My questions would be: How easy is it to replace strings? How easy/difficult is it to change tunings on the fly, i.e. go from standard tuning one song, to drop D, back to standard? Thanks for the video!
@@FirstLast-xn8ic oh I agree, but I did have those questions about that bridge. My PRS stays in tune really well and is 100% stock, but still has those human elements of which you speak, especially since I'm a bass player who's used to pressing and bending much thicker strings
So many ways having a Guitar that stays in tune always is a dream. Although have a few questions. How does it deal with drop or alternate tunings? Or is it set for only standard tuning? Was that a battery compartment I saw? If the system runs of batteries how many, what type and how long do they usually last? Last question, is there a locking nut on that guitar, didn't notice? If not with the strings being tightened and relaxed in a constant state to maintain pitch, will it prematurely wear out the nut? Years ago was in a Masterclass and the teacher asked everyone to play. Most students ripped off some licks trying to impress and show their chops. After all had their turn the Teacher says " does nobody have an ear or pay attention to what they hear"? Most everyone was so concerned about speed and flash many were prssing to hard as they got into it (as you even stated on this vid) and technique and pitch go out the window. It's a very bad habit to break. Point being, with something like this which corrects poor playing, could cause some very poor technique and sloppy play in future. Which would be very noticable when playing other guitars. Took myself quite a while playing plugged into a Peterson Strobe tuner to learn the max pressure before pitch goes sharp. Kept doing it till it was automatic. Good lesson for anybody really (especially with Barr Chords). Just a thought. Still do love the idea of complete tuning stability. Thanks for the Video!
Wouldn’t that completely defeat the purpose of having a tremolo? I personally only own hard tail guitars, so I’m not really familiar with trems, but it seams like an oxymoron to me.
@@madaxe79 one of the key problems with trem systems, especially floating ones, is that they have a really hard time staying in tune as you keep whammying. You can configure evertune bridges to allow for bends (or in reality tension change as that's all bends are) while still maintaining the perfect tuning feature for unbent notes. If they could make something that allows for a ton of tremolo stuff while also keeping unmodified note accuracy it'd be a game changer.
Cataclysmic Delta I get what you mean now... And I think I have a way to do it. Just need to get hold of an evertune to modify. It shouldn’t be too hard, the springs are just acting as a tension take-up device, so, there’s actually probably two or three ways to do it, just need to do some testing to see which way works best. That sounds like a fun project to try and make work. I’m completely not interested in the outcome, but I’m now interested in the challenge
Actually bends are like the number one way to sound like a noob. If you don't do them fight at least. A LOT of players are guilty of out of tune/flat bends
So you can’t use bends? I should finish the video LOL like what if you want to bend ha ha I’m not too overly crazy about it but I feel like it would be a must to play anything traditional
I agree then have to retune when ya want to bend guitars why fix somat when it’s not broke, design something universal to stay in tune 24/7 and play bends as well. Not stop n start like this not good they can keep this crap cannot see the point
The Evertune bridge is incredible, and perhaps the first really big innovation in guitar tech in recent history. I had the same strings on for over four months. Never went out of tune. Period.
Bruh, last time I bought a guitar was over 13 years ago. After one week of watching these videos, I got inspired to pick it up again, and immediately bought a project squier strat lol...
Cool review. Though i was expecting abusing the evertune, like breaking strings but the other strings still stay in tune. Lol. Your review definitely makes decide to get an evertune guitar. Thanks man
I never questioned the reliability of it. I just don't really have a use for it. I don't have an evertune on my guitar, but it stays perfectly in tune from string change to string change. I never have to tune it. It's called low mass locking tuners. As far as compensation goes, it's a cool idea. I can see how it would be useful for some applications, but more often than not I do a lot of bending on all strings in my style of playing so it's not a necessary feature. Still a really cool design. I'm always amazed by what people are able to figure out in the guitar world.
First time I played one of these, it felt like reality as I knew it was falling apart. I didn't know it was an evertune bridge and I couldn't understand why my bent notes weren't bending.
you don't have to use that no-bend part of the system, or can choose to use it on individual strings. So you can set up any Evertune guitar to play like any other, it just stays in tune forever
That is very useful when you don’t want the chords to go flat or sharp ,more like a studio mode! Use the tuners to make it sharper until you reach the end of the locking zone and you will be able to bend no problem
I have an Evertune on an ash strat that I have set up for bending. It plays brilliantly. Chords sound great. Bending feels the same as a standard bridge guitar. You can thrash it and it stays in perfect tune. Two-step bends? No problem! - returns to perfect pitch! My go-to guitar around the house because when I pick it up, I know it's in perfect tune. It's been a game-changer for me. If I could afford to, I'd put one on all of my non-tremolo guitars. BTW, using one doesn't rob you of the ability to HEAR or tune a guitar. I play numerous guitars and using it has no adverse effect on my playing (like lulling you into developing sloppy technique).
Awesome man! Ive got to try one of these. After playing 35 years, my ears can detect even the slightest hint of being out of tune and it drives me fkn nuts lol.
That grey and rather clean finish is definitely precious and defined! Of course it plays very well absolutely! I always enjoy these showcases, as well as envious of those guitars haha.
Hey Darrell, don’t forget that the Evertune solves the double stop bend issues for all your blues type licks as well. Ps.. all Evertune need to invent now is a whammy bar version that somehow stays in tune all of the time and I can die a happy man/boy/nerd/guitarist. Great vid bro.🤘👍🎸
Yeah on their website they say that after they finalize and release the bass version, they're going to work on the version 2 for guitars which they hope to be able to incorporate whammy bar functionality in it. But apparently the bass version has been in the prototype stage for years, and honestly I don't know how they could make it work with a whammy bar, so who the hell knows if/when it will happen.
Basically it is a hardtail Floyd rose. You dont have to worry about the balance act as much. Tune it. Set it up to the radius of the neck and proper string height and your gtg.
