Re: [Harp-L] Re: TB or pucker - or a bit of both



I was probably a bit guilty of that when i started using OBs but I've I think I've grown out of it now, my tutors at chichester would have given me a really hard time if i hadn't. On a good day, Rob's a bit like a cross between a bass player and a rottweiler. On a bad day....

An exercise I've used a lot that I suggested to a mate of mine who has started using OBs and that I've been helping out, is to use the Aebersold Dominant 7th workout and switch between the major and the minor pentatonic, i.e the Major pentatonic = Root, 2nd, major 3rd, 5th, 6th can be thought of as 'bright' and the minor pentatonic Root, b3rd, 4th, 5th and b7th as 'dark'. Then you learn to deploy those different colours strategically and withstand the temptation to hit the minor third emotive jugular (as i call it) until it's really called for.

Anyway apologies for drifting off topic, 28 years ago I walked into the music shop in Exeter High Street and came out with a Hohner Blues harp, there was a leaflet that came with it with a diagram of how to tongue block, i think i looked at it for about thirty seconds and then started using pucker to make tooty noises much to the embarassment of my sister who was with me at the time and threw the leaflet away (when i went to the Howard Levy workshop that Harponline ran in May, Howard said he did exactly the same thing, which made me feel good, he did some incredible demonstrations of the use of tongue block though). I've been puckering ever since but since I've started on the chrom I've been using tongue block exclusively on that and now after I've been through the two hours of practice it seems to take to get my diatonic embouchure back, I find I'm starting to tongue block a bit. I can't imagine being able to OB using tongue block though, especially as for me there seems to be a lot of tongue involved in shaping the note when i OB. But we'll see what happens, after concentrating on playing jazz on diatonic for the last couple of years learning to play in all keys practicing for three, four, five hours a day I've decided it's probably a fool's errand and a surefire route to musical unemployment, if I put that much effort into playing the chrom maybe I might actually get a gig. I was playing some country music with some good players a while back but had to pack it in because of the demands of my course and having to work to fund the thing but I want to start doing that again. It's country music with it's tongue in it's cheek, I not sure that you can be English (and i use the word English as opposed to British advisedly) and do country music without your tongue in your cheek, we can't wear our hearts on our sleeves without irony slipping in. Stick your head above the emotional parapet and someone will chop if off, 'taking the piss' is written deep into our DNA, a legacy of the class system probably. It's done with respect though and maybe also fuses this great music with an English tradition that was present in music hall in the 19th century, in the Beatles, the Kinks, Pulp, Blur and The Streets take on rap and more to the point there's a market.

Anyway sorry about the ramble and I'll have a pint of Old Grot if you don't mind thank you guvnor, cheers!

Bill


----- Original Message ----- From: <IcemanLE@xxxxxxx>
To: <harp-l@xxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Monday, January 19, 2009 2:32 PM
Subject: Re: [Harp-L] Re: TB or pucker - or a bit of both



Those that you mention really spent a lot of dedicated time to this
endeavor. Most blues players won't.

The biggest mistake I hear from the level B players getting into OB is that
they use, for example, 6 OB not so much to create an interesting line, but
more to show that they can do a 6 OB.



In a message dated 1/19/2009 8:16:33 A.M. Eastern Standard Time, bill.eborn@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx writes:

"It's  because the overblows are reedy thin in tone and approximate in
pitch."

...only if you don't practice hard enough, one of things I had to learn when
I started using OBs was to restrain myself from overusing the 6ob because I
loved the sound of it so much and to try and achieve a consistent tone no
matter how you achieve the note.


Howard Levy, Carlos Del Junco, Sebastien Charlier, I can't hear  much
thinness and reediness there myself.....

Bill

----- Original Message ----- From: "Drew W" <eviltweed@xxxxxxxxx>
To: <harp-l@xxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Monday, January 19, 2009 8:58 AM
Subject: [Harp-L] Re: TB or pucker - or a bit of both



Well I think it does, and Wilson thinks it does. On the other hand, I just
listened to Rick Estrin on that three-way chat say he thinks there's no
difference, though he also makes subtle adjustments in each technique to
mimic the other.


But he also contradicts that by saying something I totally agree with -
that
you get a sweet sound with a pucker and a sound that resonates through
your
whole body with a TB. So, he thinks there's a difference, but also thinks
there isn't. What are we to think if he can't decide?


What I think (and what I wrote) is that MOST of the time you can tell when
a
guy is puckering or TB-ing, but not 100% of the time. I think you get a
deeper fatter sound when you pucker the 2 draw than if you TB. I've heard
guys do it both ways and I'm yet to change my mind.


As to your own experiments: we'll never know because we weren't there and
frankly I don't know how you play and where your at or anything. What I do
know is my Little Walter, Kim Wilson, Big Walter, Steve Guyger and other
CDs
that I have listened to a million times... so I'll just keep working that
groove and trying to figure out why LW sounds like he did it this way one
time and that way another.


Because it's fun. Y'know?

Anyway, this will never be something we can reach consensus on. It's like
overblowers wondering why the legendary blues cats don't overblow. It's
because the overblows are reedy thin in tone and approximate in pitch. But
you'll never convince their advocates that that is true!


(Ducks for cover)


It does? Funny, it doesn't when I play it. I think this gets to my
 point that often people make assumptions from their own playing  and
generalize it for when they listen to old records. Which is  a
natural thing to do.

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