1 They can be
powerful performance
tools
Vibrato bridges—also commonly
referred to as “tremolo” bridges due
to errant usage of the term by Fender
for many years—are a purely mechanical
means of temporarily altering your
guitar’s pitch that can make an extremely
creative addition to your playing style.
To grasp the full range of the sound and
function of this performance tool, listen
to the playing of Duane Eddie, Hank
Marvin, Jimi Hendrix, Jeff Beck, and
Edward Van Halen. From subtle tremor
to evocative dive-bomb this is a piece of
hardware that can really move you.
2 Vintage units
excel at subtle
wobbles
By and large, vintage vibrato
bridges such as the Bigsby, the Fender
Stratocaster or Jazzmaster/Jaguar units,
or Gibson’s Maestro Vibrola remain
within their comfort zones when you
restrict them to gentle actions and
subtler vibrato effects. In many cases, the
restricted travel of these older designs
helps them to excel at those less-extreme
uses, whereas more advanced units
might feel a little “hair triggered”—
hence the enduring popularity of the
archaic Bigsby vibrato. Of course, a
Jimi Hendrix or a Jeff Beck can perform
breathtaking feats with a vintage Strat
unit, even if it wasn’t designed for such
extremes.
3 Grab a high-tech
design for more
dramatic action
Many updates of the original
Fender Strat vibrato bridge are preferred
for more intense use. PRS units perform
well, as do many two-point fulctrumstyle
bridges from Wilkinson, Hipshot,
Fender, Ernie Ball/Music Man, and others.
Listen to the way that an inventive
guitarist such as David Torn incorporates
a modern vibrato into his playing,
making it as essential to his style as
the fretting fingers of his left hand, and
you’ll begin to understand the potential
of a more high-tech vibrato. For many
incendiary rock players, however, the
“double-locking” format pioneered by
Floyd Rose and Kahler is essential when
dipping into serious dive-bombing.
4 They will affect
your tuning
Excessive use of any vibrato bridge
will affect your guitar’s tuning—it’s
just the nature of the beast. As habitual
Bigsby user Neil Young put it, “It’s a
guitar, it goes out of tune, no big deal.”
The big deal for some players, though, is
that frequent pauses to retune affect the
flow of a performance, and possibly elicit
an excess of stink-eye from your lead
singer. A good setup, periodic maintenance,
and proper string loading can help
to minimize tuning instability in any
vintage-style vibrato bridge, and modern
units such as those made by Floyd Rose
and Kramer, which lock the strings at the
nut as well as the bridge, typically have
only slight tuning issues.
5 They will affect
your tone—even
when not in use
A vibrato bridge will affect the
sound of any guitar it is mounted on, if
only slightly, even when the vibrato bar
is not being used. Any guitar’s bridge
forms part of a crucial string-anchor
point, and therefore is key in transmitting
the strings’ vibrational energy into
the body of the instrument. Change the
structure of that bridge, and you alter
its tone as compared to a “hard-tail”
version of the same guitar. The movable,
spring-loaded designs of most vibratos
also change the playing feel of the guitars
onto which they are mounted, typically
making them feel a little looser and more
rubbery to the fretting fingers.