@@sunnohh Robotuners? Like the Gibson fiasco? Absolutely nothing like that. At all. Clearly you’ve never played a guitar equipped with an Evertune bridge.
Lable isn’t terrible at all. RGD - rg drop tuning AL -axion label ET - ever tune The 61 is what’s confusing a bit because Ibanez keeps changing the number convention.
I got a Solar A1.6 with Evertune. When I first got it I had to down tune it to D standard so I had to fiddle with it a bit but once it was locked in I’ve not had to tune it once in 5 months. I haven’t changed the strings yet (cause I hate doing it) but yeah, it’s incredible to just pick it up every time and never have to do anything but play. 🤘
As a bassist by birth and guitarist for fun I have a real bad habit of playing too hard on the dainty guitar strings. This bridge seems great for my stupid fast punk songs.
I've been a huge fan of Evertune, both the product and the company. I used their install program and had them order and install one in a PRS CE24. They did a great job and didn't cost all that much, considering.
I have an ESP loaded with one and i can honestly say, it's a game changer. once you understand it, its easy. string tension in different tunings is also a non issue. if you are traveling, and the weather changes, you drop it, etc, it will always stay in tune.
Great bridge! Actually a couple of days ago I was changing strings on my LTD Alexi 200 ( for the first time in ten years since I owned it, lol ). I got fed up trying to adjust the strings on the floating bridge so I took the back plate off and stuck a small piece of wood between the bridge and the body, so the bridge wouldn't bend backwards. A lot easier to tune now, since I don't pull up on the whammy bar anymore, so there was no point in having it.
I've been planning on taking up guitar again.... Had a lot of doubts, but thanks to your videos I'm quite confident on going back to the good ol' music days hahaha thanks a lot man
My thought exactly. If you are a beginner or intermediary, it will auto compensate for bad technique. Even worse, pickup a guitar without this bridge and you're lost.
The thing is, a beginner is unlikely to spend a lot of money on a guitar with an evertune. But even if they do, who cares about "bad habits" when your instrument works just fine with the way you play?
I'm gonna disagree. The biggest issue for intermediate guitarists outside of needing to improve mechanically, is fighting bad tuning stability, or other instrument imperfections such as poor intonation and string height. This gets even worse depending on what part of the world you live in. Here on the Gulf Coast, where we have an average of 75% humidity, and wildly varying temperatures throughout the months, things like neck warp, and strings shrinking/expanding constantly will also pull your guitar out of tune. The Evertune is probably the most important advent in guitar technology since pickups and amplifiers were invented.
Lots of comments here like, “How dare you make a product that makes the guitar function more consistently”. 😂 I might not have an Evertune, but to pretend like it isn’t innovative or useful is flat out dumb.
Best thing I noticed about evertune is it really cleans up your playing. I noticed I didn't have to concentrate so much on note definition because it stays so perfectly in tune.
Another cool thing you can do is tune the bridge to Drop D, then just tune up the low string to E with the tuner on the head. makes it very easy to switch tuning on the fly.
Does anyone else find Darrel's accent really calming? Like when he pronounces an "ou" sound it's like "aaaah, I'm in the happy Canadian guitar place! Yay!"
These are the nuances I love about playing guitar. You can use them to shape your style. Not sure if I'm sold on the Evertune. Edit: Ok maybe it is cool. Definitely for studio!
295 + installing and it could go easily over 500$. But you will have guitar that is in tune and plays in tune which is the essence of a good sound. Unlike some expensive brands like gibson.
You're situation without a doubt definitely takes the cake, but I came damn close by installing $440+ worth of Mastery Bridge and Vibrato, when all was said and done, on my $500 Squier Jazzmaster. XD
How, how, I ask you how? How does Darrell keep making interesting videos? Just captures my interest with each one, never stops. Dude is great, and it makes me disappointed Jared Dines hasnt had him on a shred collab yet.
Darrell : "Normally I tune up a guitar and then play it, this one i just pick up and play it" Me : *_Looking at my Squier strat_* asking "Are you an evertune ?"
I pick up my kit-built S-type and it's still in tune about 1/3 of the time, still sufficiently in tune that I don't bother fixing it just to noodle out an idea about 1/3 of the time, and sufficiently out of tune to require breaking workflow and tuning about 1/3 of the time. It depends more on how much I've been abusing the tremolo bridge than anything else. If I have, it will drift while hanging up. If I haven't, then only temperature and humidity will make it drift.
My latest purchase-an ESP Eclipse II included an evertune in large part because of your recommendation. It is fabulous!! Well worth the money. There is a bit of a learning curve -especially tuning it in for the first time-but again well worth it.
Love my evertuned guitars. I sold all the other ones because I never played them anymore. haha I have mine setup so I can still do bends on all the strings, but the tuning stays solid for rhythm parts. Total game changer!
Who are the 54 numpties that disliked this video? This guy is excellent and very good at what he does....a definate go to when looking at different guitars. He has taught me a hell of a lot and look forward to new videos from him.
I've been wanting to buy an Evertune bridged guitar for a while now, but wasn't sure about it. This helped me answer some of the questions and reservations i had about it, so thanks a lot!
I have never seen or heard of this magical bridge. This may be because I live in South Western Australia. Thank you Darrell for another informative and entertaining video. Now I have to have one. Bugger Cheers Tim
Love the Evertune! I have three guitars with them! They are very user friendly, and you can still do anything that could normally do with a fixed bridge guitar, like bending and drop tuning.
I feel like it would be an awesome buy for a tracking guitar, but ive also heard it is a sustain/tone sucker that is pretty obvious on clean tones. I dont own one though, only what ive heard. Probably awesome for gain stuff
One of my evertune guitars loses sustain on the high E above the 12th fret. I would not call it a sustain sucker by any means but on that particular guitar with the particular strings I use, I do notice that. For me the myriad benefits far outweigh that issue, but each player is different. If you play a lot of high solos I would try a guitar or two before purchasing, just to be sure. Just make sure it's set up properly, almost universally guitar stores don't know how to set these up so they just confuse the heck out of people. I bought one used at guitar center and I had to do a complete setup on it before I could even try it out, they had everything so jacked up.
