braintheory
Well-known member
Could be just a semantic thing, but vibrato I’d say doesn’t change the core tone itself, but more so just further brings out things about the tone that is there or also can reveal things lacking in the tone too. For example, in amps lacking tonal complexity/richness (aka most amps made today) they sound really bland/sterile if you do a milky, expressive vibrato or bend, while with good gear you can squeeze out much more overtones and other nuanced goodies outta the notes with a good vibrato, but the inherent tone still is what it is (even if Kirk Hammett played it with his vibrato lol). This is actually one of the things I always do when trying to evaluate new gear I try and most of it fails in this department lolThe issue is that you're trying to isolate the term tone to a single thing. It's not and almost never used that way. The tone is what comes out in the end and is comprised of everything used to get it, from individual vibrato and picking style/technique, to specific pickups, guitar, cables, amps, effects, and speakers. I can confidently say that everything in the chain from beginning-to-end contributes it in some manner. Our individual approach to the instrument is probably the single largest item in terms to determining what we get out. That doesn't mean anyone thinks the rest is unimportant, even critical to the final sound of the instrument.
The term "tone is in the fingers" is almost always used to discuss when people spend all their effort in purchasing gear, rather than refining their playing. I've never used it, but it reminds me of the guys who come in and want an authentic fuzz box (pick particular performance) so they'll sound just like Hendrix.....then you listen to them play and realize the issue isn't the lack of a 100% accurate fuzz box, but their lack of ability/practice/experience.
I think the pick itself is part of the gear that can of course shape the tone, but as long as the pick itself is kept constant as a variable I don’t think the picking style/technique is really changing the core tone, but again more so emphasizing different aspects of the tone that is already there and of course emphasized differently depending on how you pick/play it. I think basically the playing or fingers part can emphasize or de-emphasize aspects of the tone, but the core tone from the gear still is what it is and on here that’s the part we’re really talking about and focusing on, so when others say “tone is in the fingers” it’s really not applicable and those who say that generally just don’t get it. I think most of us here understand well the distinction between playing a certain way to get certain sounds and also the gear part of it to get certain sounds