[Harp-L] Chromatic layout generator



Tim Moyer wrote:

"Isn't a "normal chrom" just a diatonic in solo tuning? "

To which Phil Lloyd responded:

"Not true because a "normal diatonic" in C is usually construed to mean a
layout of CEGCEGCEG with the blow draw pattern like the chrome only in the
middle octave."



And I think the point being missed in the reply is that Tim wrote "a diatonic in solo tuning". Diatonic harmonicas can come in many tunings, and it's worth pointing out that solo tuning was originally developed for the diatonic harmonica, long before the chromatic harmonica existed.


Tim later wrote:

"But my point was that a "normal" *chromatic* harmonica is tuned
diatonically in a pattern generally called "solo" tuning, but with a
mechanism to sharp and flat the notes.  It seems that any layout
procuded by a generator for a diatonic harmonica could be applied to
any instrument with that mechanism."


Except if the button mechanism (or other note changing mechanism) doesn't simply sharp or flat all the notes of the original layout. I don't know offhand of any others, but I've been experimenting with a new tuning for my Hands Free Chromatic (a truly amazing instrument) which does not simply sharp all the notes. The basic "natural" layout is essentially a 12-hole Steve Baker tuning:


blow: C E G C E G C E G C E G
hole: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
draw: D G B D G B D F A B D F

But, in order to get a more (though not fully) chromatic instrument with this layout, I can't simply sharp everything. So, instead I have the accidentals as follows:

slide: c# F A c# F A c# F g# c# F g#
blow: C  E  G  C  E  G  C  E  G  C  E  G
hole: 1   2   3   4  5  6   7   8  9  10  11  12
draw: D  G  B  D  G  B  D  F  A  B  D  F
slide: d# f# a# d# f# a# d# f# a# c d# f#

If that doesn't work, then this is the description, the second hole draw accidental is F#, the third hole blow accidental is A and the third hole draw accidental is A#. These two draws are both a semitone flat of the natural note, and this blow is a wholetone sharp. Otherwise everything is sharped as per standard designs.

True, this may be the lone exception to the rule that a slider always acts consistently (though I'm pretty sure some of Brendan Powers designs also break this rule), but I think that it shows why a slider- specific layout page or generator might be worthwhile.

Finally, I feel obliged to point out that slider instruments weren't necessarily designed to be "chromatic" in the first place. They were designed to switch between two sets of reeds, and early on that may have been a fifth, a semitone or even to a relative minor (see 12.2a of Pat Missin's altered states for an example of this which was available in the 20's and 30's). Thus, while most often today the slider (or other mechanical means) might almost universally change the pitch a semitone (almost always sharp), there are a few systems where that isn't the case. Very, very few systems indeed, but harp-l (unlike an encyclopedia entry, ideally) is a place where minutiae and insignifica can thrive.





 ()()    JR "Bulldogge" Ross
()  ()
`----'







This archive was generated by a fusion of Pipermail 0.09 (Mailman edition) and MHonArc 2.6.8.