I grew up with Guiars without Trem systems on them, so I had to use my hands/fingers to articulate bends/tremolos. I did a lot of rhythm playing more than lead playing , so the leads came in time, as did the use of Trem systems. I am a neck strangle-holding death-grippage player, so I have had to keep a constant watch on my playing articulations and a ear open to play in tune. It has been something else tuning because I have that perfect pitch thing that works for a person or it will drive you insane, especially on music gear with tuning and staying in tune problems or strings that cause the same problems. This is a GR8T tool to stay in tune, play strangohold style, rhythm, chords, bends and still still stay in tune, but it is a tool that does not allow for the true instrument nor the human factor in the tone production process. It does not allow for playing bends/trems on the 4th, 5th, 6th strings and get the pitch/tuning corrections. I can see the benefits of the Evertune trem system useage. On the other side, I want to know that I played my own music on guitar, correct and learn by/from my own playing mistakes. I would not want to be out on any playing venture and have some tuning gizmo fail and the real musician come sounding out as an even worse compromised/fake/failure musically ! ! ! Peace & Play 🎸On . . . 🤘🎸😎🙏 DDH 9-10-2020.
I just bought and LTD Koa can't wait to try it out! It's a demo unit it was the last one available. So ill have to check it out decide if it's a keeper but I am excited. I do lots of recording.
Great review, didn't know about the 'rhythm setup' idea as I've been wanting to get one of these for my studio work that I can depend on no matter what.
I don't know if I could ever use the rhythm mode. So many riffs of mine have bends on all of the strings, so if I got one it would be purely for the tuning stability.
Absolutely fantastic. Totally didn't realize that you had just uploaded when I started watching! Coulda said "first" or something. Looks like something to invest in when I'm not in college anymore!
As a long time player and long time les paul user, i immideatly ordered an evertune guitar and sold my les paul :D i will never worry about tuning again
I guess it could affect someone’s playing, and a beginner a lot, specially in getting familiar with string tension and doing bends in tune and that stuff. I would recommend to just practice on a normal guitar, and use this for professional purposes only like recording. I would only practice on this guitar to get familiar with it. I don’t think this shouldn’t be anyone’s first guitar. Although I could be wrong. It looks sweet, I want to get one exactly for the purpose I mentioned before (recording).
Great system. I have 5 guitars (Ibanez, LTD, Solar) with Evertune and these works awesome for live, studio and rehearsels. My main guitar is my Ibanez Jem 7vwhl with Evertune aftermarket installed and it's excellent to have on outdoor festivals and clubs nomatter temperature and not worry about going out of tune 🙂 My main studio guitar is my Ibanez RG1570L with Evertune and True temperament fretboard 🙂👍 Great for cleans, rhythms and extended chords, solos and especially harmony leads when I record for my band Cryonic Temple 😁
Problem is that every time you make a slight mistake on a regular guitar it pressures you to adjust and therefore you improve gradually. With evertune you will not notice your mistakes and they will be entrenched in your playing so when you then play a regular guitar afterwards you'll sound like crap.
This is a definite improvement to the stick with strings! For session/pro/recording/touring it looks like it would be amazing. No batteries or electric motors either! For mere mortals like me just keeping in tune is a real attraction but maybe a luxury when a $20 clip on tuner and your hands can do a pretty good job on your squire - lol. I was thinking it wouldn't cope with absolute pitch only relative but I guess by keeping the tension correct it is reacting to the wood moving in temperature and humidity too. What a great concept.
Honestly, I have heard a guitar with true temperament and evertune and I actually though it sounded bad. Don't know why, but I didn't like it. Could have just been the guy's playing. But there's something about the way this works, the intonation is so much more solid. You know how when you pluck a string to tune it goes a little sharp? That doesn't happen anymore. So as you're intonating and tuning you're really solid on the note immediately, no movement. So while technically the temperament might still be a hair off because of the way guitars work, it honestly sounds flawless when set up well.
Straight frets are tempered frets - they approximate twelve-tone equal temperament. Bendy frets from TrueTemperament simply provide other tempered tunings. A true untempered guitar would be fretted according to just intonation - pure simple ratios in reference to one pitch center - and would sound perfect in one key and immensely out of tune in others. The frets would be so bendy as to be unplayable.
I have a Strat and a Tele both with Evertune Bridges. I also have two Les Pauls and an Ibanez. It is very hard for me to play my non-Evertune guitars. I never wanted to be Guitar Tech. I just want to play. And I want to play in tune. These things are life-changing for me. I don’t love the way they look on Les Pauls. By the way, I did have evertune bridge is added to my guitars. I have an amazing tech here in Las Vegas. There are guys out there who can do it
5:52 this what does give a guitar it's natural sound, and having always a perfect tuning, will make it sound more like virtual instrument that been playing using MIDI keyboard
Had to scroll to find your comment, but i'm with you. Out of tune is all part of it, especially with double or triple tracked guitars. i often record three guitars, with one at perfect pitch, then i'll sharpen one, and flatten another, and pan the flat and sharp ones for a huge sound. i recorded a violin player, who's pitching was so good, that when i double tracked her, with a medium pan, they both met in the middle, sounding like one violin. It's like recording multiple vocals and then pitch correcting them, the whole chorus effect disappears.
@@CineDecodificado Well there is a track called And Then When We Meet Again by Gemma and Tezzo which we did at home during, and about the lock down. I'd love to hear some of your stuff too. Best, t
EASILY, did you not watch the video ? Look Up Ola Englund's "Master of the universe" album, all recorded with an evertune, you'll only know this because I told you so.....
I had one of these for a couple of years. What the demos never seem to address is that when you set it up to be right a the cusp for perfect bending, any change in humidity or whatever that makes the neck relief change slightly - will make the guitar either go sharp, or make you lose some sensitivity for bends. Either way you will have go at the tuning pegs to get it back to “right on the edge”, where it plays like a regular guitar.
