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Guitar Technique: Vibrato [Hand Movement] (Guitar Lesson TE-008)

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    Hi, how you doing?
    Justin here.
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    Today we're going to be
    talking about vibrato.
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    It's a very common question
    this one. I see questions about
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    it all the time on the forums
    and in private lessons
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    A lot of people don't really
    get how to do a vibrato,
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    what the different types are
    So there's three types
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    The one that we're looking
    at today I call "hand vibrato"
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    It's the most common type of vibrato
    that you'll ever find and it's
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    definitely the one that I would
    recommend you get to grips with first
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    The other types are "classical vibrato"
    where you tend to move your hand
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    left and right, side to side which
    is less useful on electric guitar.
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    It's possible to use it but it's not
    really what you want to be checking out
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    I think for electric guitar and the
    other one I call "whole arm vibrato"
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    which is the type of vibrato that few guys
    use like Eric Clapton and John Mayer.
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    It's not the most common in blues
    and rock but it's still definitely worth
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    checking out so we're going
    to do that in a separate lesson.
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    Now the idea of vibrato, of course, is to
    make your guitar sound a little more vocal.
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    It's really-really important that you get
    to grips with the idea of that note
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    moving up and down in pitch If you
    just play the note and you stay on it,
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    it tends to sound a little bit flat.
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    Especially where singers do that without
    the vibrato, it sounds really wonky.
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    So it's really important to realise
    that you got to get the note
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    and then you want to be changing
    the pitch up and down a little bit.
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    Now on guitar we can make it go
    up and down with a whammy bar but
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    because of the way the instrument is
    designed we tend to just move the note up.
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    Now before I talk about that,
    let's get to a close up and check
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    out the actual technique that
    you're going to need to use.
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    So I want you to start by putting your 3rd
    finger in the 7th fret of the 3rd string.
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    Get the other 2 fingers behind it,
    just on the 6th and 5th fret.
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    Or if they bunch up a little bit,
    it doesn't really matter.
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    And make sure that your thumb
    is over the top of the guitar.
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    Now you can do it without
    the thumb over the top but
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    it's a lot easier to start
    with the thumb over.
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    Now, if we just remove our fingers
    a little bit I want you to see that the
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    1st finger is in contact with the neck
    because when we've got our fingers down
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    actually the vibrato pivot point is this.
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    It's actually our hand that's moving,
    okay. So when we're playing a note
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    you'll see there that it's
    actually this motion, it's the hand.
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    I'm exaggerating it now so you can see.
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    Okay? It's not this:
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    If you try and do it with just your
    fingers by pulling your fingers in
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    like that you end up with
    this kind of quite odd vibrato
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    and usually you'll bend it out of tune
    as well because it's really important
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    that it comes back to the note
    that we call the "fundamental"
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    Which is the first note
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    So thumb over the top, 3rd finger
    on the 7th fret of the 3rd string.
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    Play the note
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    and then just pull it down a bit
    and then relax it again and again
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    Play and see if you can get into
    a little pattern of doing that
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    Okay, that's how you want
    to practice the technique
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    Just pulling it up
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    Now what I tend to think about is
    when I'm putting the string back up.
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    Instead of just going to
    the spot I'm looking for,
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    I tend to try and think of
    it going a little up as well.
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    So I'm pulling it down and when
    it's going back I'm trying to think
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    of it going slightly up, but if
    you imagine where the sting is
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    that's pulling the string down
    that's pushing it up, okay?
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    So even though we're mostly concentrating
    on pulling the strong down,
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    I want to really make sure that
    I come back to exactly that note.
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    Cause if you do the vibrato Like this:
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    Now the note that we hear is note in tune.
    That's the note that's in tune
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    So we have to make sure that we
    keep coming back to that note.
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    Just pulling it down
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    See if we can get that going
    nice and smoothly.
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    Like I said, I'm thinking about
    pushing it up a little bit,
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    but it's definitely more of a down thing.
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    Like it's definitely moving further down.
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    It's important to realise that there's
