[Harp-L] Playing chromatically on a diatonic (was Will Scarlett's place in the history of overblows)

Laurent Vigouroux laurent.vigouroux@xxxxx
Tue Feb 15 15:48:32 EST 2022


Hi Michael

Thanks for your email.
I’ll listen to your album !

Anyone else has a guess?
https://www.planetharmonica.com/NextGen/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/Audio038.mp3

Cheers

Laurent
PS: This is not me playing, but I’ll try and record it as this is a good exercice

De : Michael Rubin <michaelrubinharmonica at xxxxx>
Date : lundi, 14 février 2022 à 16:45
À : Laurent Vigouroux <laurent.vigouroux at xxxxx>
Cc : David Naiditch <davidnaiditch at xxxxx>, L-Harp <harp-l at xxxxx>, Ronnie Schreiber <autothreads at xxxxx>
Objet : Re: Playing chromatically on a diatonic (was Will Scarlett's place in the history of overblows)
The third note from the end is clearly an overblow.  The very first note I suspect is an overblow, but I am unsure.

Personally, I think you sound great and should continue your endeavors.
I have hidden two overblows on my upcoming album, released on April 29th.  I would be curious if you can hear them without a harp in hand.

Michael

On Mon, Feb 14, 2022 at 7:43 AM Laurent Vigouroux <laurent.vigouroux at xxxxx<mailto:laurent.vigouroux at xxxxx>> wrote:
Hi all

In my opinion, it is now proven overblows can sound well and can’t be spotted in a phrase.
But it seems not everybody agrees on that (cf RD comment below).

As some people may hear tone differences better than me, I’d like to submit a sound excerpt to the community:
https://www.planetharmonica.com/NextGen/wp-content/uploads/2021/05/Audio038.mp3

(it’s not played by me).

Would you spot the overblows in this phrase, just by ear? Please don’t use an harp to find out. Just your ears.
I would be very interested in your feedback.

Thanks!

Laurent


RD wrote
>>
>>> I just think it sounds bad. Even from the very best practitioners (Filip
>>> Jers, to name one) it sounds out of sorts with the rest of the
>> instrument.
…
>>> Like I said some time back, it reminds me of 'Esperanto', artificially
>>> created to make a 'universal' language.
>>> The only place it seems to have survived is with Esperanto enthusiasts.
>>> I think OB/OD technique will remain popular with devoted diatonic harp
>>> players, but that's it.
>>> I've been putting off saying this for years, but I'm getting old and have
>>> ceased to care!
>>> RD


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