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Digitech Harmony Man Intelligent Pitch Shifter Review

The Harmony Man provides classic harmonies without the drawbacks of your average pitch shifter.

Finding out about DigiTech’s Harmony Man Intelligent Pitch Shifter gave me that fluttery feeling I hadn’t felt since my dad bought me a G.I. Joe with life-like-hair and Kung-Fu grip. From what I’d heard, I would soon have the ability to create harmonies in the style of Brian May, The Allman Brothers, Thin Lizzy and Racer X. It’s party time!

 

The DigiTech Harmony Man is a real time intelligent pitch shifter that generates harmonies based on your chord progressions. The Memory Store button allows guitarists to store up to four different presets and enable them from the 42 different voices you select. It can also combine two separate voices in any combination. You can dial in a 3rd or 5th above or below, an octave up, two octaves down, 24 semitones and various detune options.

Play a chord and the Harmony Key Display will show you the key so you can create stacked guitar harmonies or allow your twisted imagination to run wild. A Circle of Fifths display on the easy to read face of the pedal puts related keys side by side. A Distortion Send and Return loop lets you put a distortion pedal before the harmony effect so it won’t influence your Clean Input signal. Also included is a built-in guitar tuner, mix control, power supply and a heavy-duty chassis. It’s built like an APC! The layout of the controls was easy to figure out before I even opened the box. The photography and knob descriptions on the back of the box were invaluable.

I ran this bad boy through a Bogner Shiva 60 watt head, a Marshall JCM 2000 and a Fender ’65 Deluxe Reverb. I used a few Strat style guitars and a friend’s ’74 Les Paul Standard. It was a blast the second I pressed the on switch. I dialed in 3rds, 5ths, low 5ths and high octaves and stacked them with other intervals with the 2nd voice knob. Besides dialing in harmonies ala The Allman Brother’s “Jessica” and Queen’s “Death On Two Legs,” I could create plenty of bizarre sounds with excellent tracking and none of the glassy craptastic tones heard on other pitch shifter pedals.

Although it seemed like a fun little toy, I was really impressed when it told me what key my chord progression was in. It thinks! I took it to band practice without creating any stored presets and was able to quickly get useful sounds on the fly. The harmonies were pitch perfect with the rest of the band. The detuned sounds were particularly bodacious with my distortion pedal because it adds a slight chorus effect and a monstrous low-end moan. It’s great for guitarists seeking to achieve harmonic heaviosity.

The Final Mojo
DigiTech has been coming out with some very cool stuff and the Harmony Man Intelligent Pitch Shifter has now become my favorite. This pedal talks the talk and walks the walk. With a little patience it’s possible to replicate all the classic harmonies from your favorite albums with glorious transparency and tracking. Best of all, you won’t have to put up with a theory challenged guitarist to screw up your harmonies again. I could go on and on but I won’t. It’s a great pedal. Not too big, not too small. It makes a great addition to your pedal board even if you just want to create occasional chaos.

Buy if...
you like getting lots of cool sounds and harmonies.
Skip if...
if you hate the sound of two guitar players harmonizing perfectly.
Rating...
5.0

MSRP $449.95 - Digitech - digitech.com