FAQ - frequently asked questions - please click a question:
In general there are four different types of harmonicas, namely Blues,
Chromatic, Tremolo and Oktave-models. Each of these are suited for different
musical styles. Especially beginners should be especially aware of the fact that their
first instrument should be a good one. Buying cheap like with other products
can lead to frustration or, even worse to giving up learning a new musical
instrument. All SEYDEL Harmonicas are high-grade instruments - made in Germany - those
with stainless steel reeds have the best price-performance ratio.
Seen from a technical point of view harmonica reeds are springs and stainless
steel is a better spring material than brass. The upper load limit and
the spring momentum is higher than with brass and this has thoroughly positve
effects on the dynamic range of the sound, the tuning stability
and the durability of our models with stainless steel reeds. The reed response of stainless steel reeds is nearly identical to those of
brass reeds, however the sound has a higher proportion of overtones.
>Here
you will find a sound comparison measurement between brass and stainless steel
reeds
All of the harmonica combs from the Blues series have the same hole spacing
and all of them are suited for beginners. On the low and high models from
the 1847 series the thickness of the comb is a little bit different (1mm)
compared to the standard keys. So there is no Blues model that is especially
suited for playing individual notes easier than on another model! Playing individual notes should not be fatiguing. The lipps should
be pursed effortlessly. The shape/embouchure is similar to whistling a low
note: the lower jaw is a little bit opened and the resulting "lip setting"
can be watched in a mirror: the "aperture" is suited wel for playing
a single note. This technique is called "pucker embouchure". The harmonica is then placed on the lower lip and the note "is breathed"
(the mouth cavity forms an "ouh" or an "uh" shape, do
not puff the air, just breath!). If you still hear two notes the instrument
can be relocated to the left or the right rather than contracting the lip
muscles even more. They should stay relaxed and so do not rehearse too
long. Instead of playing for half an hour at one push, you'd better play five
times for five minutes with a one minute pause in between. After a while you will not think about you embouchure any more! You can rely
on this fact, so give yourself the patience needed to master this technique.
Eine Overview of the complete key range of all SEYDEL harmonicasg can be found >here. How we tune exactly can be found >here.
Bending notes: the bending pitch range of a note (draw or blow) depends
on the interval the reeds within one hole are tuned in. E.g. if they are tuned
to a third with 4 semi-tones, like in 3 draw on a Richter harmonica, you can
bend down and reach the semi-otes in between this interval - take hole 3 on a C-harmonica:
If the draw note is a B and the blow note is a G, you will be able to play
the Bb the A, the Ab as bending notes. In hole 2 however the pitch of the
draw and blow note is only 3 semi-tones apart: blow 2 = E and draw 2 = G.
Therefore you have only two draw bending notes in hole 2, namely the F# and
the F. In 1 blow you find a C in 1 draw there is a D. The resulting bending
note is a Db/C#. In the lower registers (1-6) all draw notes are higher in tune than the corresponding
blow notes (in one hole!). That is why you get draw bendings. In holes 7-10 it is vice versa,
so you will get blow bends only, following the same principle of the "dual
reed bending". Valving: If you cover a draw reed with a valve, eg in 1 to 4, you
can still get the usual draw bendings like described above. However if you
blow a note the valve closes the draw reed and you can get out a so called
"single reed bending" (the valve prevents the interaction of the
two reeds). The pitch range is a semi-tone maximum. Low harmonicas with valves: On nearly all of our low harmonicas that have
valves on the lower draw reeds, it is theoretically possible to get both,
the usual draw dual-note bending notes and the addional single-note blow bendings
in each hole. In practice one problem remains: You have to build a really
large mouth cavity for producing the bent notes. Very low bending notes physically
need a long air-coumn to alter their frequency. This is physically rescricted
to the player's ability to form a huge mouth cavity. If you are starting with bending you better use a Bb a C or a D harmonica
to get the best results - after a while you will also learn lower tuned harmonicas
- step-by-step! >Here
you will find even more info about half and full valving
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Sound examples of our (Blues-) harmonicas ranging from double LowE (LLE) to High Bb (HBb)
Tonal range of our (Blues-) harmonicas ranging from double LowE (LLE) to High Bb (HBb)