Let's Talk About Squeals ("Pinch" Harmonics)

TSJMajesty

Rock Star
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Ever catch a really high squeal on the final note of a bend that just makes you go, "Damn that sounded SWEET!" Like the perfect punctuation mark to an ascending run!

My final 3 picked notes were triplets: high e 12-14-15 ending with picking the 15 again and bending up a step. I caught the string with my middle finger knuckle on the upstroke to get that squeal. Totally by surprise. (On the Majesty)

On my LP, I used to have certain notes that I knew I could nail certain pinch harmonics any time I wanted. Most definitely overused them too! It was on the bridge PU, a SD JB, into an ADA-MP1, into a Mesa 50/50. Bliss. :chef

I've found I need the right amp at the right settings, and they don't transfer to a different guitar.

You have any "regulars?"

:rawk
 
Going back about 30 years or so, I was trimming out a house, and as I got to know the owner, I learned he was an old hippie guitar player.

Once he and I got to chatting about gear, he was like, "Go bring your stuff over to the house," which had hardwood floors, a 2-story Great Room, and no furniture yet. It was a Friday night.

I bring over my JCM900 half-stack and LP, and dimed it up in the GR. OMG it sounded surreal! The natural ambience was a new thing to me.

Suddenly he stops me, and goes, "What was that you just did???" (a pinch harmonic) I showed him how, and he took the guitar, and stood there trying to do them for the next half hour, until the cops showed up! :rofl

Dude had never heard them before, but once I explained how they work, he's running his hand in all different places trying to get them to ring out.

It was like watching the expression on a child's face who had just tasted sugar for the first time. :grin

Good thing I didn't bring my OD pedal and show him tapped harmonics!
 
A caveat is that you can easily fumble a pinch harmonic and man that makes me cringe. It’s worse when it makes the cut in a recording.
 
I always wondered about the 1st note in the 2nd solo in Comfortably Numb. Was it intentional/nail-it-every-time kinda thing, a happy accident, or an overdub?
 
Hard to tell. I asked Grok and there’s conflicting answers to whether the solo was comped:



David Gilmour has spoken about his process for the "Comfortably Numb" solos in various interviews. In a 2015 *Guitar World* discussion, he explained that the solos—both the first (middle) and second (outro)—were crafted from multiple takes. He described recording "five or six solos," then charting the best parts and creating a composite by fading between them in the mix. This suggests the final solo, including the pinch harmonic, was part of a constructed performance rather than a single live take. However, he doesn’t specifically address overdubbing that pinch harmonic separately. Given his meticulous approach and the seamless integration of the note, it’s likely he played it live during one of those takes rather than adding it later.

Bob Ezrin, co-producer of *The Wall*, has offered conflicting accounts that muddy the waters. In a 2022 *Total Guitar* interview, he claimed the "second solo" was a first take, calling it a magical moment that overwhelmed him emotionally. However, Roger Waters disputed this in a 2023 YouTube Q&A, asserting Ezrin wasn’t even present for the second solo’s recording—saying it was done with James Guthrie, involved "umpteen takes," and was edited together. Ezrin later clarified (via a Reddit post attributed to him) that he misspoke about the "second solo," meaning his "first take" comment applied to the middle solo, not the outro. This doesn’t directly address the pinch harmonic but implies the outro solo’s recording was a separate, multi-take process under Guthrie’s supervision. Ezrin’s absence from that session leaves open the possibility of overdubbing, though he doesn’t mention it.

James Guthrie, the engineer and co-producer, is key here, as he oversaw the outro solo’s recording. In a *Brain Damage* interview, Guthrie detailed his role in *The Wall*’s production but didn’t specifically address the pinch harmonic. He’s known for his editing prowess, and Waters’ account credits him with stitching together the best bits of Gilmour’s takes. Guthrie’s work on the solo aligns with Gilmour’s composite method, suggesting the pinch harmonic was likely captured within those takes rather than dubbed in post-production—unless an unmentioned overdub session occurred. No explicit evidence from Guthrie confirms it was added separately.

Production notes from *The Wall* sessions (like those in Mark Blake’s book *Comfortably Numb: The Inside Story of Pink Floyd*) indicate the album was recorded across multiple studios—Super Bear in France, Miraval, and later in New York and Los Angeles—due to tax exile and scheduling. The outro solo was finalized after initial tracking, with Gilmour and Guthrie working together while Waters and Ezrin were elsewhere. Overdubs were frequent, especially for orchestral parts by Michael Kamen, but guitar-specific overdubs are less documented. Gilmour’s use of a Big Muff and delay (noted in *Guitar World*) for the solo’s tone doesn’t inherently require dubbing the pinch harmonic—it’s a technique he could execute live, as seen in countless performances (e.g., *Pulse* 1994).