@@216trixie I don't know man it kind of encourages bad habits. A good player won't need correcting like this as the technique should be correct anyways.
@@TheEchelon could be. But those guitarists would play bad anyways. In my opinion Evertune is great if you set it up that you can do bends etc. but it just stays in tune no matter what. That's why Devin Townsend uses it and said it helps him a lot
This bridge feels like magic lol! It definitely can take sketchy tuning/playing and turn it into a useable guitar performance!
Enjoy :)
Make a guitar review about JCraft guitars sir darrel, they're cheap but good🎉
My questions would be:
How easy is it to replace strings?
How easy/difficult is it to change tunings on the fly, i.e. go from standard tuning one song, to drop D, back to standard? Thanks for the video!
@@FirstLast-xn8ic oh I agree, but I did have those questions about that bridge. My PRS stays in tune really well and is 100% stock, but still has those human elements of which you speak, especially since I'm a bass player who's used to pressing and bending much thicker strings
So many ways having a Guitar that stays in tune always is a dream. Although have a few questions. How does it deal with drop or alternate tunings? Or is it set for only standard tuning? Was that a battery compartment I saw? If the system runs of batteries how many, what type and how long do they usually last? Last question, is there a locking nut on that guitar, didn't notice? If not with the strings being tightened and relaxed in a constant state to maintain pitch, will it prematurely wear out the nut?
Years ago was in a Masterclass and the teacher asked everyone to play. Most students ripped off some licks trying to impress and show their chops. After all had their turn the Teacher says " does nobody have an ear or pay attention to what they hear"? Most everyone was so concerned about speed and flash many were prssing to hard as they got into it (as you even stated on this vid) and technique and pitch go out the window. It's a very bad habit to break. Point being, with something like this which corrects poor playing, could cause some very poor technique and sloppy play in future. Which would be very noticable when playing other guitars. Took myself quite a while playing plugged into a Peterson Strobe tuner to learn the max pressure before pitch goes sharp. Kept doing it till it was automatic. Good lesson for anybody really (especially with Barr Chords). Just a thought. Still do love the idea of complete tuning stability.
Thanks for the Video!
bro, I'm a poor guy, can u send me a cheap beginner guitar plz.
I love your videos btw you're soo cool.
Once Evertune is able to bringe this technology into a tremolo system, they will completely dominate
I definitely agree! i think theyll conquer more when they make a bass bridge!
It will be kinda hard to use the trem because then you will have 6 springs instead of 3 to work with
Wouldn’t that completely defeat the purpose of having a tremolo? I personally only own hard tail guitars, so I’m not really familiar with trems, but it seams like an oxymoron to me.
@@madaxe79 one of the key problems with trem systems, especially floating ones, is that they have a really hard time staying in tune as you keep whammying. You can configure evertune bridges to allow for bends (or in reality tension change as that's all bends are) while still maintaining the perfect tuning feature for unbent notes. If they could make something that allows for a ton of tremolo stuff while also keeping unmodified note accuracy it'd be a game changer.
Cataclysmic Delta I get what you mean now... And I think I have a way to do it. Just need to get hold of an evertune to modify. It shouldn’t be too hard, the springs are just acting as a tension take-up device, so, there’s actually probably two or three ways to do it, just need to do some testing to see which way works best. That sounds like a fun project to try and make work. I’m completely not interested in the outcome, but I’m now interested in the challenge
Preventing bends: the perfect way for a guitar tech to troll his boss.
Actually bends are like the number one way to sound like a noob. If you don't do them fight at least. A LOT of players are guilty of out of tune/flat bends
Haha, how to become an ex-guitar tech!
@@michaeloberhofer7183 Your Evertune Robot Wilma here!
@Andrei James well my point was more that if a noob guitar player wants to sound more pro probably the number 1 thing he can do is just not bend.
So you can’t use bends? I should finish the video LOL like what if you want to bend ha ha I’m not too overly crazy about it but I feel like it would be a must to play anything traditional
The fact that they accomplish all this through a mechanical system using springs is amazing.
My brain hurts when it doesn't change pitch even with those tiny bend bends.
yes Hahaha
I agree then have to retune when ya want to bend guitars why fix somat when it’s not broke, design something universal to stay in tune 24/7 and play bends as well. Not stop n start like this not good they can keep this crap cannot see the point
@@SuperAwesomenateyou can play bends as well, you just need to tweak it so it's not as rigid with an extra turn
@@SuperAwesomenate What are you talking about? Pay attention...
The Evertune bridge is incredible, and perhaps the first really big innovation in guitar tech in recent history. I had the same strings on for over four months. Never went out of tune. Period.
Aaaaaaqaaaaaaaaaaa i NEED IT
I have to stop watching these, they make me want to buy things I can’t afford.
*But I can’t stop watching because they’re just too good.*
You can get them fairly cheap in LTD guitars
I wasn’t expecting you, Dio
Right!?
Bruh, last time I bought a guitar was over 13 years ago. After one week of watching these videos, I got inspired to pick it up again, and immediately bought a project squier strat lol...
I'm still saving up for a Mexican Fender Jazz bass. I know the feeling.
Rise Against are long time proponents for evertune, touring all over the world, for anyone that has doubts about reliability
Dillinger Escape Plan also
And Devin Townsend! 🤘
Rory Clewlow from Enter Shikari as well!
Cool review. Though i was expecting abusing the evertune, like breaking strings but the other strings still stay in tune. Lol. Your review definitely makes decide to get an evertune guitar. Thanks man
I never questioned the reliability of it. I just don't really have a use for it. I don't have an evertune on my guitar, but it stays perfectly in tune from string change to string change. I never have to tune it. It's called low mass locking tuners. As far as compensation goes, it's a cool idea. I can see how it would be useful for some applications, but more often than not I do a lot of bending on all strings in my style of playing so it's not a necessary feature. Still a really cool design. I'm always amazed by what people are able to figure out in the guitar world.
