[Harp-L] Harmo Torpedo

flyingv8@xxxxx flyingv8@xxxxx
Mon Aug 21 09:31:05 EDT 2017


Hi Leonard. Whenever I see questions like yours my first thoughts are that you need to relax and get a good understanding of why you want to play the harmonica and what your goals are. I have a customer who is 85 years old who sends me harps to repair. He doesn't bend any notes! Never! None at all! He loves playing diatonic harmonica and plays old folks homes 20 to 25 days a month. My question for you would be what are you trying to accomplish? If you are aiming at being a harmonica superstar on the level of Jason Ricci you better be prepared to put many, many, many, hours into practicing. I am thinking 8 to 10 hours a day for years. So many people want to move so fast in their learning but they skip the basics. A knowledge of music theory is necessary as well. Do you know the cycle of fifths? Do you know the sharps and flats in all 12 keys. Do you know chord construction? Then there is timing, quarter notes, eighth notes, sixteenth and thirty second notes. Do you understand 4/4 time? 3/4 time? Can you play Mary Had a Little Lamb in 3 different positions on one harp? Do you know where all the octaves are? There is way too much emphasis put on overblowing, overdrawing, and speed playing these days and not enough on style. Are you playing to impress others or to make music? Playing the harmonica or any instrument should be fun. The better you get at it the more fun it is. Overblows and overdraws have been explained on this forum before but your best bet is to schedule a lesson with a player who can show you the idea. You could also take up the chromatic if you really need the missing notes. It all depends on what your goals are. What are you trying to do?
Dee
Dee's Finely Tuned Instruments
Erie,PA.
www.deesfti.com
---- Leonard Schwartzberg <Leonard1 at xxxxx> wrote: 
> Hi;   Thanks for your essay on the Harmo Torpedo.   Just about when I'm
> finally starting to play a "song" (in other words, the folks no longer give
> me dollar bills to STOP playing), I'm MORE CONFUSED than ever.   I'm
> somewhat of a lower/middle intermediate harp player and trying to do ALL my
> bends (on my Seydel Session Steels) through Tongue Blocking, which I'm
> starting to do ok.   I'm not familiar (yet) with over (???).   What is (and
> what is difference) overblowing, overbending, overdraw, overdrawing?   Do I
> need your Torpedo Harp for this?   Can I use my Session Steels?   Do they
> need to be specially tuned?   What notes will I hit (that I'm not hitting
> now) with these other techniques?   Seems like Jason Ricci uses some of
> these unusual techniques.   Why is he using them?   How does he know when to
> OB, OD, OBend, OBlow, Regular Draw, Regular Blow, Draw Bend (1/2, whole, 1
> 1/2)?    Thanks, Leonard



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