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- Newsgroups: alt.guitar
- Path: sparky!uunet!nevada.edu!news.unomaha.edu!cwis.unomaha.edu!fprince
- From: fprince@cwis.unomaha.edu (Frank E. Prince)
- Subject: Re: Artificial harmonics
- Message-ID: <1993Jan25.225203.5547@news.unomaha.edu>
- Sender: news@news.unomaha.edu (UNO Network News Server)
- Organization: University of Nebraska at Omaha
- References: <1993Jan23.232327.19103@cs.tulane.edu>
- Date: Mon, 25 Jan 1993 22:52:03 GMT
- Lines: 35
-
- butterwo@cs.tulane.edu writes:
- >
- > Speaking of harmonics, could some of the more experienced guitarists out
- > there give me some pointers on techniques to sounding artificial harmonics?
- > Do you use your index or middle finger or choke up on the pick? Sounding the
- > harmonics isn't difficult, its just playing them at fast speeds that is
- > really difficult for me. I've noticed alot of guitarists, especially in the
- > hard rock/heavy metal genres, have mastered these techniques and use them in
- > there music alot. They blaze through a solo or even an up tempo riff, sound
- > some harmonics and keep on going. Can someone give me some insight? Thanks.
- >
- > Blake
-
- I usually hold the pick between the thumb and forefinger with very little pick
- protruding, so I can just roll my thumb back for downstrokes and the flesh
- will touch right after the pick and sound a random false harmonic. I've also
- worked on adjusting my forefinger so I can sound one with the upstroke. This
- is really hard at first, but neat when you nail it. Another way is to hold the
- pick between the thumb and second finger, and touch a harmonic with the first
- finger extended to a certain point along the string. This is neat because you
- can select the exact harmonic by where you touch the string. For instance, if
- you play A on the 2nd fret 3rd string and simultaneously touch the 14th fret
- you'll get a harmonic an octave up. If you reach to touch the 9th fret, the
- harmonic will be an octave and a 5th from the original note. You can also
- use this technique by fretting the note with the left hand and tapping the
- harmonic with the right. I think van halen used this one a lot. If you
- want to get pretty deep with this you might check out a first-year music
- theory for a list of all the possible harmonics. I believe it goes:
- octave(12 frets from the note), octave and a 5th(7 frets), 2 octaves(5 frets),
- 2 octaves and a major 3rd(4 frets). That's all I'm really sure of, but if you
- check by doing this on an open string you can just keep moving your finger
- towards the nut and you'll find more.
- Also, the tone and distortion of the amp seems to make a lot of difference,
- i.e. the hotter the better. :).
- Frank
-