Subject: [Harp-L] Harrison Harmonica's shutting down - open letter to Brad
This is purely my opinion, so please don't berate me or assume I'm a
spokesperson for Harrison. I'm not associated with them at all other than as a
satisfied customer.
Fwiw, Drew, I was only asked to put down an initial deposit for my two
B-Radicals, which I did - along with most of the other people I know who
ordered the harmonicas from Brad, knowing full well (at the time) that we were
the first 'investors' in a brand new start up and innovative company in
which he'd poured every bit of his own life savings along with every penny he
could otherwise come up with.
I never got any feeling whatsoever that Brad was attempting to defraud me
or any of his other customers and I trust my instincts about people. In
fact, over the time span it took to get first my C and then much later my Bb
(both engraved with my name so they took even longer than usual), I was
informed periodically of my order status. Both Dave Payne and Mike Peloquin
worked for Harrison then and I had perfectly fine interactions with each.
Apart from them, several other people were also putting in long hours trying to
make this harmonica the perfect instrument that was Brad's vision.
When mine were ready I was notified, paid the balance and received each in
short order, albeit a year+ apart. I know this is how it's worked for
other people as well. Since the number on my 2nd was in the 1500 range I'd
assume that they'd completed that many harps by the time I got mine, every
penny of which was poured back into the company for rent, machinery, salaries,
raw materials, etc. I would read and follow the info about Harrison and
watch the occasional videos, marveling at how anyone could keep up that
grueling pace. What they were doing was, in effect, producing a fully custom harp
but doing it in a tiny factory set-up. Anyone working there was doing so
because they believed in the dream because surely nobody was making enough
money at all on which to live.
While I didn't get weekly or monthly updates, there was sufficient
interaction to keep me apprised. I'm not an impatient person and simply waited
until my own were ready. My reasoning was that I wanted Brad to be actually
spending his productive hours working on the instruments rather than wasting
his time online having to respond to impatient customers. If I added to
that huge burden it would not only reduce the amount of sleep he was getting
(and already obviously deprived of) but take that much longer for my own
harps to get to me. Process of deduction.
I DO know for a fact that Brad Harrison as an individual gave up everything
in his life to make this dream work. Every cent he ever had (and then
some) went into building these harmonicas, and any time outside of building
them trying to drum up more financial support (he originally won grants from
Chicago for his pure innovation) to keep the dream alive. More times than I
can count I'd wish to have been in a better position to invest in his
company, because that's all it would have taken...more real and solid financial
backing - to give him the breathing room to circumvent the inevitable
problems which always crop up.
I can't at all fault him for this. He is only human. Perhaps it was always
an impossible dream. Perhaps there was absolutely no way other people could
learn to build them quite his way or put in the same kind of hours and
devotion Brad did - without pay, to continue filling orders. I don't know. I
do know I would never have wanted to 'walk these last miles' in his shoes.
I feel desperately sorry for him too at this point because his dream has
crashed down. It has to be a terribly painful experience. I understand your
and others' concern about possibly losing a certain amount of money, but
this is also his entire life. From my reading of the email, your money isn't
lost..the harmonicas will be completed as per the orders.
As a customer I received the same email as you. I believe whichever company
he has designated to finish his harmonicas WILL do so to his same exacting
standards since they're still the B-Rads and even while they were coming
out of Harrison Harmonicas, Brad had been hiring and training other people
to work on them. Now that another company will be doing the work to his
specifications I doubt he'd allow them to be finished to other than the same
level he demanded from day one, and that those of you whose harps are on
back order might be better off waiting for your harps. Presumably all the
parts and materials are there and simply have to be put together into the new
harps and then fine-tuned. I'd guess he simply collapsed from exhaustion
trying to do it all.
One person simply can't make custom harps(which is what they are) on that
scale. As I see it Brad kept trying to turn out each harp as if it was a
hand-made custom, but on a production level. I don't personally know more than
you, but this is what I've gleaned from my interactions and association
with the people from Harrison over the last few years.
Also, fwiw - I paid as much as (if not more) for harps made by a customizer
(NOT anyone from Joe Filisko's group), who raised his prices to $250 per.
and was still using cut back covers and raw edges from $30 MB's and GM's.
While the harps are 'quirky' looking and play very well, they aren't close
to being the objets d'art which is a B-Rad with its amazing reeds and
everything else brand new and different. I treasure my two B-Radicals. Someday I
might gift them to 'whomever' only because I don't believe in selling
harmonicas, especially the special ones.
If I found myself in your position I hope I'd be able to find the patience
to wait for the finished harps since they will, in all likelihood look and
play exactly like the same B-Rads I have in my possession.
Much luck to you and everyone in this situation.
Elizabeth
PS - might I suggest removing your subscription info from the Harrison
email since it gives more personal info about you than you probably want
widely known?
"Message: 7
Date: Fri, 5 Aug 2011 08:23:23 -0400
From: Drew MacFadyen <drew@xxxxxxxx>
Subject: [Harp-L] Harrison Harmonica's shutting down - open letter to
Brad
To: _harp-l@xxxxxxxxxxx (mailto:harp-l@xxxxxxxxxx)
Brad, I have to say this is really crappy. I paid IN FULL over $550
almost
a year ago for 3 of your harps. Not only have I not received them, but now
you tell me that my order is being BAIT AND SWITCHED to another
manufacturer. How do we now it will be the same harmonica, built with the
same specifications, composite materials. You sold us a bill of goods
based
on your manufacturing and craftsmanship - and now I have no idea who, how,
or when my order will be filled - thatâs total crap, and I bet illegal.
COMPLETE BAIT AND SWITCH - WHAT A SHAME. I love the harmonica, love the
instrument, love playing it. I missed an opportunity to purchase a Joe
Filisko custom when he was still taking orders, and when you launched I
thought - wow, how great that there is a new company taking innovative
approaches to design and manufacturing. I know running a business is hard,
and I am sure you tried your best, and your failure at that is
disappointing
- but what is egregious is how you have handled this situation with your
customers. You have had my money - in full for almost a year and I have
never, not once had a single direct communication about my order - always
the same newsletter saying you're trying to get the orders out. And then
the first direct communication I have is to tell me that you are shutting
down and have bait and switched my order to some unknown, not named company
that should be contacting me shortly....and you have the temerity to send
that from a do-not-reply email address.
That leaves me little recourse but to go out to the social networks and
shout from the mountain top that Brad Harrison, and his company Bradical
were nothing but smoke and mirrors and a total scam. Shame on you. I will
be contacting Visa to get my money back.
Truly disappointed in your actions,
Drew MacFadyen"
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