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  #1  
Old 01-14-2003, 11:27 PM
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Post chords with harmonics?

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Which chods can be form using harmonics?
Any good page with info about this?
I found one, but was in german.

Thx
  #2  
Old 01-15-2003, 12:56 AM
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I know a bunch...but I only know the names of a few.

if you hit an open E then hit the 9th fret harmonics on the A,D,G strings simaltaneously you get an E,C#,F,B which is a E 6-9 chord.

hit a G then hit B(4th fret of G) and D(5th of D harmonics for a G major chord
or use a C to get C9

likewise if you hit a G and hit F and A harmonics(4th of D 5th of A) you'll get a G9 chord

then if you use a G with C#(4th of A) and D(5th of D) Harmonics you get a G sus 4
likewise with the C again use that same shape just take it up a string

Hit a B then hit B and F for a B power chord harmonic(1-5-8)
Use the same shape down a string to get an F power chord type harmonic(1-5-8)

there are many many many more and I'm really tired right now, I'll post more later....oh and I usually confuse things in my head when I translate it from bass to text, this might not be 100% correct, I never spent the time to learn the names of all the natural harmonics, just how to play them

but I hope this helps for now
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  #3  
Old 01-15-2003, 04:41 AM
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Quote:
Originally posted by Wrong Robot
I know a bunch...but I only know the names of a few.

if you hit an open E then hit the 9th fret harmonics on the A,D,G strings simaltaneously you get an E,C#,F,B which is a E 6-9 chord.


Not really. The chord has no 3rd in it. If it had a G# you could call it E6(b9).

hit a G then hit B(4th fret of G) and D(5th of D harmonics for a G major chord
or use a C to get C9


Use a C to get C9? To be C9 it would have to contain C E Bb D really.

likewise if you hit a G and hit F and A harmonics(4th of D 5th of A) you'll get a G9 chord

That ain't G9 with no 3rd in. It's just G, F and A. You can kinda imply G9 with it - but that chord alone ain't G9.

then if you use a G with C#(4th of A) and D(5th of D) Harmonics you get a G sus 4

No you don't. Gsus4 would be G C D. I don't know what name you'd give to G C# D - again, it has no 3rd in, really. Or, if it does have a 3rd, it doesn't have a root! With an A in the bass, it could be A11.

Hit a B then hit B and F for a B power chord harmonic(1-5-8)

To be a B power chord, it would have to be F#. B F B is 1-b5-8.

there are many many many more and I'm really tired right now, I'll post more later....oh and I usually confuse things in my head when I translate it from bass to text, this might not be 100% correct



I never spent the time to learn the names of all the natural harmonics, just how to play them

Evidently
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Last edited by moley : 01-15-2003 at 04:49 AM.
  #4  
Old 01-15-2003, 04:48 AM
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I've only done very little experimentation with chords on harmonics, but here's a couple (going from memory)...

If you play the harmonics at the 7th fret on the A string, and the 5th fret on the D and G strings - you get Em7 (E D G).

If you play the harmonics at the 9th fret on the A and D strings, and the 12th fret on the G string, you get C# F# G - which when you add an A to on the E string, you get a nice A13. Which follows Em7 nicely.
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  #5  
Old 01-15-2003, 04:52 AM
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For these sort of reasons I don't tend to use natural harmonics much - you have to do a lot of planning to fit them into anything.

But it's very easy to use artifcial or false harmonics - like Jaco did into improvised solos.

You can also use them for chords - so you can just play the chord you wanted normally, but shift it up by using artificial harmonics - - it works best(easiest) as an arpeggio, but they will also ring after you play them.

So do the same as you would for fretting the chord with your left hand and then pluck the notes with 1st/2nd fingers with your thumb resting on the string 12 frets above where you are fretting the notes.

Much easier!!
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  #6  
Old 01-15-2003, 05:20 AM
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Lighten up, Frances

My personal favorite is hitting the 5th fret harmonics of the G and D strings, with the fretted Eb on the A string, for an Ebmaj7 chord (thanks, Pino!)
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  #7  
Old 01-15-2003, 05:22 AM
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Here's a list of the notes provided at the various harmonic notes, taken from the CyberFretBass site (watch out for all the pop ads though):
Quote:
12
* Sound an octave above the open string

7,19
* Sounds an octave plus a perfect 5th above the open string

5,24
* Sounds 2 octaves above the open string

4,9,16
* Sounds 2 octaves plus a Major 3rd above the open string

3+
* Sounds 2 octaves plus a perfect 5th above the open string

3-
* Sounds 2 octaves, plus a Minor 7th above the open string.

