Re: [Harp-L] looking for a new home...



You can buy add on altered tuning or raw reed plates from harponline for some models, but I use two guys in the states, Gary Lehmann and Pat Missin.  I have way too many, so I might sell a couple at some point.

--- On Wed, 6/2/10, GINO <ginoharmonica@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:


From: GINO <ginoharmonica@xxxxxxxxx>
Subject: Re: [Harp-L] looking for a new home...
To: "Gene Pool" <subdomaintain@xxxxxxxxx>
Date: Wednesday, June 2, 2010, 1:03 PM







Are you able to by the dim tuned harps somewhere,
or are you doing the tuning yourself
 
            Gino
  "LICENSE TO SMOKE" 
http://www.ginoharmonica.com






From: Gene Pool <subdomaintain@xxxxxxxxx>
To: Niall Tracey <internationiall@xxxxxxxxxxx>
Cc: "harp-l@xxxxxxxxxx" <harp-l@xxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Wed, June 2, 2010 9:21:33 AM
Subject: RE: [Harp-L] looking for a new home...

I am half valving and also playing diminished tuning which gives me all the minor thirds without breath or direction change.
 
I'm actually having a pretty good amount of success in getting some good blues sounds with the Suzuki G48.  It's opening up a whole new world to me.
 
Thanks for the tips.  I'll keep experimenting.

--- On Wed, 6/2/10, Niall Tracey <internationiall@xxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:


From: Niall Tracey <internationiall@xxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: RE: [Harp-L] looking for a new home...
To: subdomaintain@xxxxxxxxx
Date: Wednesday, June 2, 2010, 11:55 AM




A large part of the difference in sound is down to a difference in mouth shape -- chromatics being the size they are, your mouth is forced into a much more open shape, which favours lower-order harmonics over higher ones.

Try singing the vowels "Ee" and "Oh" on the same pitch.  You might notice that ee has a sort of squeakier, squealier, higher character to it, while "oh" is deeper and mellower in character.  Now think about your mouth shape as you sing the two sounds.  When you sing "oh", you drop your jaw and tongue, whereas you raise both for "ee".  The mouth here is tweaking the harmonics of your vocal chords and it does the same to harmonica reeds.

The problem here is reconciling two dimensions, because in order to get a narrower mouth shape, you have to pucker tighter and hold the harmonica further from your mouth, so most people can't achieve the same mouth shape on both instruments.

Basically, I'd just sit down with a mic and a sound recorder and experiment to see what sounds you can get -- there will be a point that will strike you as the best compromise.



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