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Guitar Lessons: Fun With Your Whammy Bar Guitar Tab


Author: Carl 'Crazy Ass Guitarist' Russell
Tab ID: 338240
Tab Rank: #1193
Posted: Apr 2, 2006
Source: GuitarMasta.net
http://www.guitarmasta.net/g/guitar_lessons/338240.html
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Most of you out there with vibrato bars have probably been through all the 
basic maneuvers (you know, the "dive bombs" when you hit the low E string 
and bottom it out). Then there's the basic wide vibrato on any given note; 
and, of course, the one where you hit a harmonic and the bar down or go "whee 
whee whee". Here I will discuss a few tricks you may not have been through yet.

First, I will talk briefly about vibrato bar systems. There are many different 
ones out on the market. If you're serious about your bar work, you're looking 
for one that won't put you out of tune or go sharp when you rest your wrist on 
it. And you don't want it to alter the string tension if you break a string 
or stretch a note. But you do want it to go sharp (up to a 4th) when you pull on 
it. Good luck! There are modifications you can make to the standard systems 
to help solve some of these problems. I use Floyd Rose tremolo systems. I 
have mine set up so that I can pull up on the bar and the strings will go sharp 
as much as a 4th.

In this area of vibrato bar exploration, we will look at using the bar to play 
melodies. This is like learning how to play a fretless guitar. It takes great 
intonation and a lot of patience.

Pick a key and hit a note. With the bar, bend the note down to the next note in 
the key. Then, bend it down again to the next lower note. Go in between these 
three notes to create a melody. Here's an example: In the key of F# minor, 
play an F# on the 11th fret of the G string. With the bar, bend that note down 
to an E; then depress it down to a D or a C#. Release it backto F#, then pull the 
bar so the note sounds G#. Be sure your intonation is happening. Now use these 
notes to construct melodies.

In this fashion, practice playing a melody you already know. Record a melody 
using four or five notes. Learn it back using the bar.

Another bar trick involves bringing it around 180 degrees from where you 
would normally use it and tapping on it. This causes the note to go sharp. 
If you chop at the bar in this position, every time you hit a note it will sound 
like little grace notes from India.

Bend the bar down and slide up the neck on the G string. As you slide your finger 
up the neck, raise the bar slowly. Boy, what fun!

Now, do the opposite. As you slide up the string, bend the bar down so your 
finger is sliding, but the pitch is the same. It can sound like a purring cat. 
Growwlll!


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