Re: [Harp-L] Harp Collection



Wow! Buy just a few more and you could play a different harp every day for a year!

Thanks for the input about comb materials. I got away from would combs for the same reasons. Hell, they were drawing blood!

Gary Popenoe

On Mar 17, 2008, at 8:50 AM, MundHarp@xxxxxxx wrote:


leone@xxxxxxxx writes:


<<"WHO in hell has the most
harmonicas".  >>



I counted mine the other day

342 (Three Hundred and Forty Two) WORKING harmonicas, mostly 10 hole
diatonics, but at least 30 chroms and half a dozen tremolos... Just now I have
about 6 out of tune, but all the others have been refurbished, mostly by Tony
Danneker, and are in A+++ playing condition.
A lifetime (so far) of harmonica playing. And I used to chuck them away when
they failed.
Oh well, with age SHOULD come wisdom!


But I just gig with a case of perhaps 30 diatonics, 2 in each key plus a few
low tunings and specials...and also about 15 Chromatics, a "270" in EVERY
major key, and a few spares...Oh yes and my favourite, one of the first Doug
Tate "Renaissance" Chromatic in "c" with NOS 1960's "Silver Concerto" reed
plates... That harp really sings!


I try to avoid special tunings though I do have a few. I find it real hard
to jump from a chrom to a 10 hole diatonic... I'm TOTALLY lost if I pick up a
"Paddy Richter" or "Spiral tuned" ...instrument.


However, I am truly BLESSED! I now have the instruments that will do what I
want them to do!


Comb material? I learnt a lot from my pal Vern Smith
Comb material has a minimal effect on tone.

But these days, I like a metal comb. NOT because it sounds better! It
doesn't. It just PLAYS better

Back in the late 1960's when I was on the road all over Europe with "John
Walden Workshop" blues band, and "John Walden's Blues Combine" I used 10 hole &
12 hole Echo Vampers... In the States known as "Marine Bands", the same but
with different lables.


THEY RIPPED MY LIPS TO BITS!

The "Pear" wood combs swelled and shrank.

Plastic combs and metal combs DON'T swell. Wood combs mostly (BUT NOT
ALWAYS) DO swell.

Thank goodness that in the past 40 odd years harmonicas are SO MUCH BETTER

A bad workman always blames his tools.
A good workman gets good tools!

So I try to get the best instruments that I can obtain.

These days I have more or less standardised on Hohner MS diatonic
harmonicas, and 270 "Hohner Super Chromonica" chromatics.

OK, I prefer a metal comb, but I just love the "Blues Harp" cover plates. I
like a cover plate that "sings" in my hand.


Amen?


Kind regards, John "Whiteboy" Walden London England










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