Re: [Harp-L] Need encouragement!
I came to a realization a few years ago that the word "pucker" may hinder
rather than help someone learning to play single notes w/out tongue. "Pucker"
conjures up what your mouth does when you think of lemon licking or whistling,
which is to distend the lips a bit and create a small hole, tensing the
muscles. If you focus on "narrow", you'll miss the relaxation.
The problem may stem from looking at the chamber hole in the diatonic and
assuming you must make the lips conform to this very small hole. However,
horizontally, you actually have the dimensions of the hole PLUS the wooden or
plastic posts on both sides of the hole to work with. If you lips are relaxed and
the hole created is wider to include those posts, the air will still only
move through that single hole.
Taking this concept vertically, it shouldn't matter if the air passage
created with your lips extends above and below the hole, as the cover plates are
solid and you will still move the air only through the hole.
So, what I've realized is that if you relax your lips without distending
them to reach for the harmonica, the hole you create is actually quite large
compared to the dimensions of the single hole on the diatonic harmonica, but
magically still produces a clean single note.
Add to this "breathing" rather than blowing/drawing (using the same energy
as "humming" rather than whistling or blowing) and you create a very impressive
single note efficiently and almost effortlessly. In fact, it is so easy that
you won't believe it, which in itself is one reason this is so often missed
by most learning to play.
The Iceman
In a message dated 2/19/2008 9:45:34 P.M. Eastern Standard Time,
dave@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx writes:
If you should try simply "puckering" to make your single notes, remember
this ---- it does not matter how big the opening to your mouth is when you play.
ALL that matters on a clear, single note is how NARROW your mouth is. You
can open it as far as you want vertically, what is important is how close it is
horizontally.
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(http://living.aol.com/video/how-to-please-your-picky-eater/rachel-campos-duffy/
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