T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1782.1 | going round the bend | CHEFS::IMMSA | adrift on the sea of heartbreak | Tue Apr 17 1990 08:47 | 17 |
| Many years ago I first heard a harmonic being bent and I spent hours
trying to figure out how this was done.
It's so simple (but so am I :-) for not spotting it)
For the uninitiated, and this sounds better in open tuning, sound
the harmonic by barring across the neck, say at the fifth fret,
then reach *behind* the nut and push down on one of the strings
between the nut and where the string goes into the machine.
The harmonic will go on sounding but one note will go up and down
as it does. Eerie sound and if you want to hear how good it can
really sound, and on a twelve string too, listen to "Easter" on
the album "My feet are smiling" by Leo Kottke.
andy
|
1782.2 | The way I do it! | NEEPS::IRVINE | I think therefor I gotta headache | Tue Apr 17 1990 08:52 | 15 |
| Tony,
One thing that definately effects your harmonics is the EQ.
I have set my graphic up with little or no MID, that plus the fact
I use a RAT heavily distorted with the filter turned way down I
can get excellent harmonics, but my overall sound suffers. I think
you have to play your sound... and then gently tweak the EQ untill
you get the harmonics you want *without* sacrificing your over all
tone.
A guitar that sustains forever... (like my LP) makes it a lot easier
though.
Bob
|
1782.3 | If your in a pinch... | TCC::COOPER | MIDI-Kitty-ADA-Metaltronix rack puke | Tue Apr 17 1990 09:53 | 12 |
| Sustain+EQ
Use a compressor if your really into it. Also a really compressed
tube distortion will add natural harmonics.
I love 'em. I pinch 'em, tap 'em, bend 'em, twist 'em etc...etc...
My Ibanez has passive pickups and my Charvel has active. Can't
really say I can tell the difference, but I tend to like the
sustain on the Ibanez better. On the other hand, the Charvel
seems to have *more* "bright spots" (harmonics).
jc
|
1782.4 | | CHEFS::DALLISON | The return of the bald avenger | Tue Apr 17 1990 10:23 | 18 |
|
Re : Eq
Hmm thats interesting - I've never thought of using EQ to help voice
harmonics.
Re : Andy+bending harmonis bhind the nut
Problem is though, if you have a locking trem, you can't do it,
and if you don't have a locking trem, it sometimes goes out of
tune!!
Funny, on my main guitar, I can get an artificial harmonic on the
2nd string 6th fret to really scream, but when I try it on the 3rd
string 6th fret it just make a rather pathetic 'plop'.
Cheers,
-Tony
|
1782.5 | fret + 12 naturals | SMURF::BENNETT | Towers Open Fire! | Tue Apr 17 1990 11:02 | 15 |
|
I like to use harmonics as a spice to my rhythm playing. My
favorite is to strum the strings at a play ~9 frets above where
I'm fretting a chord and to let the edge of my hand brush against
the strings 12 frets above the chord.
I also like squanking the strings with the thumb right after the
pick attach to get that Billy Gibbons squink-squeek-squAwk.
I like twangy guitars with passive single coils. I have a solid
body neck-thru with trapeze tail and 2 singles. Talk about open
string feedback!
A tip from the latest GP - cords can act as capacitors bleeding
high frequencies to ground. Coiled cords are the worst.
|
1782.6 | More ways to do it | DREGS::BLICKSTEIN | Conliberative | Tue Apr 17 1990 11:14 | 19 |
| re: .1
There's lots of ways to do it:
o Bending behind the nut
o Pulling or pushing back on the neck (not recommended)
o Using the bar
o Artificial harmonics bent with the finger
o Tapping the harmonic (ala EVH "Spanish Fly" and the intro to "Woman
in Love") and bending it
o Using the tuners
Check out a song called "Country Colors" on the Steve Morse album
"High Tension Wires". The main theme is played entirely with
artificial harmonics with lots of bending. Morse seems to be able
to do (seemingly without effort) two artificial harmonics at a
time to create harmony.
db
|
1782.7 | | CHEFS::DALLISON | The return of the bald avenger | Tue Apr 17 1990 11:18 | 12 |
|
Another neat trick with hrmonics gives a sort of artificial feedback
effect...