First time I played one of these, it felt like reality as I knew it was falling apart. I didn't know it was an evertune bridge and I couldn't understand why my bent notes weren't bending.
It sure is a different system to get used to, but it takes 5 minutes to learn it, and then it's really really simple.
you don't have to use that no-bend part of the system, or can choose to use it on individual strings. So you can set up any Evertune guitar to play like any other, it just stays in tune forever
bros physics didnt load in
That is very useful when you don’t want the chords to go flat or sharp ,more like a studio mode! Use the tuners to make it sharper until you reach the end of the locking zone and you will be able to bend no problem
@@malevolent5496 shut up
I have an Evertune on an ash strat that I have set up for bending. It plays brilliantly. Chords sound great. Bending feels the same as a standard bridge guitar. You can thrash it and it stays in perfect tune. Two-step bends? No problem! - returns to perfect pitch! My go-to guitar around the house because when I pick it up, I know it's in perfect tune. It's been a game-changer for me. If I could afford to, I'd put one on all of my non-tremolo guitars. BTW, using one doesn't rob you of the ability to HEAR or tune a guitar. I play numerous guitars and using it has no adverse effect on my playing (like lulling you into developing sloppy technique).
Awesome man! Ive got to try one of these. After playing 35 years, my ears can detect even the slightest hint of being out of tune and it drives me fkn nuts lol.
Does this mean Lil Wayne can finally play a solo that won’t make dogs cry?
No lol
Not yet
yea, nah
That's the evertune 3 fret series in single string mode
That grey and rather clean finish is definitely precious and defined! Of course it plays very well absolutely! I always enjoy these showcases, as well as envious of those guitars haha.
Evertune is the greatest guitar innovation in the last 30 yrs. Works flawlessy.
But how do you bend? Seems really stupid to me. My fender, ibanez, prs and even gibson all stay in tune real good....
@@sunnohh there is a setting to be able to bend and also stay in tune
@@sunnohh this bridge also achieves perfect intonation. And you can bend all you want, watch the video.
Hey Darrell, don’t forget that the Evertune solves the double stop bend issues for all your blues type licks as well. Ps.. all Evertune need to invent now is a whammy bar version that somehow stays in tune all of the time and I can die a happy man/boy/nerd/guitarist. Great vid bro.🤘👍🎸
Smokestack Studios Gembrook allegedly Evertune are working on a trem system 🤓
Yeah on their website they say that after they finalize and release the bass version, they're going to work on the version 2 for guitars which they hope to be able to incorporate whammy bar functionality in it. But apparently the bass version has been in the prototype stage for years, and honestly I don't know how they could make it work with a whammy bar, so who the hell knows if/when it will happen.
C wow...wow👍
SheepHair awesome dude, can’t wait👍🎸
You could tune it in a way that you can bend but it's a but tricky to find the right Point
I think the Evertune bridge is the greatest piece of gear developed since the Floyd Rose came out.
Basically it is a hardtail Floyd rose. You dont have to worry about the balance act as much. Tune it. Set it up to the radius of the neck and proper string height and your gtg.
Meh, its just another take on robotuners, hard pass
@@sunnohh Robotuners? Like the Gibson fiasco? Absolutely nothing like that. At all. Clearly you’ve never played a guitar equipped with an Evertune bridge.
@@sunnohh maybe actually watch the video. There's no relation to robo tuners. This is entirely mechanical.
@@sunnohh Maybe you should look into things before talking nonsense...
Lable isn’t terrible at all.
RGD - rg drop tuning
AL -axion label
ET - ever tune
The 61 is what’s confusing a bit because Ibanez keeps changing the number convention.
This Bridge has two settings. One setting will not let you bend notes. Other setting let's you bend
I was wondering that thank you clearing that out
3 settings you mean. The third setting, have any number of strings to compensate for bends and the rest no compensation.
The no-bend setting would be good for studio rhythm sessions.
@@TK-fk4po Cleans. Its amazing for cleans.
@@peterharoldjanakjr2078
I was only aware of two settings. But I appreciate you sharing there are three
Love my Evertune LTD EC-1000ET, I've adjusted the tuning 3 or 4 times in 6 years.
I got a Solar A1.6 with Evertune. When I first got it I had to down tune it to D standard so I had to fiddle with it a bit but once it was locked in I’ve not had to tune it once in 5 months. I haven’t changed the strings yet (cause I hate doing it) but yeah, it’s incredible to just pick it up every time and never have to do anything but play. 🤘
As a bassist by birth and guitarist for fun I have a real bad habit of playing too hard on the dainty guitar strings. This bridge seems great for my stupid fast punk songs.
why didnt you ask OLA for a SOLAR?????
id love to see you review one :)
At first glance I was like SOLAR!!!! 😄
then I got a better look, still a sick guitar tho.
@@meatrocket1 Where did you think that Ola got some of his inspiration for certain Solar Guitars? He played Ibanez Guitars for years.
I bought a Solar and it turned up to be a garbage. I could cut and apple with those fret ends.
@@amirrezarezaie Good to be in a kitchen ! i thought Solar guitars were nice built
I've been a huge fan of Evertune, both the product and the company. I used their install program and had them order and install one in a PRS CE24. They did a great job and didn't cost all that much, considering.
Love how you write soli deo gloria in all your videos💪
Where was that?😊
I have an ESP loaded with one and i can honestly say, it's a game changer. once you understand it, its easy. string tension in different tunings is also a non issue. if you are traveling, and the weather changes, you drop it, etc, it will always stay in tune.
That is, indeed, INCREDIBLE. Almost breaks the mind to watch you bend those strings and have them NOT go out of tune. Thanks Darrell!
I have the LTD EC-1000 Evertune. It really is amazing how it just stays in tune. The problem of over-pressing on the fret board is simply gone.
Pretty cool! I could see it being great for recording.
