How do you do vibrato on mandolin - guitar sideways string bending style, violin style longitudinal finger rocking, varying pressure behind the fret, or everything that works?
How do you do vibrato on mandolin - guitar sideways string bending style, violin style longitudinal finger rocking, varying pressure behind the fret, or everything that works?
Vibrato isn't really a core part of the mandolin sound -- the lack of sustain/quick decay of the instrument means it's fairly infrequent that you're letting a note really ring a long time and the paired nature of the strings makes it both physically hard to do and makes it hard to sound really good.
Generally speaking on a mandolin, when you'd be emphasizing a long, held note, you'd be using tremolo for that similar effect. You can use variable speeds and volume to help give that vibrato feel.
4 or 5 string Electric mandolins do use guitar techniques and have longer sustains available thanks to electronics, so you could use vibrato that way.
If you get an effect you like from either technique that you mentioned, then go for it, but I don't think about vibrator on the mandolin myself.
I am with KEB on this one. The short scale length, quick decay and higher tension of the strings, plus the double courses all seem to go against vibrato, and tremolo would probably be the choice for mandolin playing. But I am sure there will be players out there who have developed ways of getting vibrato from acoustic, 8-string mandolins.
I'm playing all the right notes, but not necessarily in the right order. - Eric Morecambe
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I think some of the choro players bend strings but they also use light gauge strings on their bandolims. Not sure anyone uses true vibrato though I suppose it could be done and maybe has been done on a slow piece.
Jim
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I found this video, in which Caterina Lichtenberg explains, how tremolo is executed on classical mandolin.
It's done in a sideways motion like in classical guitar, as opposed to an up-and-down-motion like electric guitar players do:
I do vibrato on mandolin the same way I do on guitar - rotating my wrist in alternating directions around the pivot point of the noting finger.
Although on mandolin the technique is constrained by rapid decay, it has it's value to me - it's one more tool for being expressive.
Clark Beavans
Having difficulty embedding this so here's the link to Tim Connell
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gxzKoTIm_I0&t=463s
You so often see it argued that vibrato is impossible on mandolin - because of the short scale length leaving not enough flexibility in the strings to do it at all, because of the lack of sustain meaning you'd never even hear it if you could do it and because the double courses would immediately send the intonation painfully off.
That's why I love this video. It's not just a demonstration that it can be done - it's an explanation of how to do it and above all else a demonstration that it is worth doing.
Last edited by des; Dec-06-2022 at 9:21am. Reason: embedding issues
Violin style.
Only audible for a couple of beats, but adds a nice touch on slow tunes.
I would assume that most guitar players who use vibrato on guitar, who then pick up mandolin, would use some vibrato on mandolin. It would be natural, though adjustments would have to be made due to the characteristics of a mandolin, already described. Often when I make assumptions they turn out to be incorrect, lol, so maybe that’s just not the case. I certainly have been using small doses of vibrato on certain notes even on fiddle tunes, ever since I picked up the mandolin.
Max, you’re making a broad generalisation about guitar vibrato (sideways bending), vibrato technique on guitar can vary amongst players.
The videos from Catherine L. and Tim C. are the best I’ve seen on mandolin vibrato, and those have already been included above; check them out
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Here’s the Tim video embedded:
Jim
My Stream on Soundcloud
19th Century Tunes
Playing lately:
1924 Gibson A4 - 2018 Campanella A-5 - 2007 Brentrup A4C - 1915 Frank Merwin Ashley violin - Huss & Dalton DS - 1923 Gibson A2 black snakehead - '83 Flatiron A5-2 - 1939 Gibson L-00 - 1936 Epiphone Deluxe - 1928 Gibson L-5 - ca. 1890s Fairbanks Senator Banjo - ca. 1923 Vega Style M tenor banjo - ca. 1920 Weymann Style 25 Mandolin-Banjo - National RM-1
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