Play the 3rd on the low E (G) and give it wide finger vibrato
(about half a tone wide vib) then, very gently, touch the low E
string at the 15th fret (octaved G) and make the vibrato much wider
(a whole tone wide). Gives a sort of feedback effect and its quite
effective to spice things up.
Cheers,
-Tony
|
1782.8 | air guitar | CHEFS::IMMSA | adrift on the sea of heartbreak | Wed Apr 18 1990 08:38 | 16 |
| Re Tony and his lockin trem
I don't think you can get these on Martin - at least, mine hasn't
got one :-)
Another master of the harmonic and string bending is Jerry Donahue
as anyone who saw the CH4 (UK) prog on guitar will verify.
His version of The Claw is, to borrow an expression from the Prophets,
gobsmackin'
acoustic andy
|
1782.9 | | CSC32::H_SO | If you like the shoe, then wear it! | Wed Apr 18 1990 22:08 | 19 |
|
...Or if you're trying to get high pitched A with harmonics, how
about fretting Low A on G string, estimate about 1/4 length of
the **fretted part** of the string, and using right hand pinch harmonic
at that 1/4 distance from the bridge? This should give you harmonic 2
octaves higher than the fretted note...
Theoredically, you could do the same on the B string fretted at the 10th
fret, and using the 1/4 length method, and B string should be a lot
easier to bend/etc than the G string at the 2nd fret...
Using this method would still leave your right hand free to use
trem/etc for added wildness...
My $0.0000000000000000000002
J-Dot
|
1782.10 | | CSC32::H_SO | If you like the shoe, then wear it! | Thu Apr 19 1990 00:22 | 51 |
|
Oh, incidently, all of my strat style guitars have splittable humbuckers
(except the EMG 81) at the bridge, and the humbucking mode tends to pick
up the harmonic better than the single mode and the other position single
blade PU's.
I don't really think that the EMG is necesarily better than the passive
pickups as far as picking up the harmonics, but I do think that the
bridge pickup, even in single mode, is better than the neck. This
is true for my LP as well...
If you apply physics to harmonics, all you're basically doing is
causing "node" in the string. This would be the place where the
string is sitting still where the other parts of the strings are
vibrating; as on an open string, the nut and the bridge would be the
node, and the whole length of the string would be vibrating (duh).
On 12th fret harmonics, you'd have a node on the 12th fret. By
default, the nut and the bridge are always nodes.
On 5th fret harmonics, you're basically cutting the sin wave of the
string in 1/2, so you'd have nodes on 5th fret, 12th fret and somewhere
above the neck PU(I think above where the 24th fret would be) and thus
the harmonic note on 5th fret and over the 24th fret will be the same.
Also the fretted note on the 24th fret should be same note, and same
octave as the harmonics over 5th and 24th frets.
On 7th fret harmonics, you'd have nodes on 7th fret and somewhere around
19th fret. Again, the fretted noted on 19th fret should be the same as
harmonics over 7th and 19th frets. And this goes on and on.
The basic idea behind this is that if you take a length of the string,
say on 25 1/2" scale and divide that by any *whole* number, measure that
distance from the nut, and there should be a natural harmonic there.
Example; 25.5" / 5 = 5.1" (or the 4th fret) There should be a natural
harmonic, and there is one, existing at 5.1" from the nut AND the same
note 5.1" from the bridge because they're nodes of the same harmonic.
From this theory, I'd be willing to bet that the harmonics over 4th fret,
9th fret, 16th fret, and one over the neck PU will be the same note, same
octave. Once again, if you fret the note where the node would be above
the neck PU, this should be the same note/octave as 4th, 9th and 16th fret
and neck PU harmonics.
And I thought I didn't learn anything in my college Engineering
Physics...
J-Dot
PS I can just see everyone rushing home, breaking out the guitar,
calculator, and a ruler to see if all this is true... 8^)
|
1782.11 | ex | CSC32::H_SO | If you like the shoe, then wear it! | Thu Apr 19 1990 00:25 | 5 |
|
RE: -.1 Woops! On 4th paragraph, I meant to say "cutting the sine
wave in 1/4", not 1/2...
