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[[Image:Harpsympitars.jpg|thumb|right|Two harp sympitars together. 38-string "Big Red" and 24-string "Oracle", by Fred Carlson.]]

A '''sympitar''' is a modern form of [[Guitar|guitar]] descended from a combination of the guitar and the Indian [[Sitar|sitar]]. This instrument has a unique feature in that there is a graphite channel which guides a series of "sympathetic" strings through the neck from the bridge up to the headstock. These strings vibrate or resonate against a "jawari" bridge, which produces the sustaining drone typically associated with Indian music but also found in many other forms of music. The instrument(s) also have at least 6 standard guitar strings which traverse the length of the neck just as they do for a standard steel-string guitar. Depending on the notes played and on how the sympathetic strings are tuned, the sympitar's sympathetic strings will produce long waves of resonating notes, either in harmonic or enharmonic reponse.
A '''sympitar''' is a modern form of [[Guitar|guitar]] descended from a combination of the guitar and the Indian [[Sitar|sitar]]. This instrument has a unique feature in that there is a graphite channel which guides a series of "sympathetic" strings through the neck from the bridge up to the headstock. These strings vibrate or resonate against a "jawari" bridge, which produces the sustaining drone typically associated with Indian music but also found in many other forms of music. The instrument(s) also have at least 6 standard guitar strings which traverse the length of the neck just as they do for a standard steel-string guitar. Depending on the notes played and on how the sympathetic strings are tuned, the sympitar's sympathetic strings will produce long waves of resonating notes, either in harmonic or enharmonic reponse.



Revision as of 01:04, 21 March 2006

Two harp sympitars together. 38-string "Big Red" and 24-string "Oracle", by Fred Carlson.

A sympitar is a modern form of guitar descended from a combination of the guitar and the Indian sitar. This instrument has a unique feature in that there is a graphite channel which guides a series of "sympathetic" strings through the neck from the bridge up to the headstock. These strings vibrate or resonate against a "jawari" bridge, which produces the sustaining drone typically associated with Indian music but also found in many other forms of music. The instrument(s) also have at least 6 standard guitar strings which traverse the length of the neck just as they do for a standard steel-string guitar. Depending on the notes played and on how the sympathetic strings are tuned, the sympitar's sympathetic strings will produce long waves of resonating notes, either in harmonic or enharmonic reponse.

The inventor of the sympitar is the master luthier Fred Carlson http://beyondthetrees.com

There are only a few sympitars in existence, all commissioned as custom builds. Fred Carlson now spends his time in the workshop building a variation on the sympitar called the "harp sympitar", the first of which, completed in January 2002, was the Oracle Harp Sympitar commissioned by guitarist Jeffrey Titus and dedicated to the memory of Michael Hedges.