🎶 Grip it and rip it with Gorilla Snot!
Gorilla Snot is a professional-grade gripping aid made from naturally refined tree rosin. Designed to enhance grip on drumsticks, guitar picks, and bows, it reacts with your body's chemistry to provide a secure hold without the mess of traditional products.
G**S
Watch this, it's surprisingly versatile!
Gifted this to someone who is a pianist and wears watches. Who knew that putting gorilla snot on your wrist also keeps your heavy watch in place?
J**T
Price increase
Great product!Big price increase
M**E
Little go's long way
Well it's sticky I love it no lost pick so far
D**S
a little dab i'll do ya
have not found any better
W**Z
Works on fiddle bows too!
I’m a senior and taking up the fiddle. The bow was sliding out of my grip, then I remembered I had this and tried it. Just what I needed. Works great.
C**S
A guitar players necessity!!
It’s hard to play without this stuff, makes you a better player!!
D**E
Does what it says
This stuff does exactly what it says, but a little goes a long way. I have authritus and drop my pick alot. A very small smear on my thumb and index finger and then rubbed on the pick is great. I do stress a small amount.
K**H
it works great, in fact, its the only thing that worked for me...but..one prob
It works great, thats the great news. With acoustic guitars, I've had a gravity & pick problem from the day I started strumming. With the electric it was less a problem, but with acoustic guitar, being a hard strummer, I was boomerang-ing sometimes 5-10 picks a night out of my fingers into oblivion. I tried candlewax- padded picks which didn't hold and chipped off, tennis grip spray wore down quickly to gummy balls by friction and dried out, cork-padded picks were ineffective, flexible paper thin picks fractured by song #3, but h.s.! this stuff works and stays, maybe an occasional touch-up is needed, but a little goes a long way. I was ecstatic!!.....however..................regretfully, I soon realized that once you lay the pick down for a break or use your hands for something else, then grasp the pick again...roll it around to that sweet spot position, your smudging it out slowly towards the periphery. Once you press down a few many times, the snot eventually migrates towards the playing tip area and from there, you guessed it........it violates sacred territory and crosses the bridge of no return by making contact with your strings, and now the strings get tacky and grab a little more at a time and then you notice gradually that your competing with the sticky strings for pick domination and once your strings get more and more gummed up with the stuff the string loses its inherent characteristics which ultimately affect the tone, resonance, and sustain. I would love to say this didn't happen, but it did. I strum hard and perhaps readjust my fingers frequently just as I sense a little slippage. I don't know what this residue does to the strings if you don''t wipe it down right after it happens, but the buildup over time drying out concerns me possibly oxidizing it or just adding buildup that alters tone. I was sold till that happened after about 1.5 hours of strumming. Still, I'll give it another try with a very conservative amount.. nonetheless, something to consider.
TrustPilot
5天前
1天前