J-Dot
|
1782.12 | | IOENG::JWILLIAMS | Welcome to the Bush League | Thu Apr 19 1990 14:26 | 16 |
| Yes, these relationships are where music comes from. For example, a
major chord contains 1, 4/5, and 2/3. If the third were raised by
2 octaves, and the fifth raised by 1 octave, you would have
the fundamental, the 3rd order harmonic and the 5th order harmonic,
A SQUARE WAVE!
One problem, however, turning the circle of physically perfect fifths
does not bring you back to the same frequency. That is why guitars
( and other instruments ) use a scale called equal temperament. It's
actually a close approximation of perfect harmonics that is closed
over the circle of fifths. It uses an exponential function and is
close to within a couple of cents.
Not sure if this fits in with the discussion . . .
John.
|
1782.13 | confused | ZYDECO::MCABEE | Definitely no 'a' | Thu Apr 19 1990 19:04 | 10 |
|
> Yes, these relationships are where music comes from. For example, a
> major chord contains 1, 4/5, and 2/3. If the third were raised by
> 2 octaves, and the fifth raised by 1 octave, you would have
> the fundamental, the 3rd order harmonic and the 5th order harmonic,
> A SQUARE WAVE!
How does that make a square wave?
Bob
|
1782.14 | Nils, Jaco, Percy and Earl Scruggs | AQUA::ROST | Bad imitation of Jerry Jemmott | Fri Apr 20 1990 15:16 | 19 |
|
If you can find a copy of "Grin" or "Best of Grin", by Nils Lofgren's
old band, Grin, you should listen to "See What A Love Can Do". The
solo is double-tracked. Nils worked out the solo note for note. The
first time through, he played every second note as a harmonic, the
second time, he did the same but on the *opposite* note.....so you hear
a solo where every note is "doubled" with a harmonic. Awesome sound, I
think this was recorded in 1970.
For some wild use of harmonics go listen to fretless bassists like Jaco
Pastorius or Percy Jones (with Brand X) who developed mind-boggling
control of harmonics. Particular favorites: "Portrait of Tracy" on
Jaco's debut and Percy dueling with fellow bassist John Giblin on "Wal
to Wal" from the "Product" LP by Brand X.
Brian
P.S. Those with open minds go check out any bluegrass version of
"Grandfather's Clock".
|
1782.15 | I just learned this yesterday.... | CIMBAD::TOTH | | Sun Apr 22 1990 20:47 | 24 |
|
I've been learning a piece with a lot of harmonics in it and was
having trouble getting them to ring properly (especially the 4th
fret). I was doing this the 'natural way', ie, lightly touching
the string at the 4th, 5th, 7th, 12th etc. frets and free stroking
the string (for the electricians in the crowd, this is roughly
equivalent to flat picking it, 8^)......... But you knew that right?).
My teacher had me stroke (read pick) the strings closer to the bridge
and, voila, they started to ring. Now if an electric works
anything like an acoustic, you might get your E string to ring this
way. When he showed me this, I was amazed! Paid for the whole
lesson right there.
I still get excited when I learn something new. jt
BTW, and at the risk of telling you things you already know, you CAN
get almost any harmonic you desire by fretting the instrument normally
with the finger of your choice on the left hand, say on the second
fret, touching the string lightly at the 14th fret with the pointer
finger of your right hand whilst simultaneously plucking the string
with the ring finger of the right hand. This is pretty standard fare
for classical guitarists. The 3d fret on the left hand would require
the 15th fret touched with the right hand etc.
|
1782.16 | | ICS::BUCKLEY | Cheesy oblique-motion tapping puke! | Sun Apr 22 1990 21:08 | 6 |
| -1
Yeah, for harminics of death, I pick right next to the bridge and they
scream out!
|
1782.17 | a little classical technique | VLNVAX::ALECLAIRE | | Sun Apr 22 1990 21:10 | 24 |
| Artificial harmonics are part of every classical guitarist's training.
The right hand indications on classical guitar editings are
p thumb
i 1st finger
m middle finger
a ring finger
These are derived from the spanish words for those fingers.
Stopping fingers are 1,2,3,4.
Neither the thumb of the stopping hand nor the little finger of the
plucking hand are ever used.
Then in the plucking hand there are 2 kinds of strokes,
free stroke, where the plucking finger lets the next-lowest string
ring and rest stroke which is used whenever the next-lowest string need
not sustain a tone.
