Free Shipping with no minimum purchase. Learn more »

Cart (800) 222-4700 Español (800) 222-4701


The Roger Nichols Gear Collection

Expert Center Sweetcare

«Back to Glossary Menu

Search:

A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z 0-9

Harmonic
In audio a harmonic is sort of the opposite of a fundamental, though technically the fundamental is also considered a harmonic. Pretty confused? Harmonics of a particular waveform are multiples of its fundamental frequency. The first multiple is obtained by multiplying the fundamental frequency by one (1). Therefore in a strict sense the first harmonic is the same value (frequency) as the fundamental. The rest of the "harmonic series" (2x, 3x, 4x, etc.) of a sound make up the basic character, or timbre, of the sound based upon all of their relative amplitudes (levels).

In the discourse of guitar playing (though this concept applies to all stringed instruments) a harmonic is a technique where a string is made to sound at some multiple of its fundamental frequency. This is achieved by applying light pressure at some point along the length of the string and exciting it into vibration (usually with a pick). With this technique the fundamental frequency of the string is (nearly) muted by the pressure, but depending upon where along the length of the string pressure is applied the harmonics are excited differently. This has the effect of changing the apparent pitch of the note played, but the notes always have some relationship to the fundamental frequency of that string at its given tension and length. This action is fundamentally (no pun intended) different than fretting a string, which actually changes the length of the string and creates a new fundamental frequency.


Haas Effect

Half-cell

Half-Track

Half Damper

Half Duplex

Half Nashville Tuning

Half Normal

Half-Power Bandwidth

Half Space

Half Step

Hammer-On

Hammer Action

Hamming Code

Handling Noise

Handshake

Hangover

Hangover

Hang Tag

Hard Bop

Hard Case

Hard Disk

Hard Disk Drive

Hard Drive

Hard Reset

Hard Shell Case

Hardtail

Hardware

Hardware Bypass

Hardwired

Hardwood

Harmonic

Harmonic Distortion

Harmonizer

Harmony

Harmony Rocket III

Harp Guitar

HDCD - High Definition Compatible Disc

HDD

HD DVD

HDMI

Head

Head (Tape)

Head Crash

Header

Head Gap

Headphone Mix

Headphones

Headroom

Head Shadow

Head Stack

Headstock

Heartwood

Heat Sink

Heel

Helical Scan

Helicon

Helmholz Resonator

Hemiola

Hermode Tuning

Herringbone

Heterodyne

Heterophony

Hexadecimal

Hexaphonic Pickup

HFS (& HFS+)

HH

Hi-hat

Hi-MD

Hi-Z

Hierarchical Menu

High End

High Pass Filter

High Sierra

High Strung

HiLoTron

Hiss

Hit

HockeyStick Headstock

Hollow-Glas

Hollowbody

Hollowbody/Semi-Hollowbody

Holophonics

Homophony

Hoop

Hoopy (or Hoopie)

Horn

Hornpipe

Horseshoe Pickup

Host

Host Based

Hot

Hot Swap

House Sync

House Sync

HSH

HSS

HTDM

HTML

Hub

Hub

HUI

Hum

Hum-canceling

Humanize

Humbucker

Humbucking

Humidity

HX Pro

Hygrometer

Hygrometer

Hyperacusis

Hypercardioid

Hyperlink

HyperText

Hysteresis

Hertz

     
Home | Gear Reviews | Videos | Buying Guides | Glossary | Tech Tips | Show Reports | Publications | Featured Articles

Our Customers Say...

One thing I really admire about Sweetwater is that every customer is treated well, whether they're purchasing something for $10 or $10,000. You don't find that at other places. We consider Sweetwater a partner.
Joel Kass, Chicago, IL

Sweetwater Sound Inc.
5501 U.S. Hwy 30 W
Fort Wayne, IN 46818
Get Directions »

Toll Free (800) 222–4700
Español (800) 222–4701
Local (260) 432–8176
Fax (260) 432–1758
E-mail us

Phone & Retail Store Hours:
9–9 Monday–Thursday
9–8 Friday
9–7 Saturday
(All hours listed are
Eastern Standard Time.)

© 2012 Sweetwater Sound Inc. All rights reserved. Please read our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy. Links | Press Releases