Hey everyone! I want to introduce you to the new system in my Guitar Academy for all english speaking guitarists. Now you can purchase some of my lectures from my Guitar Academy SEPARATELY! And also purchase access to chats with my students separately too and ask me any questions during 365 days! Prices for July 2020. Lectures: 1. Basics and Right hand technique - $60 2. Left Hand technique - $40 3. String switching technique - $70 4. Glushovka (Muting) - $20 5. Synchronization of hands - $50 6. Guitar sport - $40 7. Technique of visualization - $30 8. Legato - $25 9. Hybrid picking - $20. 10. 365 DAYS Access to chats with my students where you can ask me any questions and send me your videos for analysis - $130 Or buy all of it for only $390 + get 50 exercises for all techniques. For purchase contact me here or via email: mpaostudents@gmail.com
I've followed you since you were so young, and you got so good so fast, I'm so happy seeing you come into the ranks of great youtube guitarists, you make me want to get so good like you
The reason is how the human ear perceives relative pitch. In an un-bent string the only way the amplitude of the vibrato can go is from pitch to higher pitch, then back to baseline. This means you are always returning exactly to base pitch, which allows the ear (brain) to set reference and feel like it is resolved to that base pitch. With a bent string, unless you are a robot you will never be able to oscillate such that the pitch returns exactly to the base pitch… you will always slightly overshoot downwards and it will make the note sound flat, and humans are more sensitive to flat notes than sharp. Try as an experiment to vibrato with a tremolo but always push it a bit past the neutral point, and your ear will then lose reference and hear the flat sound, which will cause you to think the tremolo is out of pitch.
There are lots of people who walk the same way. No one tells them that they walk like someone else. It's completely normal that among millions of guitar players at some point someone's vibrato sounds the same as another's without them even knowing each other. I think it's good to experiment and do what feels right for whatever type of music you want to play.
@Anton Oparin If you bend up to D from C and then apply vibrato to the D note, It will sound not as good because it's very difficult to return the pitch to D perfectly. Not impossible but difficult. And I'm sure you already new this!
As for the vibrato an a bend, i guess because you already need force to bend the note to the pitch you want, it is easier and more controlable to release a bit from there and bend to pitch again then do bend even more and then try to release to the right pitch. But since you mentioned this i am expirimenting with it. And although it is indeed a bit harder to do it sounds cool doing an upward vibrato an a bend; also on a downward bend.
To the bending+vibrato thing: I guess it is connected with the fact, that if you make a vibrato or a band your goal is a particular note to "arrive". And not to make an average! If you achieved that specific note, it sounds right. But maybe I'm wrong, who knows 🙂
but yngwie does all kinds of vibrato, including horizontal vibrato, and when he plays Blues he also dominates shaky vibrato, there are several videos where he does it. In any case, it is a good explanation of the different types of vibrato and their usefulness c:
Hey everyone!
I want to introduce you to the new system in my Guitar Academy for all english speaking guitarists.
Now you can purchase some of my lectures from my Guitar Academy SEPARATELY!
And also purchase access to chats with my students separately too and ask me any questions during 365 days!
Prices for July 2020.
Lectures:
1. Basics and Right hand technique - $60
2. Left Hand technique - $40
3. String switching technique - $70
4. Glushovka (Muting) - $20
5. Synchronization of hands - $50
6. Guitar sport - $40
7. Technique of visualization - $30
8. Legato - $25
9. Hybrid picking - $20.
10. 365 DAYS Access to chats with my students where you
can ask me any questions and send me your videos for analysis - $130
Or buy all of it for only $390 + get 50 exercises for all techniques.
For purchase contact me here or via email: mpaostudents@gmail.com
I am a fan of you since you are 10 years old :)
Load is one of my favourites, too ;)
I've followed you since you were so young, and you got so good so fast, I'm so happy seeing you come into the ranks of great youtube guitarists, you make me want to get so good like you
Thank you so much! Will be glad to make great content for you!
Awesome, now I can understand what you're saying.
The reason is how the human ear perceives relative pitch. In an un-bent string the only way the amplitude of the vibrato can go is from pitch to higher pitch, then back to baseline. This means you are always returning exactly to base pitch, which allows the ear (brain) to set reference and feel like it is resolved to that base pitch.
With a bent string, unless you are a robot you will never be able to oscillate such that the pitch returns exactly to the base pitch… you will always slightly overshoot downwards and it will make the note sound flat, and humans are more sensitive to flat notes than sharp.
Try as an experiment to vibrato with a tremolo but always push it a bit past the neutral point, and your ear will then lose reference and hear the flat sound, which will cause you to think the tremolo is out of pitch.
I really like Steve Morse's vibrato. He also gets a very unique sound from it.
I like the Ritchie Blackmore´s vibrato and bends. Great channel, congrats!
Great tips!
How are you champ? one of the world's best 😉
There are lots of people who walk the same way. No one tells them that they walk like someone else. It's completely normal that among millions of guitar players at some point someone's vibrato sounds the same as another's without them even knowing each other. I think it's good to experiment and do what feels right for whatever type of music you want to play.
@Anton Oparin If you bend up to D from C and then apply vibrato to the D note, It will sound not as good because it's very difficult to return the pitch to D perfectly. Not impossible but difficult. And I'm sure you already new this!
I’ve always struggled with my vibrato. Great info Anton 👍
As for the vibrato an a bend, i guess because you already need force to bend the note to the pitch you want, it is easier and more controlable to release a bit from there and bend to pitch again then do bend even more and then try to release to the right pitch.
But since you mentioned this i am expirimenting with it. And although it is indeed a bit harder to do it sounds cool doing an upward vibrato an a bend; also on a downward bend.
To the bending+vibrato thing: I guess it is connected with the fact, that if you make a vibrato or a band your goal is a particular note to "arrive". And not to make an average! If you achieved that specific note, it sounds right. But maybe I'm wrong, who knows 🙂
New subbed brother.......
but yngwie does all kinds of vibrato, including horizontal vibrato, and when he plays Blues he also dominates shaky vibrato, there are several videos where he does it. In any case, it is a good explanation of the different types of vibrato and their usefulness c:
th-cam.com/video/_mYkk6Bogfg/w-d-xo.html there are an example, not the best one but you got the picture
Hello of Brazil...
How can you fix having very low dexterity in the left hand? I can't make the vertical vibrato move no matter what.
Bend da hell outa em er strangs!!!!😎🎸🎼🎸👍✌
❤️❤️❤️
Maybe it's playing with the intonation when bent with vibrato?
yo donna4collins dm´s me your link, i wanna come here to insult u but u are good jajaj keepgoing m8
Thanks a lot now I can avoid sound like yngwie
😅
😁
at 8:14 it just sounds like a nervous player with this type of vibrato tbh, not my fav
I think you don`t even have to discuss Kirk's playing, because he is a worst guitarist... if we can call him guitarist :)