The disagreement between Waters and Ezrin complicates things. Waters’ claim of "umpteen takes" edited by Guthrie contradicts Ezrin’s "first take" narrative, but neither mentions the pinch harmonic being dubbed in. Gilmour’s own words lean toward a crafted solo from multiple passes, not a single overdubbed note. Given his technical skill and the lack of specific evidence for a separate pinch harmonic overdub, it’s most plausible it was played within one of the takes and refined in the mix.

In conclusion, based on Gilmour’s composite method, Guthrie’s editing role, and the absence of explicit overdub mentions, the pinch harmonic was likely not dubbed in separately but was part of the original takes blended into the final solo. The *Wall* sessions were chaotic and layered, so I can’t rule it out entirely without a smoking gun (like a studio log), but the evidence tilts against it being a post-production addition.
 
I unapologetically overuse them. I fucking LOVE pinch harmonics.

Rhythms or leads, don’t matter, they’re goin’ in. Between Zakk Wylde and Steve Vai I was full on addicted by my 3rd or 4th year playing guitar. With Wylde it was that crazy wide vibrato that made it sound like the notes were ready to fly off the fingerboard, like a paint can in a paint mixer gone awry. And Vai’s use of it just has this attitude to it, cheeky at times.

I even know the two songs that did it for me the most-





There’s pinch harmonics in every single metal song I’ve written, there’s most likely pinch harmonics in every solo I’ve written/played. I know I kept this take of this one just because those pinches in the last portion of it, they fly out of that guitar with that Aldrich pickup-

 
Gilmour for me. Also like Roy Buchanan...who was one of the earliest adopter of this technique(he called them howlers?). He may have been the first.
 
I learned this before anyone was around to show me the technique. I don’t use the side of my thumb for the harmonics but the front of my third finger . I since learned the way everyone else does it but I still use my way.
 
Vivian Campbell on Holy Diver and Last In Line.

George Lynch on Dokken's Tooth and Nail.

Gary Moore on Victim's Of The Future.

John Sykes on Whitesnake.

:chef

I can recall working on that technique a ridiculous amount of
time as a youngun. It led to me choking up on the pick way too
much, so I could get more flesh into the mix, and get those
harmonics flying. I found out later that totally messed up my
alternate picking, because not enough of the plectrum was showing.


I don't ever think about where they need to go, or when to play
them. I had a friend who abused the fuck out of them (Massive Zakk guy
who even had a Bullseye LP) and he kind of made me hate them
for an hot minute there in the 2000s.

For me they are like an exclamation point. Great as a point of emphasis, but if
you start to exclaim at the end of every sentence or phrase you utter people are
going to think you are being totally obnoxious, and they would be right about that.

Why are you YELLIN' AT ME!!!! :LOL:
 
I need to make a video about this sometime, but I also don’t use my thumb for every pinch harmonic. I’m curious if @Eagle is doing it this way, but I ‘discovered’ it via cupping the whammy bar when I was first starting out; the knuckle of my ring finger is perfectly in line with the pick when I cup the bar in my fingers, I was accidentally hitting pinch harmonics and eventually worked it into a technique I use frequently.

If I have a pinch harmonics I want to hit and don’t want to chance it, I’ll use my knuckle. I can nail them probably 90% of the time with my thumb, but I can nail them 99% of the time with my knuckle.
 
I learned this before anyone was around to show me the technique. I don’t use the side of my thumb for the harmonics but the front of my third finger . I since learned the way everyone else does it but I still use my way.
I’m having a tough time wrapping my head around this. 😆
 
Zakk Wylde learned his "pings" from

Ronni Le Tekrø

of TNT.

Your pinch harmonics style is distinctive—from where did you draw inspiration to play that way? Is it true you’re a big fan of TNT?


I love Ronni Le Tekro. When we did “Miracle Man” on that first Ozzy record I used Ronni’s guitar tone from “10,000 Lovers” as a reference. I love his playing. What’s cool is I got a chance to see him and I told him all that stuff. He was like, “No way,” I was just like “Yeah, without a doubt man.” I love Ronni. He’s amazing.'




I use the nail of my forefinger. This way there are 2 hard surfaces (pick, nail) producing it.

There are nodes all up and down the string.

I also use same fingernail for "harp harmonics"... or do I? I forget
 
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I love em…. But on some guitars its really difficult to pull them off…..

You need thrash gods to be on your side when you try them on your gig.

I get so disappointed when i dont pull it off…
 
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