A capacitive coupling between a secondary radiofrequency (rf) channel and the gradient coil of a standard commercially available high resolution NMR spectrometer and probe head is described and used to introduce a low level exponentially damped rf signal near the frequency of the primary rf channel to serve as an external concentration standard, in analogy to the so-called ERETIC method. The stability of this inexpensive and simple to implement method, here referred to as the Pulse Into the Gradient (PIG) approach, is superb over a 14-h period and both gradient tailored water suppression and one-dimensional imaging applications are provided. Since the low level signal is introduced via the pulsed field gradient coil, the coupling is identical to that for a free induction signal and thus the method proves to be immune (within 5%) to sample ionic strength effects up to the 2M NaCl solutions explored here.