[Harp-L] Re: Hamacher Touts Harmonica
Hello, Ian. If the cover of the Hammacher-Schlemmer catalog shows a Hohner
"Trumpet Call," it has 5 horns.
It's a re-issue of a popular Hohner Trumpet Call made in the 1920s.
The Trumpet Call is a Hohner Auto Valve, with horns and a sound box. If you
can play a standard 10-hole Richter system blues harp, you can play the
Trumpet Call ( or Auto Valve Harp). It's the same note placement, doubled
(octaves).
If you don't mind spending a little extra on an experiment, buy the Hohner
Auto Valve Harp first, practice on it, then buy the Trumpet Call. The Auto
Valve Harp is less expensive than the Trumpet Call. The Auto Valve is available
in keys D, E, F, G, A, Bb, and C. The Trumpet Call is only in C.
It might take a few days to adjust to the extra sound of the octave-tuned
Trumpet call or Auto-Valve, and the feel of the mouthpiece.
Octave tuned harmonicas have four reeds for each "cell" (two pairs of holes
are called a "cell."), each pair is tuned 8 diatonic scale notes (an octave)
apart. The octaves reinforce the sound, making the instrument louder with
less effort. I don't know why more rock, latin and funk harmonica players don't
use the Auto-Valve. Maybe it's the valves, which make bending a little more
difficult.
I have a re-issue Trumpet Call and 2 Auto-Valve Harps. The Auto-Valve Harps
are more useful, with the 7 keys available.
I use the Trumpet Call for a novelty, but you could use it for any style of
music. The Trumpet Call is great for playing music that sounds like a drum &
bugle corps, marching band or brass ensemble, or a funk horn section.
John Broecker
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