The way you do rest-stroke is you pluck the string, say the 2nd, and
the finger comes to rest on the 3rd string. Alternate fingers in both
hands when you can.
|
1782.18 | - .02 and I'm confused........ | CIMBAD::TOTH | | Mon Apr 23 1990 12:56 | 3 |
| harmonics of death??
jt
|
1782.19 | | VLNVAX::ALECLAIRE | | Mon Apr 23 1990 13:48 | 1 |
| What about Pregnant harmonics then? :-)
|
1782.20 | | TCC::COOPER | MIDI-Kitty-ADA-Metaltronix rack puke | Mon Apr 23 1990 14:20 | 7 |
| Pregnant harmonics are the ones I get when I rest the headstock of my guitar
on the speaker cab and pluck a 5th fret harmonic on the low E.
Harmonics of death are the ones ya get behind the 2nd fret b string...those
are J-sharps for you techies... ;) Learned that one from Mr. Gilbert himself.
nasty !
;)
|
1782.21 | Ring dem chimes | ZYDECO::MCABEE | Definitely no 'a' | Mon Apr 23 1990 18:34 | 16 |
|
> My teacher had me stroke (read pick) the strings closer to the bridge
> and, voila, they started to ring. Now if an electric works
> anything like an acoustic, you might get your E string to ring this
> way. When he showed me this, I was amazed! Paid for the whole
> lesson right there.
If you're playing a harmonic at the fourth fret, then you're creating five
(correct me if I'm wrong) nodes on the string. If you pluck the string at one
of these nodes, you won't get much sound. The best places to pluck should be
exactly between any two nodes. Anywhere within two or three inches of the
bridge should be a safe place for any harmonic.
Bob
|
1782.22 | Too Quiet to be heard Mostly | VLNVAX::ALECLAIRE | | Tue Apr 24 1990 13:07 | 13 |
| plucking the string after a harmonic at 5th , then 4 parts
Plucking then near 4rth at 2nd node terminator
using rest stroke
will produce a strong tendency to feedback 1 octave up from harmonics
baby harmonic so to speak,
and plucking elsewhere will cause different baby harminics as well.
You can really hear them 1. Hyperactive lots of gain medium volume
2. medium gain HyperVolume
oena
|
1782.23 | il | VLNVAX::ALECLAIRE | | Tue Apr 24 1990 13:09 | 7 |
| make that
Producing a harmonic at the 5th fret gives 4 nodes of vibration to the
string. Using rest stroke in the production of the harmonic at say the
17nth fret will produce...
|
1782.24 | | CHEFS::DALLISON | Get yer hands off me Suck-ker | Mon May 07 1990 12:56 | 8 |
|
You don't need a fret to play a harmonic - I've been playing with
this cool idea where you play the 'swing' part of 'In the Mood' (by
Glenn Miller) but only on the string between the 24th fret and the
bridge pickup - so effectively you're playing harmonics over the
pickups. Its easiest to use your thumb, first and third fingers. Sounds
well cool cranked (or it would if I could get the thing down properly
- its gettin' there 8^).
|
1782.25 | Many harmonics from one | POCUS::LUCIANO | | Mon May 14 1990 17:12 | 11 |
| RE .21
I might point out that when you play a harmonic by touching
the string at the fourth fret you are not only playing the fifth
harmonic i.e. 5 times the fundamental frequency i.e. 5 nodes, but
you are playing other harmonics as well which have nodes at the
same place e.g. the 10th 15th 20th... harmonics. Picking the string
as close to the bridge as possible makes the guitar produce a metallic
twang (Best description I could think of). This is because these
higher harmonics are emphasised.
|
1782.26 | | VLNVAX::ALECLAIRE | | Mon May 14 1990 17:27 | 11 |
| >> Picking the string
>> as close to the bridge as possible makes the guitar produce a metallic
>> twang (Best description I could think of).
This is called pizzicato, from the violin technique of plucking the
strings. On the guitar ( well OK, classical guitar ) the strings are
plucked as close to the bridge as possible ( with just nails, if you
believe 'The Segovia Technique' by Vladimir Bobri ).
