The word 'vibrato' names one of the most fundamental and most debated techniques in musical performance. It is Italian for 'vibrated,' from Latin 'vibrāre' (to shake, to brandish, to move rapidly to and fro), and it describes the rapid, slight variation in pitch that gives sustained notes their characteristic warmth, richness, and expressiveness.
Latin 'vibrāre' originally described physical motion — the brandishing of a weapon, the quivering of a spear, the rapid oscillation of any object. The English descendants are transparent: 'vibrate' (to oscillate), 'vibration' (the act of oscillating), 'vibrancy' (the quality of pulsating life). The word 'viper' may be distantly related — Latin 'vīpera' (a poisonous snake) is sometimes etymologized as 'vī-pera' (life-bearing, because vipers bear live young) but has also been linked to the quivering or darting motion of a striking snake, though this connection is speculative.
In musical practice, vibrato is produced differently on different instruments. On the violin and other string instruments, the player oscillates the left-hand finger that presses the string against the fingerboard, alternating between the main pitch and a slightly higher or lower pitch several times per second. On wind instruments, vibrato can be produced by varying the air pressure or by jaw and embouchure movements. In singing, vibrato is the natural oscillation of the vocal folds when the voice is produced freely and without tension
The history of vibrato is a history of changing taste. In the Renaissance and early Baroque periods, vibrato was used sparingly, as an ornament or expressive device. Treatises from the period describe it as a special effect to be applied to specific notes for emotional emphasis. Leopold Mozart, in his 'Treatise on the Fundamental Principles of Violin Playing' (1756), described vibrato as 'a trembling of the voice' and warned that it should be used 'only on long notes' and 'never on short notes.' The continuous, pervasive vibrato that characterizes modern orchestral string playing
The shift toward continuous vibrato occurred gradually during the nineteenth century and accelerated in the early twentieth, driven by changing aesthetic preferences and by the influence of great soloists like Fritz Kreisler, whose warm, continuous vibrato became the model for modern violin playing. By the mid-twentieth century, continuous vibrato was the default technique for virtually all orchestral string players, opera singers, and wind soloists.
The historically informed performance movement, which gained momentum from the 1970s onward, challenged this default. Performers like the Kuijken brothers, Christopher Hogwood, and John Eliot Gardiner argued for a return to period-appropriate vibrato practices — using vibrato selectively and sparingly when performing Baroque and Classical music. This approach remains controversial: some listeners find non-vibrato playing cold and lifeless, while others find continuous vibrato inappropriate and anachronistic.
Vibrato is often confused with 'tremolo,' but the two are technically distinct. Vibrato is a variation in pitch (the note oscillates between slightly higher and slightly lower). Tremolo is a variation in volume (the note oscillates between louder and softer) or a rapid repetition of a single note. In practice, the distinction can blur, and many singers and instrumentalists produce a combination of both. The word 'tremolo' comes from Italian 'tremolo' (trembling), from Latin 'tremulus' (trembling), from 'tremere' (to tremble) — a different Latin root from 'vibrāre,' though the physical phenomena they describe are closely