![]() Various musicians have been suggested as the originators of modern two-hand tapping. Tapping techniques and solos on various stringed acoustic instruments such as the banjo have been documented in film, records, and performances throughout the early 20th century. Similar to two-hand tapping, selpe technique is used in Turkish folk music on the instrument called the bağlama. Well known to frequent taverns, Paganini was likely exposed to gypsy guitar techniques from Romani, "gypsies." He preferred playing his guitar for tavern customers instead of concert hall audiences. Some musicologists believe he wrote his 37 violin sonatas on guitar and then transcribed them for violin. Paganini considered himself a better guitarist than violinist, and in fact wrote several compositions for guitar, most famously the "Grand Sonata for Violin and Guitar." His guitar compositions are rarely performed in modern times, though his violin compositions enjoy multiple performances. Niccolò Paganini (1782-1840) used similar techniques on the violin, striking the string with a bouncing bow articulated by left-hand pizzicato. Tapping has existed in some form or another for centuries. Jazz guitarist Roy Smeck, seen in the 1926 short film His Pastimes, was an early popularizer of tapping. Guitarist John "5" Lowery has been known to use it, and has nicknamed it a "Spider-Tap". Some guitarists may choose to tap using the sharp edge of their pick instead of fingers to produce a faster, more rigid flurry of notes closer to that of trilling, with a technique known as pick tapping. All of these instruments use string tensions less than a standard guitar, and low action to increase the strings' sensitivity to lighter tapping. The harpejji is a tapping instrument which is played on a stand, like a keyboard, with fingers typically parallel to the strings rather than perpendicular. The NS/Stick and Warr Guitar are also built for tapping, though not exclusively. The Hamatar, Mobius Megatar, Box Guitar, and Solene instruments were designed for the same method. ![]() ![]() The Chapman Stick (developed in the early 1970s by Emmett Chapman) is an instrument designed primarily for tapping, and is based on the Free Hands two-handed tapping method invented by Chapman in 1969 where each hand approaches the fretboard with the fingers aligned parallel to the frets. The Bunker Touch-Guitar (developed by Dave Bunker in 1958) is designed for the technique, but with an elbow rest to hold the right arm in the conventional guitar position. While tapping is most commonly observed on electric guitar, it may apply to almost any string instrument, and several instruments have been created specifically to use the method. Thus the three notes (E, C and A) are played in quick succession at relative ease to the player. This finger would be removed in the same way, pulling off to the fifth fret. ![]() For example, a right-handed guitarist might press down abruptly ("hammer") onto fret twelve with the index finger of the right hand and, in the motion of removing that finger, pluck ("pull") the same string already fretted at the eighth fret by the little finger of their left hand. Tapping generally incorporates pull-offs or hammer-ons. Tapping is an extended technique, executed by using either hand to 'tap' the strings against the fingerboard, thus producing legato notes. Tapping is the primary technique intended for instruments such as the Chapman Stick. This is in contrast to standard techniques that involve fretting with one hand and picking with the other. The technique involves a string being fretted and set into vibration as part of a single motion. Tapping is a playing technique that can be used on any stringed instrument, but which is most commonly used on guitar. Erik Mongrain demonstrating the technique
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