Clueless Wonder Toe
|
1782.27 | neck size and finger technique? | BSS::COLLUM | Oscar's only ostrich oiled an orange owl today | Mon May 14 1990 17:51 | 24 |
| I'm curious:
I had read that Segovia's technique involved using both the pad and the
nail like this: pluck with the pad and the edge of your nail clicks on
the string as it goes by. I know it's my favorite tone for a "hand"
plucked string. Every now and then my nails get long enough to have
this happen (by accident, I don't really play in that style much,
although I admire it, I'm just a rock and roller)
What are the techniques used like this in classical? What's most
prevalent?
Another for you acoustic players: I'm having a custom acoustic built
and can't decide what kind (width, essentially) neck to have put on it.
It will be a steel string. I am considering having the neck be the
same dimensions as my Stratocaster so I can play my electric licks on
it and play the same sort of style. Or a wide neck and learn to finger
pick more. How much of a difference will it make for finger-picking?
I get the feeling it will be a lot, but have never played a wide neck
for any length of time, I've played my Strat for 10 years.
What else might I think about?
Will
|
1782.28 | | ZYDECO::MCABEE | Definitely no 'a' | Tue May 15 1990 00:01 | 21 |
| re: .26
I think the term "pizzicato" makes more sense applied to plucking a string
that's muted by the heel of the hand. It sounds a lot more like violin
pizzicato. I think maybe Julian Bream uses it that way.
re: .27
If you're gonna do a lot of fingerpicking, you need to have adequate string
spacing at the bridge end just to have room to attack the strings. What's
adequate depends on the size of your fingers and your technique.
At the nut end, you need room to make open chords and, at the same time, to
play melodies without damping adjacent strings. If you're playing mainly
jazz out of closed chord forms, this might not be as important - I'm not sure.
I've never found a spacing that *really* suits me for both fingerpicking and
flatpicking.
Bob
|
1782.29 | What to do about spacing? | BSS::COLLUM | Oscar's only ostrich oiled an orange owl today | Tue May 15 1990 12:37 | 13 |
| re: .-1
> I've never found a spacing that *really* suits me for both
> fingerpicking and flatpicking.
I just knew somebody would say that, (rats!) but I'm not really
surprised. I can't imagine how a spacing could suit both very well,
but I was hoping.
Oh well, I've got a decision to make, thanks for the insight. I hadn't
thought about the nut end the way you were saying.
Will
|
1782.30 | Do you have skinny fingers? | ZYDECO::MCABEE | Definitely no 'a' | Tue May 15 1990 18:18 | 16 |
|
> > I've never found a spacing that *really* suits me for both
> > fingerpicking and flatpicking.
>
> I just knew somebody would say that, (rats!) but I'm not really
> surprised. I can't imagine how a spacing could suit both very well,
> but I was hoping.
I have a couple of friends who do both very comfortably on dreadnaught style
guitars, but that's a bit wider than Strat spacing. Have you tried
fingerpicking on a Strat to see how it would feel?
Bob
|
1782.31 | Maybe a compromise | BSS::COLLUM | Oscar's only ostrich oiled an orange owl today | Tue May 15 1990 18:27 | 13 |
| re -1.
I've tried it on my strat and it seems abit tight. I have also tried
it on an acoustic with a neck just a little wider, like a 16th of an
inch down at the nut, and it made a bit of difference for the better.
(for fingerpicking) I'm beginning to think that's maybe the route I'll
go. I'm afraid, though it may wind up being a compromise and not be
really good for either. I'm a little indecisive because it's a lot of
money for me and I want it to be something I'll play well, you know?
I've got time to think on it, so I'll be able to come to something.
Will
|
1782.32 | | VLNVAX::ALECLAIRE | | Fri May 18 1990 10:27 | 15 |
| Oh gosh, yer right, the pizz. is a muted sound, I'll check the book
tonight and enter some stuff in.
The Segovia Tech. uses the end of the finger, the flesh comes in
contact with the string first and the nail then finishes the stroke.
The biggest error here is using too much nail. I quit (mostly) for a
while, when I went back to playing I used no nail for about a year.
It really gave me an advantage, really taught me to get that skin on
the nail first. The hardest thing for me to sound properly with no
nails was tremelo. Now I use rest stroke on tremelo.
The nails should be really smooth, too. Polish 'em with 600 wet/dry
( I find wet in warm water right before I play gives good tone).