Evertune Bridge is one of the greatest guitar inventions ever. It's just incredible.
Great bridge! Actually a couple of days ago I was changing strings on my LTD Alexi 200 ( for the first time in ten years since I owned it, lol ). I got fed up trying to adjust the strings on the floating bridge so I took the back plate off and stuck a small piece of wood between the bridge and the body, so the bridge wouldn't bend backwards. A lot easier to tune now, since I don't pull up on the whammy bar anymore, so there was no point in having it.
How tf do you not change strings for 10 years?
First of all you definitely don’t know how to change the strings on a Floyd Rose if you didn’t block the bridge😂
when you change strings,put in a block UNTIL ITS TUNED .then you remove the damned thing
I've come close to doing that to my LTD so many times. lol
@@trillrifaxegrindor4411
Yeah I use a stack of business cards under the trem.😀
I've been planning on taking up guitar again.... Had a lot of doubts, but thanks to your videos I'm quite confident on going back to the good ol' music days hahaha thanks a lot man
I can see this being really useful for recording, but for practice, it might be better to have a normal guitar so you don't develop bad habits.
My thought exactly. If you are a beginner or intermediary, it will auto compensate for bad technique. Even worse, pickup a guitar without this bridge and you're lost.
The thing is, a beginner is unlikely to spend a lot of money on a guitar with an evertune.
But even if they do, who cares about "bad habits" when your instrument works just fine with the way you play?
usually people who know how to play already buy these.a beginner absolutely should learn how to play properly first
I can definetly tell a difference in my ears, not as natural of a sound at the strings. But that guitar is awsome.
I'm gonna disagree. The biggest issue for intermediate guitarists outside of needing to improve mechanically, is fighting bad tuning stability, or other instrument imperfections such as poor intonation and string height. This gets even worse depending on what part of the world you live in. Here on the Gulf Coast, where we have an average of 75% humidity, and wildly varying temperatures throughout the months, things like neck warp, and strings shrinking/expanding constantly will also pull your guitar out of tune. The Evertune is probably the most important advent in guitar technology since pickups and amplifiers were invented.
Thanks for the video - this bridge totally blew my mind. Awesome channel. 👍👍
Lots of comments here like, “How dare you make a product that makes the guitar function more consistently”. 😂 I might not have an Evertune, but to pretend like it isn’t innovative or useful is flat out dumb.
Best thing I noticed about evertune is it really cleans up your playing. I noticed I didn't have to concentrate so much on note definition because it stays so perfectly in tune.
Another cool thing you can do is tune the bridge to Drop D, then just tune up the low string to E with the tuner on the head. makes it very easy to switch tuning on the fly.
Does anyone else find Darrel's accent really calming? Like when he pronounces an "ou" sound it's like "aaaah, I'm in the happy Canadian guitar place! Yay!"
As I Minnesotan I think his pronunciation was perfect
These are the nuances I love about playing guitar. You can use them to shape your style. Not sure if I'm sold on the Evertune. Edit: Ok maybe it is cool. Definitely for studio!
You are always amazing. So much talent and knowledge
$295 bridge on my $100 Squier, sure will rise the value of my guitar.
Love your pro pic
295 + installing and it could go easily over 500$. But you will have guitar that is in tune and plays in tune which is the essence of a good sound. Unlike some expensive brands like gibson.
You're situation without a doubt definitely takes the cake, but I came damn close by installing $440+ worth of Mastery Bridge and Vibrato, when all was said and done, on my $500 Squier Jazzmaster. XD
How, how, I ask you how? How does Darrell keep making interesting videos? Just captures my interest with each one, never stops. Dude is great, and it makes me disappointed Jared Dines hasnt had him on a shred collab yet.
Hey Darrell, do you ever play extended range guitars? I would like to see you play a 7 or 8 string sometime!
Same! The Brian "Head" Welch ESP 7 string or James "Munky" Shaffer Ibanez 7 string would have been a good one to explore the evertune with
Yes, make it a multiscale at that!
I’ve heard of this product but first time seeing it. Kind of revolutionary. About time
Wow, the new RGD61ALET is even more gorgeous than I thought
Cool demonstration and explanation, Darrell!
Thank you!
Love ur channel!
Darrell : "Normally I tune up a guitar and then play it, this one i just pick up and play it"
Me : *_Looking at my Squier strat_* asking "Are you an evertune ?"
I pick up my kit-built S-type and it's still in tune about 1/3 of the time, still sufficiently in tune that I don't bother fixing it just to noodle out an idea about 1/3 of the time, and sufficiently out of tune to require breaking workflow and tuning about 1/3 of the time. It depends more on how much I've been abusing the tremolo bridge than anything else. If I have, it will drift while hanging up. If I haven't, then only temperature and humidity will make it drift.
My latest purchase-an ESP Eclipse II included an evertune in large part because of your recommendation. It is fabulous!! Well worth the money. There is a bit of a learning curve -especially tuning it in for the first time-but again well worth it.
Love my evertuned guitars. I sold all the other ones because I never played them anymore. haha I have mine setup so I can still do bends on all the strings, but the tuning stays solid for rhythm parts. Total game changer!
When they're setup for bend mode, do they stay in tune as well as not?
This is one fantastic looking amazing sounding guitar! Thanks for sharing Darrell! Cheers from Winnipeg!
Who are the 54 numpties that disliked this video?
This guy is excellent and very good at what he does....a definate go to when looking at different guitars. He has taught me a hell of a lot and look forward to new videos from him.
I've been wanting to buy an Evertune bridged guitar for a while now, but wasn't sure about it. This helped me answer some of the questions and reservations i had about it, so thanks a lot!
DAMN nothing sounds better than a perfect tuned distorted guitar Lord I do say lol
I have never seen or heard of this magical bridge. This may be because I live in South Western Australia. Thank you Darrell for another informative and entertaining video.
Now I have to have one.
Bugger
Cheers
Tim
What is this sorcery?
