Re: [Harp-L] Just something to ponder...Alternate tunings for Chords



staley wrote:
> Thanks for the comments Tim.  I appreciate your opinions.  You 
> probably noticed I was also laughing at myself about some of 
> this.  This was more for fun than anything.  But I wouldn?t put it 
> out of the realm of possibility either.  A Slide/Chromatic with 
> good seals may not be a possibility on production harps today, but 
> from what I hear, Power?s CX10 and 12 custom harps are pretty darn 
> good, at a cost.  

Yes, you could do something like this with a well made chromatic 
design.  

> I do disagree with one of your points however. Take a closer look 
> at the layout.  All notes are available and all major and minor 
> chords are available for every note.  The idea here was to keep 
> from having to have a harp for each key.  With this tuning and 
> sharing of two plates, it?s not needed.  That?s the cool feature 
> that I was trying to point out in answering this other person?s 
> question.  It may not be the most! practical but certainly isn?t 
> impossible either with current harp designs and available 
> tunings.  

I have to admit I didn't plow through the entire bulk of the post 
with the tuning layouts.  But are you suggesting that you could 
design a chromatic harmonica that has justly intoned major and minor 
chords for every note AND has 12TET single notes?  Hmmmm....

-tim

Tim Moyer
Working Man's Harps
http://www.workingmansharps.com/


 

I also apologize for the layouts not coming out well after sending 
in my response.  I?m trying again.  Hopefully the text below will 
straighten those layouts out better.

 

-Dave

 

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I think the allure of the Slide Harp -- two diatonics just a button 
press away! -- is dashed by the poor quality generally found in that 
design.  The mouthpiece is very leaky and the plates just aren't up 
to snuff, and even if you can get it to work right, it's bigger and 
fatter.  On top of that, you'd have to have one for each key in 
which you planned to use this scheme.  
 
In considering which intonation to select for a harmonica it's best 
to think about how it's going to be used.  If you're not playing in 
a lot of less common positions (besides 1st/2nd/3rd) and not playing 
alongside another chromatic instrument like a piano or a guitar and 
not playing precise single note melodies, you likely won't hear too 
much dissonance in a compromise tuning scheme to make it worth going 
to all this effort.  If I was playing a tune that required a precise 
melody or doubling, then also wanted to use chords in a backing 
part, I'd just use two diatonics.  If nothing else, it would be a 
lot cheaper!  
 
-tim
 
Tim Moyer
Working Man's Harps
http://www.workingmansharps.com/
 
David Staley wrote:
 

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I was just reading some information on tuning schemes
on Pat Missins page
http://www.patmissin.com/tunings/tun2.html and was
wondering... Since just intonation sounds better in
chords and equal temperament tuning is more melodic,
would it be possible or has it been done to make or
rework a slide harp or chromatic harp (whichever would
be best suited) so that with the button out the harp
is just intonation tuned for playing chords, and then
when the button is pushed the harp switches to equal
tuning for melodies? 
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This message was posted on another forum.  I was going
to respond to it but couldn't cut and paste into it so
below is my response.
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Oh all right, since you asked, I?ll share with you what I?ve been 
toying with recently.  I?ve been working on a number of alternate 
tunings.  One of them I?ve applied to diatonics and am now working 
on a chromatic version that does just as you suggest.  Be patient 
through this long diatribe of mine and I?ll get to it near the end.

 

First, I must admit I?m just a beginner.  But I have an insatiable 
need to understand how things work, tear them apart and create my 
own Frankensteins.  I never seem to be satisfied and go through this 
with almost everything I touch.  Recently, I?ve become interested in 
alternate tunings looking for a more versatile layout than Richter. 
Initially I came up with the spiral tuning and found that it was 
already being used but not very popular.  Heaven knows why, because 
it seems very intuitive to me. Yet I still wasn?t satisfied.  I 
combed Pat Missin?s body of work and  Magic Dick?s patents. (By the 
way, just because someone has a patent doesn?t make them the first 
ones to think about it or even that the patent is defendable.  
Patent officers make mistakes all the time.  I doubt his patent is 
very defendable because of the existence of so much relevant prior 
art.  What I am presenting probably isn?t the first time it?s been 
thought of either. But I can say that I came up with i!
 t on my own. I present it freely and welcome discussion.  I also 
welcome any opinions, feedback, or comments for criticism or 
improvement.) Nevertheless, with regard to the tuning I?ve been 
working on, I can?t seem to find reference to it even on Pat Missin?
s website. It could be buried in his site somewhere, there?s a lot 
of information there.

