Re: Old Standby



By gosh they are plastic now.  The Old Stand Bys used to be wood.  That 
was the first harmonica I ever played.  I still have it somewhere.  I had 
always thought that I would get a new one for old times sake.  I guess 
I'm to late.  Oh well.  The marketing genuises at hohner strike again.  FJM

On Tue, 14 Jun 1994, Steven D. Levine wrote:

> 
> 
> On Wed, 15 Jun 1994, Thomas Lilleston wrote:
> 
> > > 
> > > What's the word on the Hohner Old Standby? Is it just a cheap version of 
> > > a Marine Band? I know that Charlie McCoy plays them, and I think a few 
> > > other great players have mentioned using them. Being, on the most part, a 
> > > Marine Band player, I'm considering trying out a couple. Anyone have any 
> > > good or bad experiences they'd like to share with them?
> > > 
> > > -Steve
> > > 
> >  Charlie Musselwhite has been known to play them on occasion too. I've
> > tried one or two in "C" and they just seemed like cheap Chinese plastic
> > Hohners to me, similar to Pocket Pal harps. They look a lot like 
> > Special 20s but they don't sound as good to my ears.
> >  If you want to try a plastic harp and you're using a marine band now,
> > I'd recommend the Special 20s. They have somewhat similar tone, IMHO.
> > I've been using them quite a bit these days although I still prefer
> > the ease of use of Lee Oskars. Lee's opted for the bright tuning,
> > though, and I'm finding that the Special 20s sound better close-miked
> > for blues playing. 
> >  Obviously, that's an opinion. Please don't kill me.
> 
> So the Old Standby is plastic? I always thought they were wood. I've 
> played a fair share of Special 20's (which Sugar Blue favors) and Lee 
> Oskars but I prefer Marine Bands.
> 
> 




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