Re: Clicking G harp.
At 15:19 9/6/94 -0700, clarke@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx wrote:
>Yes, there are times when you don't blow as hard as you can, but I
>would say that I range in moving as much air as my lungs wil allow me to and
>playing really light.
But surely your lungs will allow you to move *far* more air than will fit
through a harp? Once you reach a certain pressure, the reed simply cannot
vibrate any harder. Going beyond that point just reduces instrument life
expectancy.
>You aren't going to get the full, fat Big Walter sound by
>holding back. Then there's Cotton. The man can lift a bowling ball with
>his lips and didn't get that way by blowing light :-)!
I manage fairly credible Little/Big Walter clone sounds without using a
whole lot of wind. I've found that the trick is to use *everything* as a
sound chamber - hands, sinuses, nose, mouth, throat, lungs, diaphragm,
butth^H^H^H^H^H etc and to get the right amp / effects / mike setup.
>
>The truth is that blowing too hard on a poorly adjusted reed can cause the
>reed to stick. Then it doesn't matter how hard you blow after that, 'cause
>unitl you release, it's goint to stay stuck. The key is breath control
>at all times.
I'll drink to that. However, since I cut way back on the amount of wind I
use, harps last me a whole hell of a lot longer, stick less and stay in
tune better.
>
>Bernie Clarke
>"You been talkin 'bout your woman, I sure wish you could see mine." - SBWII
-- hugh
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