My thoughts exactly!
Science.
Is this right with the lordt?
@@darthlazlo :}
And I thought I've seen everything...Amazing future tech stuff! Looks great too!
Evertune: the way guitar players at Hogwarts figured out to mess with muggles.
Love the Evertune! I have three guitars with them! They are very user friendly, and you can still do anything that could normally do with a fixed bridge guitar, like bending and drop tuning.
I feel like it would be an awesome buy for a tracking guitar, but ive also heard it is a sustain/tone sucker that is pretty obvious on clean tones. I dont own one though, only what ive heard. Probably awesome for gain stuff
One of my evertune guitars loses sustain on the high E above the 12th fret. I would not call it a sustain sucker by any means but on that particular guitar with the particular strings I use, I do notice that. For me the myriad benefits far outweigh that issue, but each player is different. If you play a lot of high solos I would try a guitar or two before purchasing, just to be sure. Just make sure it's set up properly, almost universally guitar stores don't know how to set these up so they just confuse the heck out of people. I bought one used at guitar center and I had to do a complete setup on it before I could even try it out, they had everything so jacked up.
So glad you R checking this out!
Perfect guitar for me I have a heavy touch and do one or two unwanted bends so this bridge is perfect ..... but can it play jazz hmmmmmm
Awesome video, you did a great job explaining how the Evertune works. I have two guitars with it I love it.
I put one on a Les Paul and It tried so hard to compensate, that it exploded
Authentic.
😆🤣😂
Lolol
Then it's headstock popped off...
String Butler helped mine immensely.
I grew up with Guiars without Trem systems on them, so I had to use my hands/fingers to articulate bends/tremolos. I did a lot of rhythm playing more than lead playing , so the leads came in time, as did the use of Trem systems. I am a neck strangle-holding death-grippage player, so I have had to keep a constant watch on my playing articulations and a ear open to play in tune. It has been something else tuning because I have that perfect pitch thing that works for a person or it will drive you insane, especially on music gear with tuning and staying in tune problems or strings that cause the same problems. This is a GR8T tool to stay in tune, play strangohold style, rhythm, chords, bends and still still stay in tune, but it is a tool that does not allow for the true instrument nor the human factor in the tone production process. It does not allow for playing bends/trems on the 4th, 5th, 6th strings and get the pitch/tuning corrections. I can see the benefits of the Evertune trem system useage. On the other side, I want to know that I played my own music on guitar, correct and learn by/from my own playing mistakes. I would not want to be out on any playing venture and have some tuning gizmo fail and the real musician come sounding out as an even worse compromised/fake/failure musically ! ! ! Peace & Play 🎸On . . . 🤘🎸😎🙏 DDH 9-10-2020.
i wanna see one of these with a whammie bar for every string.
Mini bridge whammy’s
You’re onto something !
Sounds like a weapon of mass destruction
I just bought and LTD Koa can't wait to try it out! It's a demo unit it was the last one available. So ill have to check it out decide if it's a keeper but I am excited. I do lots of recording.
I own an Evertune Equipped LTD EC 1000 Deluxe.
Congratulations
good for you?
Good job?
CofeDafoax is that a question?
How does it compare to a gibson modern standard les paul?
I realy like this positive vibes from your clips :)
You should make a video of the WHOLE process: install/intonation/tuning/fine tuning, etc.
Is the Ibanez tuned up a semi or is the evertune tones down a semi??
Both guitars are Ibanez
This comment gave me a semi
That silver
Ibanez is an RGD and tuned down to D standard stock according to the website
That’s downright fascinating! Thanks for sharing!
A real cowboy knows how to manipulate his saddle
This saddle is installed directly into the horse
just super super pro idea!!! Excellent, thank you!!
It's all fun & games until your friend tunes it wrong & steals your allen key.
Great review, didn't know about the 'rhythm setup' idea as I've been wanting to get one of these for my studio work that I can depend on no matter what.
I don't know if I could ever use the rhythm mode. So many riffs of mine have bends on all of the strings, so if I got one it would be purely for the tuning stability.
Exactly,if you play rhythm and lead it's not practical to stop to be able to bend notes. I also use the whammy so..............keep trying
Excellent review especially on the hybrid settings for bending and locked tuning. I was never interested in Evertune before but I may just get one.
Thanks Larry!
When you added in that you could still bend your strings if play a lot of Blues and if you can't bend it ain't Blues ;-) LOL
Absolutely fantastic. Totally didn't realize that you had just uploaded when I started watching! Coulda said "first" or something. Looks like something to invest in when I'm not in college anymore!
Haven’t finished it yet, but great video Darrell
As a long time player and long time les paul user, i immideatly ordered an evertune guitar and sold my les paul :D
i will never worry about tuning again
This is insane but I worry about how it'll affect my playing when I go back to a non evertune
I guess it could affect someone’s playing, and a beginner a lot, specially in getting familiar with string tension and doing bends in tune and that stuff.
I would recommend to just practice on a normal guitar, and use this for professional purposes only like recording. I would only practice on this guitar to get familiar with it. I don’t think this shouldn’t be anyone’s first guitar. Although I could be wrong.
It looks sweet, I want to get one exactly for the purpose I mentioned before (recording).
No difference, you will just find yourself more annoyed at having to tune again ;)
you wouldnt go back....
That would be if your playing was inaccurate before the evertune
@@abcrx32j I looked into it and it has methods to set for bends and vibrato. This thing is a god send for studio people
Great system. I have 5 guitars (Ibanez, LTD, Solar) with Evertune and these works awesome for live, studio and rehearsels.
My main guitar is my Ibanez Jem 7vwhl with Evertune aftermarket installed and it's excellent to have on outdoor festivals and clubs nomatter temperature and not worry about going out of tune 🙂
My main studio guitar is my Ibanez RG1570L with Evertune and True temperament fretboard 🙂👍
Great for cleans, rhythms and extended chords, solos and especially harmony leads when I record for my band Cryonic Temple 😁
methinks playing clean is better for demos, just an opinion, everyone's got one! 😁
curtrod lol when I hear an Ibanez, clean is exactly what I wanna hear.
