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Thread: Please Explain "Pinch Harmonics"

  1. #1
    Forum Member rdnzl's Avatar
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    Please Explain "Pinch Harmonics"

    Another noob question.....

    I see quite a few references to pinch harmonics.

    Could someone explain what exactly that means, and why I need to know how to do it?

    Thanks

  2. #2
    Forum Member Los7's Avatar
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    Re: Please Explain "Pinch Harmonics"

    i'm not sure if i'm allowed to post this
    applogies in advance for linking to another guitar site
    Here

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    Forum Member Power_13's Avatar
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    Re: Please Explain "Pinch Harmonics"

    I'm not sure how to describe the sound, but try this. Very lightly place your finger on any string, at the twelfth fret. Pick the string, and you should get a "chime"-esque sound from it. That's an artificial harmonic. A pinched harmonic sounds like this, but with a little more "bite" to it.

    To do a pinched harmonic, hold your pick so that the flesh of your thumb is very close to the end. When you pick the string, pick it so that your thumb touches it briefly. It works best in certain places on the string, so it might take a while to get the hang of it.

    Hope this helps :)
    Last edited by Power_13; 10-15-2005 at 06:29 PM.
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    Forum Member cooltone's Avatar
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    Re: Please Explain "Pinch Harmonics"

    Guys like Billy Gibbons and Zakk Wylde do this a lot. When done as Power_13 described above, you get a harmonic overtone on top of the note you are plucking or 'pinching'. It's easier to get these when you have a heavily overdriven sound.
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    Forum Member juniorspecial's Avatar
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    Re: Please Explain "Pinch Harmonics"

    You know that sound pretty girls make when you pinch 'em good?

    Pinch harmonics.





  6. #6
    Forum Member Los7's Avatar
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    Re: Please Explain "Pinch Harmonics"

    i like the sound you get when you pluck the note and get the harmonic at the same time. I dont really practice these, but i can occasionaly pull them out accidently, lol. I sorta mean to do them, but its very.........whats the word......i cant think, we'll just say 50/50

  7. #7
    Forum Member Kap'n's Avatar
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    Re: Please Explain "Pinch Harmonics"

    As others have said, overdrive helps.

    If you hold your pick between extended thumb and index finger, if you pull them in, the meat of your fingers deaden the fundamental, and you get the harmonics, hence the 'pinch.'
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    Forum Member thetallcoolone's Avatar
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    Re: Please Explain "Pinch Harmonics"

    A prime example of pinch harmonics sounds, ZZ Top La Grange, starting at about 2:32 and more evidently at about 3:06 on.

    Some guitar tones are more prone to generate that sound as the G and B strings are easier to use for this sound.

    Pinch harmonics are generated basicaly the same way as you generate the artificial harmonics by slightly touching the stings at the 12th, 7th and 5th fret while picking'em. Only this time, as Power13 explained, you do it by slightly touching the string, as you pick it, with the side of your thumb holding the pick.
    And depending on where you fret a note, the actual place where you "pinch" will vary slightly, just as different "pinching" locations will generate different harmonics (as heard at 3:06 to 3:12 of La Grange)

    Experimentation is the key here.
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    Forum Member Offshore Angler's Avatar
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    Re: Please Explain "Pinch Harmonics"

    A Rangemaster clone is perfect for doing them live. It pops them right out in the mix. With classic OD or distortion they tend to get lost in it.
    "No harmonic knowledge, no sense of time, a ghastly tone, unskilled vibrato, and so on. Chuck is one of the worst guitar players I know" -Gravity Jim

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    Forum Member sabby's Avatar
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    Re: Please Explain "Pinch Harmonics"

    Listen to Robby Robertson's intro Cripple Creek for a less screaming style.

  11. #11
    ZoneFiend photoweborama's Avatar
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    Re: Please Explain "Pinch Harmonics"

    I do it all the time. one of my regular tools in by tool box...
    I makes it sound like your amp is doing a high frequency feedback, but only much more controlled.
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    Forum Member NeoFauve's Avatar
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    Re: Please Explain "Pinch Harmonics"

    Quote Originally Posted by sabby
    Listen to Robby Robertson's intro Cripple Creek for a less screaming style.
    Or Clapner's solo on "Bell Bottom Blues."
    Brief. but nice.
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  13. #13
    Gravity Jim
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    Re: Please Explain "Pinch Harmonics"

    Or Skunk Baxter's jaw-dropping set of thumb harmonics in the first phrase of the second solo on "My Old School" By Steely Dan. Clean and dazzling.

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