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Frank Gambale Style Speed Picking Рџћёрџ”ґрџ¤˜рџџ» May 2026

Consistent patterns—like playing four notes on one string to reverse direction—help automate the technique so you don't have to think about every stroke. Essential Training Resources

If you finish on an upstroke and move to a lower string, you continue with an Upstroke . Key Mechanics Consistent patterns—like playing four notes on one string

If you finish a phrase on a downstroke and the next note is on a higher string, you continue with a Downstroke . The pick should feel like a machine part

Unlike strict alternate picking (Down-Up-Down-Up), Gambale’s method uses a whenever moving to an adjacent string: Unlike strict alternate picking (Down-Up-Down-Up)

Gambale designed his system around specific scale fingerings. Playing three notes on one string (Down-Up-Down) sets your pick up perfectly to "sweep" into the next string with another Downstroke.

High speed requires "gracing" the strings rather than digging in. The pick should feel like a machine part where the strings are just "in the way".

Frank Gambale's "Speed Picking" is a revolutionary system that prioritizes to achieve fluid, high-speed guitar lines. Often called "Gambale Sweeping" or "Economy Picking," the core philosophy is to minimize motion by letting the pick fall naturally from one string to the next. The Core Principle: "The Path of Least Resistance"