@@soleneisconbi7302 I know you were being sarcastic but what about the Artcore archtops?
Elan Sleazebaganno I’d go elsewhere for a descent hollow body. Not saying Artcore isn’t descent just that I’d go else where.
@@soleneisconbi7302 True, I just like the Artcore HB's for some reason
Do a bit of everything 👌🏻
I bought this exact guitar a few weeks ago, it sounds killer, stays in tune and just feels right.
Problem is that every time you make a slight mistake on a regular guitar it pressures you to adjust and therefore you improve gradually. With evertune you will not notice your mistakes and they will be entrenched in your playing so when you then play a regular guitar afterwards you'll sound like crap.
Dont play a conventional guitar then. Reminds me of a Tommy Cooper joke
This is a definite improvement to the stick with strings! For session/pro/recording/touring it looks like it would be amazing. No batteries or electric motors either! For mere mortals like me just keeping in tune is a real attraction but maybe a luxury when a $20 clip on tuner and your hands can do a pretty good job on your squire - lol. I was thinking it wouldn't cope with absolute pitch only relative but I guess by keeping the tension correct it is reacting to the wood moving in temperature and humidity too. What a great concept.
It’s a cool concept, but imperfection is what makes the guitar the guitar 🎸
No.
Not even remotely true.
Very helpful video. Thanks for posting
I'd be wary of having one of these through fear of it encouraging bad habits with no consequence
Great job Darrell! I own about 10 EVERTUNE equipped guitars and they have spoiled me. I wasn't aware of the B bender trick. Bravo!
Wouldn't it make sense to pair this with temperament frets? Otherwise it seems like you are making the guitar ever-out-of-tune...
But consistently so.
Honestly, I have heard a guitar with true temperament and evertune and I actually though it sounded bad. Don't know why, but I didn't like it. Could have just been the guy's playing. But there's something about the way this works, the intonation is so much more solid. You know how when you pluck a string to tune it goes a little sharp? That doesn't happen anymore. So as you're intonating and tuning you're really solid on the note immediately, no movement. So while technically the temperament might still be a hair off because of the way guitars work, it honestly sounds flawless when set up well.
@@Muchthesame
Good point!
Straight frets are tempered frets - they approximate twelve-tone equal temperament. Bendy frets from TrueTemperament simply provide other tempered tunings. A true untempered guitar would be fretted according to just intonation - pure simple ratios in reference to one pitch center - and would sound perfect in one key and immensely out of tune in others. The frets would be so bendy as to be unplayable.
I have a Strat and a Tele both with Evertune Bridges. I also have two Les Pauls and an Ibanez. It is very hard for me to play my non-Evertune guitars. I never wanted to be Guitar Tech. I just want to play. And I want to play in tune. These things are life-changing for me. I don’t love the way they look on Les Pauls. By the way, I did have evertune bridge is added to my guitars. I have an amazing tech here in Las Vegas. There are guys out there who can do it
Maybe Ola would send you a SOLAR to try!
5:52 this what does give a guitar it's natural sound, and having always a perfect tuning, will make it sound more like virtual instrument that been playing using MIDI keyboard
That's because this guy's playing a guitar set up for metal with low action and high output pickups and too much gain.
There are no midi instruments that sound like this.
I think this kills the whole feeling. Imperfections are part of art.
Had to scroll to find your comment, but i'm with you. Out of tune is all part of it, especially with double or triple tracked guitars. i often record three guitars, with one at perfect pitch, then i'll sharpen one, and flatten another, and pan the flat and sharp ones for a huge sound. i recorded a violin player, who's pitching was so good, that when i double tracked her, with a medium pan, they both met in the middle, sounding like one violin. It's like recording multiple vocals and then pitch correcting them, the whole chorus effect disappears.
@@tezzo55 share some of your recordings if you want.
@@CineDecodificado Well there is a track called And Then When We Meet Again by Gemma and Tezzo which we did at home during, and about the lock down. I'd love to hear some of your stuff too. Best, t
I really like the elegantly simple, streamlined look of that guitar. Bridge seems pretty cool.
I'd like to hear David Gilmour try to play the Comfortably Numb solos with that thing.
EASILY, did you not watch the video ? Look Up Ola Englund's "Master of the universe" album, all recorded with an evertune, you'll only know this because I told you so.....
I had one of these for a couple of years. What the demos never seem to address is that when you set it up to be right a the cusp for perfect bending, any change in humidity or whatever that makes the neck relief change slightly - will make the guitar either go sharp, or make you lose some sensitivity for bends. Either way you will have go at the tuning pegs to get it back to “right on the edge”, where it plays like a regular guitar.
Kasper Fauerby Sure, but they always market this thing like: YOU WILL NEVER HAVE TO TUNE YOUR GUITAR AGAIN! haha
If you’re in the evertune zone (no bending) it won’t go out. If you’re on the cusp it will.
There's autotune for bad singers and there's evertune.
Not the same. auto-tune just corrects bad singing. This helps enhance good playing. Besides doing a little correction.
@@216trixie I don't know man it kind of encourages bad habits. A good player won't need correcting like this as the technique should be correct anyways.
@@TheEchelon could be. But those guitarists would play bad anyways.
In my opinion Evertune is great if you set it up that you can do bends etc. but it just stays in tune no matter what. That's why Devin Townsend uses it and said it helps him a lot
Tell that to Andy James while he wipes the floor with ya ;)
lets just give everyone a trophy,no matter how hard you work !
Never knew about this bridge. Thanks for the video man!
Seems more of a headache to me. Lol
I'll stick with good ol' tune-o-matic.
Notice how he started this video AFTER setting it up, lol.
Yeah this thing seems like idiotic engineering
@@sunnohh only if you misunderstood what it is. This is a good example of incredible engineering.