More than nails you should know how to hold it and rest stroke ,
without these the nails / flesh thing have no foundation.
Toe
|
1782.33 | | ZYDECO::MCABEE | Definitely no 'a' | Fri May 18 1990 19:11 | 26 |
| <<< Note 1782.32 by VLNVAX::ALECLAIRE >>>
> nails was tremelo. Now I use rest stroke on tremelo.
I've heard of that, but never saw it. I guess you'd almost *have* to train
without nails to develop that technique.
My free stroke is almost a rest stroke unless I consciously change it. I
don't lean the fingers back as far as in a rest stroke and I don't land on
the adjacent string, but I do press downward slightly on the string. It
has the full-bodied sound of a rest stroke with just slightly less volume.
My nails slope from very short, at the contact point, to slightly long at the
release point. And the string doesn't roll off my fingertip and hit the nail.
I attack the string so that the flesh touches it first and then compresses
until the string is in contact with the nail (at the base of that steep
slope). Then I pluck the string.
I think you have to have the right anatomy to make it work. Most of my
students never mastered it, but the ones who did tended to produce a cleaner
tone.
Bob
[Are we off the subject enough to move to another topic?]
|
1782.34 | | VLNVAX::ALECLAIRE | | Sat May 19 1990 11:58 | 4 |
| Only after learning to play with no nails did I understand the physical
motion of the nail and flesh method.
Now It's nothing for me when break a nail, or they're too short.
|
1782.35 | | ZYDECO::MCABEE | Definitely no 'a' | Mon May 21 1990 14:53 | 2 |
| Christopher Parkening has recommended that beginners start out without
nails.
|
1782.36 | more useless information! | CHEFS::DALLISON | Naaa... We can't let Steve drive! | Thu Jun 28 1990 04:59 | 28 |
|
I came up with a cool idea yesterday.
Normally, when I'm doing (very bad!) tapping, the only sort of harmonics
I can get are by tapping a note an octave higher than the fretted
note. You can't do stuff like artifical harmonics in the middle
of a rapid tapping lick can you ?
Yes!!
I was goofing with this stuff last night, and I've never liked tapping
coz its a bit clich�, so I decided to try and do something different
with it. I came to the conclusion, that most tapping licks around
today are one finger jobbies, so I spent the evening practising
using three right hand fingers, so, as you probably guessed, the
pick with sat firmly in my mouth!
Anyway, if you tap a note, you can produce a harmonic by gently
touching your hand on the string, just over the pickups. if you bend
that tapped note up, you can get it to scream, coz it just catches
the skin on your hand, in the same way as you do with your thumb
when you pick them. So, do a tapping lick and bend the A on the
14th fret of the G string, to a B, and just as you bend (your right
hand is fretting the bent note), lower your elbow slightly and very
very gently touch the string (it works best over the centre pickup
for me) with the palm of your hand.
That thing should screeeeaaaaaamm!
|
1782.37 | Natural Harmonic Map | PNO::HEISER | Smaq Iraq | Wed Jan 30 1991 11:51 | 28 |
| The complete Natural Harmonic map (open strings) is as follows: (R =
Root, -7 = minor 7th)
Fret 1� 2 2� 2 3/4 3� 4 5 5 3/4
Harmonic +11th 9th R -7th 5th 3rd R -7th
Fret 7 9 12 13� 14 14 3/4 15� 16
Harmonic 5th 3rd R +11th 9th -7th 5th 3rd
Fret 17 19 24
Harmonic R 5th R
From the 24th fret to the bridge you have the reverse of fret 5 to the
nut plus some extras. For example, from the 24th fret to the bridge,
you get R, 3rd, 5th, -7th, R, 9th, 3rd, +11th, 5th, 6th, -7th, 7th, R,
9th. The last 6 or 7 are tough to pull out or even recognize, but
they are there. Each open string will produce the same harmonic
intervals, but due to physics behind string size, tension, and whether
they are wrapped or plain, you will get different degrees of
intonation.
I'm sure you'll notice frets 12-24 pretty much repeat frets 1-12.