    2 things that we've got to play with.
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    The depth which is how far
    we're bending it, okay? So:
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    You can have a really wide vibrato, like
    that which is a little bit exaggerated.
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    Okay? Or it could be quite subtle.
    Where it's hardly moving at all.
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    Just a little okay. Okay?
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    And then of course we've got speed so the
    wide one slowly will sound really weird.
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    Okay? The little one slowly
    will sound quite nice. Okay?
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    So we've got those two different things.
    Normally the wide one would be quite fast.
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    Otherwise it just sounds
    kind of wrong so you want to
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    experiment a little bit with
    all of those different things so
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    Just putting a finger on, see if
    you can get a nice small vibrato.
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    Where it's not moving much.
    Making sure again you're coming
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    back to the note as if it's not
    being pushed or pulled at all
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    And maybe trying to
    make it a little bit bigger.
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    And then back. Okay, then
    try it with different fingers.
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    The first finger's a good one as well.
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    Cause then you can really
    feel that kind of a pulling there.
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    You can really see while
    I've got my first finger straight.
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    Bend it in and then by moving my hand
    you can see that it's making that motion.
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    So then put it down.
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    Get use to what it feels like.
    Little, little motions. Big ones.
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    And experience. Get a feeling.
    How does it makes you
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    feel when you're doing
    that nice little subtle vibrato?
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    Okay, try it on some
    other parts of the neck.
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    Little vibrato, quite wide vibrato.
    Now one thing that
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    you're going to find straight
    away on the first string
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    You can't pull it down. So you have to be
    thinking now of pushing it up.
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    Okay, so instead of all of that feeling
    that you had before pulling down.
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    It's the same things,
    it's still the hand moving
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    Just a bit more subtle. Try it all over
    the neck, with all the different fingers.
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    I don't tend to use my little finger
    much for vibrato, to tell the truth.
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    But you probably should be able to do it.
    Okay?
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    just going through a bunch of time.
    Sometimes working on a
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    real slow nice vibrato, like you
    might play in a ballad.
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    Just thinking about something
    really beautiful and soft
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    and make the note sound really
    nice and vocal and singing.
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    Other times you might want to be doing:
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    Something more aggressive
    and fast and crazy.
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    That one's gone right out of
    tune because I've gone too crazy.
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    But experiment and see because there's a
    time and a place for every different type
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    of vibrato and you want to learn how to
    make the guitar sound how you imagine.
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    One last little tip for you before
    you start your practise, and that
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    will be to emulate the vibrato
    that you really like.
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    So a lot of the guitar players -
    Angus Young springs to mind, very,
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    very distinctive type of vibrato and
    if you really like that style of vibrato.
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    Something that you want to think about
    is really trying to copy his vibrato.
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    So maybe learn one of his
    licks that's got vibrato in it
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    and then sit and try to make
    your playing sound exactly like his.
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    Try and copy it. Listen to it closely.
    Is it very wide? Is it very fast?
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    Or is it very narrow? Is it slow?
    Really try and pick up on what
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    it is that he's doing and then try
    and make your guitar sound like that.
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    It's going to take you some practise,
    but it's totally worth it.
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    Even if you don't end up using
    his style of vibrato all the time.
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    The fact that you've learned
    how to copy it will mean that
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    you're better able to express yourself
    through the instrument. You know,
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    BB King another guy who's got a very
    distinctive vibrato and it's something-
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    it's really, really, important to try and
    emulate the stuff that you really like.
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    The things that really connect with
    you on a kind of a spiritual level
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    That's the stuff that you really want to
    copy and you want to try and really make-
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    incorporate those things into your playing
    because they obviously resonate with you
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    in a kind of a deep way so try and copy
    the things that really move you.
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    The stuff that you really, really like.
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    So hope that helps you get
    your vibrato on track and I'll
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    see you for plenty more lessons very soon.
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    You take care of yourselves
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    Bye
Title:
Guitar Technique: Vibrato [Hand Movement] (Guitar Lesson TE-008)
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
JustinGuitar (legacy)
Project:
Technique (TE)
Duration:
09:15

English subtitles

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