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What's the term for the electric guitar technique that results in a smooth sound (like that of a wind instrument) by:

  1. Decreasing the volume (usually to mute; typically with the pinky finger)
  2. Striking the string(s) with the fingers or plectrum (just as in normal guitar playing)
  3. Gradually or suddenly increasing the volume such that the resonating notes are heard, but the initial striking of the string(s) is not heard

The general musical term "crescendo" seems related but is not specific to electric guitar.

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Examples

  • Metallica - My Friend of Misery (3m30s-3m52s)
  • Donkey Kong Under Water Theme (38s)
stevec
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3 Answers3

7

I've always known it as 'violining'. [1]
I first heard it used by the late, truly great, Leslie West in the early 70s.

There are just a few brief examples in this live solo [30s & 1:15 approx]

[1] I have no citation for this, it's just what I've known it as for 50 years or so ;)

Tetsujin
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    'Cos it sounds like a violin! (Far more than it sounds like a flute!). – Tim Feb 01 '22 at 14:55
  • Also used very extensively by Mark Knopfler, FWIW. – Graham Feb 01 '22 at 15:08
  • Well, as a classical cellist (among other music hats :-) ), I agree that removing the initial pluck-impulse sound followed with a crescendo means the dynamic profile is similar to a violin, but you still have a sinusoidal fundamental vs. the sawtooth waveform a bowed violin produces. – Carl Witthoft Feb 01 '22 at 15:15
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    Sure. I wouldn't claim it actually really sounds like a violin or cello - you can get a lot closer to that with an E-Bow. – Tetsujin Feb 01 '22 at 15:18
5

It's also known as swelling. Similar to effects on an organ, using the, erm, swell pedal.

Tim
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That's a volume swell. That's also a common use for volume pedals, to limit or eliminate pick noise and pop and emphasize the sustain. The guitarists I associate most with this are Danny Gatton and Roy Buchanan.

With pedal steel, the technique takes on a secondary form where your swell rises with a turned-up amp so that the decay is hidden and the sustain seems to go on forever.

There are also tone swells, the same technique with another knob. The example I think of most is Jeff Beck on the Yardbirds take on "Train Kept A'Rollin'", doing the train whistle. I think that Aerosmith used a wah pedal for the same effect.

Dave Jacoby
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