Welp. That Went Badly.

I severed the Ulnar nerve in my left wrist ( the "funny bone nerve') 15 years ago , and lost all the feeling in my pinky and ring fingers and side of my hand all the way down to the elbow. I could not play guitar for a year , I tried but it was like sticking a hot soldering iron up my hand.
Well, in that way we're alike - after very long open heart surgery (septuple bypass) the ring and pinky fingers on my left hand were numb. After a few months, they became too weak to play.

The issue was initially misdiagnosed in an MRI as neuropathy from other causes.

But one of my doctors (physical medicine specialist) said he didn't think it was that at all, did some nerve conduction tests, and he suspected a pinched ulnar nerve at the elbow.

I was referred to a hand surgeon who did more testing, and that's what it was. I had ulnar transposition surgery, and regained the use of my fingers. However, the pinky and ring fingers are, and will remain, partially numb.

Feels really weird to play now, doesn't it?
 
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Issue with great acoustic guitars, is that they amplify everything. When younplay great, they make you sound better. However if are not on top of your hame, they amplify mediocreness (is that a word?). You probably don't suck, your guitar might be too good.

Good news is, just reach the tipping point where the guitar amplifies again how great a player you actually are :)
 
Issue with great acoustic guitars, is that they amplify everything. When younplay great, they make you sound better. However if are not on top of your hame, they amplify mediocreness (is that a word?). You probably don't suck, your guitar might be too good.

Good news is, just reach the tipping point where the guitar amplifies again how great a player you actually are :)
My guitar is definitely too good now. It wasn't when I bought it. So it goes.

I'm working hard to regain my form so as not to embarrass the darn thing. ;)
 
I try to rip myself away from the electrics once or twice a week to ensure that I can still hold a tune without all the wizardry! Usually satisfied, but I have not done so in a few weeks now as I have been exclusively recording, so who knows what will happen with the next acoustic test ride ;~)) Keep at it László, it will be good both mentally and for your hands to work on the acoustic!!
 
When last I checked, I was a pretty decent acoustic guitar player. OK, not a Tony McManus, but I could do an ad project and sound reasonably good. I'd never have bought my PS acoustic otherwise. Not that it'd have been wrong, just not something I'd have done.

But ever since Covid. I've played it only sporadically. I've concentrated on orchestral writing, and when I've played guitar, it's been mainly electric.

I've practiced the acoustic for the last couple of weeks trying to get the hands back in shape. Today I felt confident, and decided to record it and see how things sounded (I always think I'm brilliant until I hear playback). So I set up a mic, got the height just right, used the mic and mic preamp that have always sounded great with this guitar, and thought I'd be rockin' and rollin' like a champeen.

It was not to be.

Friends, when I heard playback, I wasn't just lousy, I was execrable.

Picking? Inaccurate. Timing? Marginal. Tone? Who could even tell with multiple failures to get an even, clean note. Sloppy, sloppy, sloppy. An embarrassment to myself and all of humankind!

If people needed qualify for a license in order to play guitar, I'd have had mine confiscated by the guitar police right then and there. If playing badly was an indictable offense, I'd be doing time.

I have some work to do! I just hope it's not too late and I haven't lost it permanently! :oops:
Off day. We all have them. Tomorrow you‘ll sound great Les:)
 
When last I checked, I was a pretty decent acoustic guitar player. OK, not a Tony McManus, but I could do an ad project and sound reasonably good. I'd never have bought my PS acoustic otherwise. Not that it'd have been wrong, just not something I'd have done.

But ever since Covid. I've played it only sporadically. I've concentrated on orchestral writing, and when I've played guitar, it's been mainly electric.

I've practiced the acoustic for the last couple of weeks trying to get the hands back in shape. Today I felt confident, and decided to record it and see how things sounded (I always think I'm brilliant until I hear playback). So I set up a mic, got the height just right, used the mic and mic preamp that have always sounded great with this guitar, and thought I'd be rockin' and rollin' like a champeen.

It was not to be.

Friends, when I heard playback, I wasn't just lousy, I was execrable.

Picking? Inaccurate. Timing? Marginal. Tone? Who could even tell with multiple failures to get an even, clean note. Sloppy, sloppy, sloppy. An embarrassment to myself and all of humankind!

If people needed qualify for a license in order to play guitar, I'd have had mine confiscated by the guitar police right then and there. If playing badly was an indictable offense, I'd be doing time.

I have some work to do! I just hope it's not too late and I haven't lost it permanently! :oops:
Ya think playing an acoustic is easy after playing an electric for a long time, I had the same experience….try it with old arthritic hands.. You haven’t lost it, you just haven’t found it back yet! I bet it took about a day;)
 
When last I checked, I was a pretty decent acoustic guitar player. OK, not a Tony McManus, but I could do an ad project and sound reasonably good. I'd never have bought my PS acoustic otherwise. Not that it'd have been wrong, just not something I'd have done.

But ever since Covid. I've played it only sporadically. I've concentrated on orchestral writing, and when I've played guitar, it's been mainly electric.

I've practiced the acoustic for the last couple of weeks trying to get the hands back in shape. Today I felt confident, and decided to record it and see how things sounded (I always think I'm brilliant until I hear playback). So I set up a mic, got the height just right, used the mic and mic preamp that have always sounded great with this guitar, and thought I'd be rockin' and rollin' like a champeen.

It was not to be.

Friends, when I heard playback, I wasn't just lousy, I was execrable.

Picking? Inaccurate. Timing? Marginal. Tone? Who could even tell with multiple failures to get an even, clean note. Sloppy, sloppy, sloppy. An embarrassment to myself and all of humankind!

If people needed qualify for a license in order to play guitar, I'd have had mine confiscated by the guitar police right then and there. If playing badly was an indictable offense, I'd be doing time.

I have some work to do! I just hope it's not too late and I haven't lost it permanently! :oops:

It has been so long that you played, it appears that you forgot my 3 top tips for rapidly improving your performance..

1. turn off the metronome.
2. Do not record yourself.
3. Do not play through a PA

You will be amazed at how much better you sound! :D
 
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