Fender has incorporated a Bigsby unit on multiple models in the past, including the 2016 Limited Edition American Special Jazzmaster. It was the Bigsby that finally stabilized the tremolo enough to make it popular-and they’re still popular today thanks, in part, to their vintage, curlicue looks. Invented by Clayton “Doc” Kaufman in 1929 and officially patented in 1935, the Kaufman (or Kauffman) Vibrola was the earliest vibrato system put to use on guitars and was featured on some Epiphone archtops and Rickenbacker lap steel models, but its spring-based design would quickly work the guitar out of tune if used with any brio.Ĭountry legend Merle Travis took his dissatisfaction with the problematic Kaufman Vibrola design to Paul Bigsby, a motorcycle racer and mechanic, who soon gave Travis, and the world, the Bigsby Tremolo. It’s also worth noting that guitars equipped with any type of vibrato system can be harder to tune, keep in tune and re-string than guitars with a fixed tailpiece. Pressure on the tremolo arm loosens the tension on the strings and flattens the pitch, while pulling the tremolo arm away from the body does the opposite, sharpening the pitch. In a nutshell, “tremolo” is a variation in volume while “vibrato” is a variation in pitch. More confusing is the fact that tremolo systems don’t actually create tremolo, but vibrato. (Fun fact: It was pioneering guitarist Lonnie Mack’s 1963 instrumental hit “Wham!” that gave us the term “whammy bar”.) And it helps to know that the terms “tremolo bar”, “vibrato bar” and “whammy bar” are all used interchangeably-as are the terms “bar” and “arm”. Utilizing tremolo can be an integral aspect of your sound-see: Duane Eddy, Jimi Hendrix, David Gilmour, Jeff Beck and Eddie Van Halen-or add a splash of color to your style.īut what is a tremolo system, how does it work and what are the benefits of one system over another?Ī “tremolo system” refers to all components of the tremolo unit, which can include the tailpiece, the bridge, the nut and the tremolo bar. Tremolo systems first started appearing on guitars in the 1930s and have evolved multiple times in the ensuing decades.
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