Some helpful hints on the harmonics between the 2nd and 4th frets:
Use an overdriven amp! Put a little weight on the tremolo bar (i.e., a
couple fingers from your right hand) to help grab the harmonic. After
hitting the harmonic, bring it out by pulling up on the tremolo bar.
Mike
|
1782.38 | missed one missed one | CAVLRY::BUCK | Love's not safe | Wed Jan 30 1991 11:57 | 1 |
| dude, you missed one... Fret 1 3/4 is a 10th!
|
1782.39 | Artificial & Tap Harmonics | PNO::HEISER | Smaq Iraq | Wed Jan 30 1991 12:06 | 16 |
| Now that we know the Natural Harmonic Map, we can apply it to
Artificial or Tap Harmonics. For an Artificial Harmonic, you tap the
string a specific number of intervals up from the fretted note. For
example, say you have an F# major chord (E form barre) at the 2nd fret
like so:
===========
| | | | | | The asterisks outline the chord and each strings
1 1 1 1 1 1 Root harmonics 5 frets up. This is derived from the
| | | 2 | | Root harmonics on the Natural Harmonic map of the
| 3 4 | | | 5th fret. To apply the Natural 5th Harmonic from the
| | | | | | 7th fret, tap on the strings 7 frets up from the
| | | | | | chord on the left.
* | | | * *
| | | * | |
| * * | | |
|
1782.40 | add it to the map | PNO::HEISER | Smaq Iraq | Wed Jan 30 1991 12:08 | 7 |
| > dude, you missed one... Fret 1 3/4 is a 10th!
sorry about that. I didn't know about it and didn't have it in my
notes.
Thanks,
Mike
|
1782.41 | Pinch Harmonics | PNO::HEISER | Smaq Iraq | Wed Jan 30 1991 12:13 | 14 |
| I just learned about Pinch Harmonics last night too. They sound great
and are fun, but take some practice to be able to use them
consistently. What do they sound like? Best example is from ZZ Top's
"La Grange" (sp?). The squawk-like sound Billy Gibbons gets during the
final solo are pinch harmonics.
The way I was taught, it takes a combination of the fleshy-side of your
thumb and a sliver of your pick exposed across the string to get the
harmonic out while fretting a note (anywhere) with your left hand. The
right thumb nail is almost perpindicular (sp?) to the strings.
Easier to show someone than describe. ;-)
Mike
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1782.42 | | CSC32::H_SO | Redline? What redline? | Sat Feb 02 1991 17:18 | 11 |
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Good discussion, Heiser! Pinch harmonics has got to me my favorite
way to add color to my playing.
There's another technique for creating pinch harmonic, Mike. While I
use the technique that you spoke of, using the pick and the thumb,
Greg House uses a technique that involves picking the string with
the pick and the middle finger simultaneously. Care to elaborate
Greg?
J.
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1782.43 | Another way | GOES11::G_HOUSE | Beware the gummy cereal! | Mon Feb 04 1991 12:37 | 8 |
| Yeah, the way I do pinch harmonics is to grab the string behind the
pick with my ring (or middle) finger and use the pick as the harmonic
point rather then trying to move my thumb up there to grab the
harmonics with it. The thumb method always felt clumsy to me, as I
either had to change the way I held the pick or contort my hand around
to get it in position. This method doesn't bother me.
Greg
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1782.44 | And this is mine..... | TRUCKS::LITTEN | | Wed Feb 06 1991 08:55 | 19 |
| Pinch Harmonics......
Just for the record, I get 'em by moving my thumb and first finger nearer the
edge of the pick by rolling the pick upwards between thumb and first finger
( my fingers are now in a bowed position), and then *nearly* always picking
upwards and using the fleshy side of my first finger to get the pinch
harmonics.
I know most folks usually get by using the fleshy part of the thumb.
Pick harmonics......
Pick in usual place between second finger and thumb, using the first finger
to get the harmonic.
Dave
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1782.45 | | CHEFS::DALLISON | Stick it to ya! | Fri Feb 22 1991 10:51 | 8 |
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Some natural harmonics are difficult to get out (such as some 3rd frets
or some on the high E). A useful tip is to pick these natural harmonics
about half an inch from your termolo unit (or hardtail bridge). There
is another point about an inch off your neck (towards the bridge). This
is just over my neck pick-up on my guitar.
-Tony (Screamin' Demon)
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