 

As I have said, I was looking for a more versatile tuning with a 
more comprehensive choice of chords and was intrigued by the spiral 
tunings but wasn?t quite satisfied with the diatonic spiral.  The 
tuning scheme I?ve been working on is assembled by using parts of 
this circular or spiral chromatic string:

 

A C# E G#  B Eb F# Bb C# F G# C Eb G Bb D F A C E G B D F# A

 

Looking closely at this string, you?ll find the circle of fifths so 
I call this the Circle of Fifths tuning.  Stack a few of these 
strings on top of each other like one big harmonica and you get.:

 

 

    4    3     4    3     4    3    4     3   4   3    4   3    
4      3     4   3    4    3   4      3     4   3    4    3

G#  C    Eb   G   Bb  D   F     A   C    E   G    B   D    F#  A    
C#  E   G# B    Eb  F#  Bb  C#  F    G#

A    C#  E    G#  B    Eb  F#   Bb C#  F   G#  C   Eb   G   Bb  D    
F   A   C    E    G    B   D    F#   A  

B    Eb  F#   Bb  C#  F   G#   C   Eb  G   Bb  D   F     A   C    
E    G   B   D    F#  A    C#  E   G#   B

Bb  D    F    A    C    E   G     B   D   F#  A   C#  E     G#  B   
Eb  F#  Bb C#  F    G#   C   Eb G    Bb

 

Geez, what a mishmash, but take any 10 hole chunk out of the above, 
apply it to a semivalved harp (valves placed on each hole of the 
draw plate only), and you get something like this:

 

Valved Blow Bend       A    C#     E    G#   B    Eb   F# Bb  C#  F

Blow                          Bb   D      F     A    C     E    G   
B    D   F#

Hole                           1     2      3     4     5     6     
7    8    9   10

Draw                          C    E     G     B     D    F#   A   
C#  E   G#

Draw Bend                 B    Eb    F#   Bb   C#   F    G#  C   Eb  
G

 

This is a C version that starts with a CEG major chord on the draw. 
Alternating between blows and draws up the scale gives you each 
chord in the C major scale except that the seventh chord in the 
sequence is a B minor chord instead of  a B diminished chord.  One 
usually uses the vii diminished chord for some level of dissonance 
which is relatively easy to accomplish here by bending the minor 
chord a bit.  In other words, pick any three or four notes in a row 
and it will give you a major or minor chord.

 

 

Major Scale Sequence

 I     ii        iii   IV    V   vi    vii   I   

     DFA         FAC      ACE     CEG

CEG        EGB       GBD   BDF#

 

Minor Scale Sequence

   i    II    III   iv    v    VI    VII   i

       FAC     ACE      CEG       EGB

  EGB    GBD     BDF#    DF#A

 

 

One can just as easily pick out a tuning that starts with a with a 
minor chord instead of a major chord which has advantages that you 
will see later.  

 

When you look closer, other cool things start popping out too.  
First to note are that the 2nd position key of G has the exact same 
blow/draw pattern as the 1st position except it?s moved 2 holes 
over.  And so is the 3rd position and so on.  In addition the minor 
key is represented too.  For instance E minor uses the same notes as 
G major and so you have a harmonica that doubles in usefulness with 
minor key patterns that are all the same as well.  This one of the 
reasons you may want to start the draw row with an A rather than a 
C.  You get the corresponding minor key.

 

Another interesting thing happens too.   You?ll find that for the 
minor Blues scale, the three ?Blue notes? are draw bends, right 
where you want them.  Not only that but to play blues, you?ll find 
that the the blow/draw pattern for a blues scale on this tuning is 
almost identical to the one used for the 2nd position blues pattern 
on a Richter harmonica.  

 

G blues scale on the Circle of Fifths tuning

             C          G

G           D     

      Bb   C#    F

 

G blues scale on the Richter tuning.  ( i.e. 2nd position on a C 
harmonica)

             C          G

G           D     F

      Bb   C# 

 

 

 

 

The only difference is that with the Circle of Fifths  tuning, the F 
is a draw bend, not just a draw.