2+
* Sounds 3 octaves higher than the open string

2
* Sounds 3 octaves, plus a Major 2nd above the open string

2-
* Sounds an octave higher than the 4th fret harmonic
Given the name of the open string, you can then write out the available harmonics and therefore spell out your chords (you can also use the information in figuring out artificial harmonics - eg. 12 frets above a fretted note will produce an octave, 5 frets will give a double octave).

So, take a chord played with harmonics over the seventh fret of the D and G strings (A & D). That could be either Asus4 or an inversion of D (no third, so major or minor) - it will depend on what else is being played by other instruments, where you have come from and where you are going. If you add an extra note, you can twist the flavour - for example, D (5th fret, A string) would strongly suggest a D chord, F# could be D/F# or F#m6, B could be read as Bm7 and so on.

Write out the notes and you will see the range of this new palette that is available to you - the only limits are what your fingers can reach and the fact that everyone else in the band will probably insist that basses aren't for playing chords

Wulf
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  #8  
Old 01-15-2003, 05:31 AM
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Quote:
Originally posted by wulf
If you add an extra note, you can twist the flavour - for example, D (5th fret, A string) would strongly suggest a D chord, F# could be D/F# or F#m6, B could be read as Bm7 and so on.
F#m6 would have a D#, not a D. And you can't get a D# with a natural harmonic.
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  #9  
Old 01-15-2003, 05:40 AM
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Quote:
Originally posted by moley
... And you can't get a D# with a natural harmonic.
You can if you've got a G# string

What else could you call F# - A - D, apart from D/F#?

Wulf
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  #10  
Old 01-15-2003, 05:51 AM
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Quote:
Originally posted by wulf
You can if you've got a G# string

lol, have you got a G# string?

What else could you call F# - A - D, apart from D/F#?
I wouldn't. D/F# is exactly what I'd call it. But you said F#m6 too - which would be F# A C# D#. So F# A D couldn't be F#m6.
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  #11  
Old 01-15-2003, 05:51 AM
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I suppose that's another justification for 7/8 string basses - more natural harmonics!!
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  #12  
Old 01-15-2003, 06:20 AM
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Or multiple retuning devices, ala Michael Manring's Zon Hyperbass. Harmonic possibilities aplenty there... although it doesn't quite seem fair to classify it as a four string instrument! More like 4 physical strings and 17 or 18 virtual ones

Wulf
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  #13  
Old 01-15-2003, 06:28 AM
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Yes - that was amazing and how he got so many chords, I suppose!!
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  #14  
Old 01-15-2003, 07:51 AM
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I use natural notes and natural harmonics mixed in chords. But like what was stated earlier, you will be quite often leaving out some key notes and be implying certain chords rather than explicitly playing the full chord. There are hundreds of them and BassPlayer ran an article on this many years ago outlining many such chords/chord substitutions.
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  #15  
Old 01-15-2003, 10:06 AM
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a natural harmonic is not just made up of a single note is it?
  #16  
Old 01-15-2003, 10:11 AM
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A single note is made up of natural harmonics...
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  #17  
Old 01-15-2003, 10:19 AM
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Well, yes, but that doesnt answer my question...
From wulf's earlier post I would understand that certain natural harmonic produce more than one pitch?

Eitherway, some of these chords are gonna sound odd because you're replacing a note with a harmonic right?
  #18  
Old 01-15-2003, 10:22 AM
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The more harmonics present, the less distinguishable is the note - so orchestral gongs (or Tam Tams) produce huge numbers of harmonics - which is basically perceived as a low note plus loads of noise!
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  #19  
Old 01-15-2003, 10:27 AM
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Indeed.

What did wulf say that meant that certain natural harmonics produce more than one pitch?

How d'ya mean sound odd, Howard? They'll be slightly out of tune, but that's not gonna make it sound odd really (except for the really high harmonics, the 7ths and 9ths). Like in Portrait Of Tracy - the harmonic chords don't sound odd in that
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  #20  
Old 01-15-2003, 10:40 AM
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Quote:
Originally posted by Bruce Lindfield
So do the same as you would for fretting the chord with your left hand and then pluck the notes with 1st/2nd fingers with your thumb resting on the string 12 frets above where you are fretting the notes.
Isn't this a strain on your wrist? I will try it at home tonight but it seems like it would be awkward, how does it compare with using the 1st finger as the resting finger and pluck with the thumb?
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