, Bluechip, Red Bear and many others. I just ordered a tone slab. 2) I am a crap player and my opinion doesn't matter, Do whatever you want.
I think you could play that mando with the corner of a milk jug and it would sound good. Thank you for the demos💯
I liked the Delrin but the player seemed most comfortable with the Wegen.
You left off one from your evaluation. Where is the Dawg Pick ?
Love Joe! But would love to hear a more opinionated review! (We don't gravitate to the same pick out of an expensive arsenal for nothing!)
Personaly i like the dunlop 80 it doesnt flack or ziz 😊😊😊
The "milk protein/formaldehyde is actually what Casein is made of -pronounced "Case-in",
Wegen - Michel is Dutch and I believe his name is pronounced "Vey-gen".
I use both Blue Chip picks and Wegen 346 large triangles. Frankly i don't believe the audience would tell the difference between picks, but "might" possibly hear a slight difference in "EQ" bsed on the thickness and mass of various picks, but it is the player who feels best with the pick or picks who experiences the difference.
everyone compares picks like they sound different... but do they really? i mean, if we couldn't see wat pick he was using would we evn hear a diff? i rather doubt it. to me, the only diff' is how they feel in my lil'hand :)
Finally, someone is talking sensibly here!
But they do sound different in blind tests... just like your thumb and a pick sound different.
They're obviously more similar than your thumb, but they do have different EQ, attack, and string noise.