 

 

You also get a whole other set of keys on the draw bend and blow 
bend rows.   For instance, below C E G is B Eb F# .  Alternating the 
draws and bends, you?ll find the B major scale.  (I?m still not good 
enough yet to bend full chords to use these extra keys effectively 
but it can be done and I?m sure it?s a cinch for some) 

 

Sure, there are disadvantages too.  First is that, you don?t get all 
the notes in a major key on just the draws and blows.  Though you 
don?t have to overblow to get any not you still need to bend to get 
to some of those notes.  This may not be suitable for very quick 
playing.  Second, though every set of consecutive notes is a 
consonant major or minor chord.  you don?t get the convenient 
feature of having the tonic chord everywhere you blow on a Richter 
layout.  Also, unless you have lips as wide as the Mississippi, you 
don?t get the ability to do octaves.  But this may be a blessing in 
disguise because it opens itself up for just tuning intervals quite 
easily.   (You only really need two interval ratios, 6/5 and 5/4).  
So far I have  an F/C/G harp like the following in a diatonic harp: 

 

 

Valved Blow Bend         D     F#   A     #    E   G#  B    Eb    
F#   Bb

Blow                            Eb    G    Bb   D    F   A    C    
E      G    B  

Hole #                         1       2     3     4    5    6    
7     8      9    10   

Draw F                        F      A     C    E    G   B    D    
F#    A    C#

Draw Bend                  E      G#   B    Eb  F#  Bb  C#   F     
G#   C

 

If it works out well, I think one could get by nicely with 4 harps.

F  A   C E   G   B  D   F# A  C  E  G   Bb  D   F  A

E  G# B Eb F# Bb C#  F G# B  Eb F   A   C# E  G#

 

And If I never get the hang of bending full chords, seven or eight 
harps should be more than sufficient:

  

F,F#,G,G#,A,Bb,B,and G

 

Ok, so how can this apply to a chromatic style harmonica?  Well, 
with the availability of half-valved harps, XB-40?s, Discrete Combs, 
etc. I personally don?t have much desire for a chromatic unless it 
can give me some additional chord choices.  Let?s take a look at 
what can be done using a Circle of Fifths tuning with twelve holes 
in a Chromatic layout like this:

 

Slide Out

Valved Blow Bend        B     D     F#   A    C#  E     G#   B    
Eb  F#   Bb  C#

Blow                           C     Eb   G    Bb   D    F     A     
C    E    G    B     D 

Hole #                        1      2     3     4     5     6     
7     8    9    10   11   12

Draw                          D     F     A    C     E     G    
B     D    F#  A    C#  E

Draw Bend                 C#    E    G#   B    Eb   F#   Bb   C#  
F    G#   C    Eb

 

Slide In

Valved Blow Bend       B      Eb   F#   Bb  C#   F    G#    C      
Eb   G      Bb   D

Blow                          C      E    G     B    D     F#   
A     C#     E    G#     B    Eb

Hole #                        1      2     3     4     5     6     
7      8       9    10    11    12

Draw                         D      F#   A    C#   E    G#   B      
Eb     F#   Bb    C#   F

Draw Bend                 C#    F    G#   C    Eb   G    Bb    
D       F    A       C    E 

 

 

With this rig you get chromatic operation plus all the major and 
minor chords for each note by selecting slide in or slide out.  For 
this particular tuning you also get the most popular major keys on 
the blow and draw notes.  For Slide Out, you get low F, C, and G and 
for Slide In, you get low D,A, and E.   It?s not easy, I admit, 
probably on a par with performing overblows in context.  All the 
other keys and chords are available by bending except for Bb which 
can be done by bending too but takes a little more work.  Now this 
tuning structure could be made in other keys too but for a  ?
stranded on a desert island? choice for a versatile harmonica, this 
is the best I could come up with.  To build one of these, I?d like a 
12 hole chromatic about the size of a Hering Master Solo (don?t 
exist as far as I know).  There are some that come close.  If you 
want to see some really nice harmonicas that are built as half 
valved chromatics, check out Brendan Power?s excellent site.  His !
 CX12?s and cut down CX10?s are very cool.  I?m thinking of doing 
this project on the new Hering Vintage 40 Chromatic.  It might be 
small enough for my needs.  

And when this becomes the best thing since brass reeds (Hah!!)  all 
I ask is that the harmonica companies and customizers send me one of 
their first production models.  That isn?t so much to ask, is it?  
Ahh well, it was fun playing with this and maybe it answers your 
question.

 

Dave

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