Hi
I am learning how to play lead and have a question about vibrato,
I know when it comes to technique every player will have his
or her own way of executing to get the same sound.
The video below of Yorgui is a good example. Is he using wrist, finger, or arm movement at .24 and .46 seconds?
Also how would one practice to achieve such a sound?
With the other video of Adrien at 48 sec and at 1:46 it looks
like from the angle he's using wrist and finger movement.
When I listen to the vibratos of these guys and others it
sounds like the vibrato speeds up till the sound fades out.....is that right?
Angelo
Comments
Stochelo has a pretty great vibrato and RA would be a good place to look at this.
I agree Stochelo's vibrato is great ... probably my favourite style/sound of the guys alive today ...
technique wise, one of the typical ways of doing it has to do with actually tensing up the wrist area that connects the forearm to the hand .. if you do it right now without a guitar in your hand , you'll see your hand quivering very quickly.. that's sort of the idea...
but a lot also depends on the direction you push the strings, depending on whether you push up or down and the speed of the vibrato desired, or on which strings you're on, your thumb might even have to come off the back of the neck.. i don't have my guitar with me right now so i can't verify which is which
at any rate, i think the intonation thing is the most important one that most people tend to have trouble with (just listen to metallica's kirk hammet for an idea of poor intonation) ; it's extremely crucial to oscillate between two pitches and two pitches ONLY (ok there may be some exceptions, but i can't think of any besides wanting to sound out of tune on purpose).
If you do a vibrato that's a quarter step, make sure it's a quarter step up. and then make sure you come back to the original pitch.. that's the one that most people screw up, they bend up to a pitch but don't come down to the original pitch.
www.denischang.com
www.dc-musicschool.com
I use classic technique which is what I learned 40 years ago and I am too lazy to change. Much more subtle...maybe 20 cents.
Your explanation helps a lot, in the next few weeks I might
try uploading some videos of my vibrato.
Rather than focusing too much on picks, strings, upgrading guitars and really cool licks,
I think it's important to focus on sound, I haven't heard one person yet
at DiJ or DFNW pull off this type of vibrato (some get close) except for the visiting
artists......why is that?
Angelo
ALSO - for the gypsy jazz vibrato, you need to press the string even harder than you normally do. this creates that subtle sound of increased amplification and sustain of the note being vibrato'd.
Speed of the vibrato is something that comes in time. if you're doing the rest correctly though, even a slower vibrato can sound cool.
Anthony