The Concepts Behind Barbera Multi Transducer
Bridges
MUSIC IS ENERGY, and the pickup is the first
critical link in the projection of that energy. Like a lens, the pickup
must collect and focus vibrational energy, then transform ("transduce")
it into electrical impulses and project it onward. Tone, texture and dynamics
require a refined sensitivity to be reproduced well. If the pickup is
inefficient, musical energy is lost, poorly focused and distorted and
musical performance is compromised.
The nuances of sound
unique to violin family instruments require particularly sensitive treatment
for amplification. The typical approach to violin family pickup design
has been to attach a surface contact piezo transducer element in some
fashion onto or under a traditional bridge. These approaches result in
a surface sensitization effect (resonant surfaces of the instrument becoming
microphonically active). This tends to yield a raw, unfocused or distant
sounding signal which contains much microphonic "noise". Microphonic
noise muddies up the amplified signal and creates a lack of clarity which
does not project well in a mix with other instruments. This occurs because
there is very little selectivity in the way the vibrational information
is collected with surface sensitizing type pickups, everything gets amplified,
including unwanted noise. Also, the traditional viol bridge is a structure
designed to transmit string vibrations to a relatively large, acoustically
resonant surface, not to a transducer element. For violin, a traditional
violin bridge has very little mass, and a high resonant frequency which
accentuates trebly, high frequency overtones. Keep in mind that when we
hear an acoustic instrument through the air, the air is actually filtering
out quite a lot of frequencies and noise present acoustically in the resonating
surfaces of the instrument. Anyone who has ever placed their ear directly
up against the surface of an acoustic instrument knows how "raw"
and "boomy" it sounds. These properties become accentuated when
amplified via a surface sensitizing type pickup. So while a traditional
bridge does a great job of transmitting string vibrations to a resonant
instrument top, it is not an optimized structure for transmitting vibrations
to a transducer effectively.
Strings vibrate on a musical instrument in direct response to the resonant
properties of the particular instrument on which they are strung. The
strings and instrument are coupled together in an interactive loop. As
a result, all the unique tonal information of the instruments voice is
mirrored in the way that the strings are vibrating in response to the
instruments resonant properties. This is true on both acoustic and non
acoustic electric stringed instruments. With that in mind, BTS multi transducer
bridges were designed to collect string energies directly by way of an
integral multi transducer graft in the bridge. By collecting string energy
directly, an exceptionally clear image of the instruments voice is produced
for amplification, without the presence of microphonic surface noise,
and with a high resistance to feedback on acoustic instruments. This is
because the surfaces of the instrument are not microphonically sensitized.
In addition, general handling noise such as knocks and thumps to the instrument
body are not amplified.
Barbera pickup designs are unique. They employ a
precision fabricated multi-element pickup cartridge made of maple which
is grafted into a maple bridge. For Cello and Bass, traditional bridge
blanks are thick enough to accommodate a multi transducer graft. Traditional
violin bridges however are to thin to accommodate a graft, so special,
thicker violin bridges were developed (the Hybrid and Standard/solid style
bridges). The design compatibly integrates highly refined piezo transducer
design concepts into a violin family bridge. The pickup cartridge contains
an array of transducer elements, one (or two) transducers for each string
depending on the model. Each transducer element within the cartridge structure
functions as an independent pickup which is selectively sensitive only
to its corresponding strings vibrations. The interactions of vibrating
strings and wood are employed to maximum advantage in the multi transducer
cartridge, which collects horizontal string vibrations directly (horizontal
and vertical vibrations for Bass). For arco, the horizontal string vibrations
are where all the rich complexity of sound occurs on a bowed string.
Twenty years after their introduction, Barbera Multi
Transducer Bridges continue to evolve through ongoing refinements in both
the design concepts and in the craft of how they are made. Barbera bridges
are a highly responsive, feedback resistant pickup system for violin,
viola, Cello and Upright Bass which is sensitive to the instruments full
range of texture, tonality and dynamics. Barbera pickups yield a rich
sounding full range audio signal, which accurately reflects the tonal
personality of an instrument with striking presence, clarity, and depth.
The Bottom line is that the experience of playing music is greatly enhanced
when the player has a high level of control over their sound. That high
degree of control is what Barbera Multi Transducers Bridges are designed
to provide.
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