0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.
I suffered a HAS attack yesterday and I bought a new one...Actually, I had been thinking about buying a tremolo harmonica for some time. I have a Chinese Golden Cup tremolo (which was my first harmonica), and I wanted a second one.Yesterday, I was walking my dog and we entered a music instruments shops. They had some Hohner Seductoras in C at about 50% of their usual price, so I could not resist the temptation. I think they probably bought them from another shop that closed some time ago.The Seductora's range is quite small (only 1 and 1/2 scales), but I love how it sounds...
Quote from: J.R. on January 05, 2023, 07:09:30 PMI suffered a HAS attack yesterday and I bought a new one...Actually, I had been thinking about buying a tremolo harmonica for some time. I have a Chinese Golden Cup tremolo (which was my first harmonica), and I wanted a second one.Yesterday, I was walking my dog and we entered a music instruments shops. They had some Hohner Seductoras in C at about 50% of their usual price, so I could not resist the temptation. I think they probably bought them from another shop that closed some time ago.The Seductora's range is quite small (only 1 and 1/2 scales), but I love how it sounds...Hi J.R. Congratulations on the new harp. I think that is an octave harp, not a tremolo. I could be wrong. I think it is like the Hohner Unsere Lieblinge but it is named differently for the South American market. They look similar. I have the Unsere Lieblinge in C and G and enjoy playing folk music on them. Mine have 16 notes, 32 holes, and the low end plays chords instead of a complete scale. Here is what mine sounds like:https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8ZpHMdrzhfA&list=PLJ1G4oHit4xhsBkYVTganjO7Dd-TiJDHU
SUZUKI TREMOLOS CMPR'D: BARITONE SBH-21 & SCT-128 TREMOLO CHROMATIC I wonder if anyone can weigh in on how similar these two Suzuki Tremolos are. I absolutely love the tone and response of the Baritone SBH-21. I didn't care for its' "Asian Tuning" though, preferring instead the Solo or, "Orchestra" tuning of Chromatic Harmonicas. The SCT-128 features Solo tuning. Listening to audio clips on Suzukis' website I can't tell how similar it might be to the Baritone. The SCT-128 is so expensive that I thought it wise to first run it past the TFCT. Thank youHUGO
There are some post on here somewhere about the SCX128, & they didn't seem to be liked very much, by those who bought one, worth trying to find them/those posts.I thought it might be good too, but after reading about it, decided not to waste money on it. I decided to try playing C/C# tremolos chromatically instead; I still haven't managed, but haven't tried very hard, (I tend to stick with my Orchestra tuned chromatics, when I do play). P.S. You might like to consider Seydel Fanfare S - they are normal solo tuned tremolos.
The tremolo harmonica was invented by an employee of the Wilhelm Thie company, of Vienna, Austria, circa 1870?The Vienna System, also known as the tremolo harmonica, is one of six standard comb systems used today. The other standard comb systems include the solo system (Knittlinger), used mostly on standard slide chromatics; the chromatic (Berlin) system, mostly on standard no-slide, single reed chromatics; the Richter (Haidau)system of standard blues harps; and the Asian (Shanghai)system of oriental-made harmonicas, a variation of the Vienna system.THE TREMOLO HARMONICA & OCTAVE HARMONICACirca early 1870s (?), an un-named employee of the Wilhelm Thie company in Vienna, Austria, invented the tremolo harp (according to Wilhelm Koch, son of harmonica maker Andreas Koch):"It is a Sunday, the Thie workshop is overloaded...a harp tuner has to do Sunday work. Wilhelm is repairinghis tools. He hears a tone...like the violin of Strauss...coming from the tuner's room. Wilhelm hurries to thetuner's room. He asks the tuner, 'what have you done?'"Tired of doing Sunday work, the tuner is doing silly tricks,tuning a top harmonica reed plate slightly lower in pitch,than the identically-pitched bottom reed plate, generating a sweet tone, called a celeste, a soft, wavy tone."Wilhelm gives the tuner a coin, saying, 'go to a pub, a concert, drink for the well-being of our business.'Wilhelm works overnight, making a tremolo (doublereed) comb, each reed in it's own chamber.The first published listing of Thie tremolo harmonicas known to this author, was in the Moses Slater 1874 products catalog. Within years, the other major harp makers copied the Thie tremolos. Later, octave-tuned harmonicas were added, using the same tremolo comb system.Best Regards, Stay HealthyJB
Quote from: HUGO on January 31, 2023, 02:10:31 PMSUZUKI TREMOLOS CMPR'D: BARITONE SBH-21 & SCT-128 TREMOLO CHROMATIC I wonder if anyone can weigh in on how similar these two Suzuki Tremolos are. I absolutely love the tone and response of the Baritone SBH-21. I didn't care for its' "Asian Tuning" though, preferring instead the Solo or, "Orchestra" tuning of Chromatic Harmonicas. The SCT-128 features Solo tuning. Listening to audio clips on Suzukis' website I can't tell how similar it might be to the Baritone. The SCT-128 is so expensive that I thought it wise to first run it past the TFCT. Thank youHUGO I can't speak to the Suzuki Baritone. Have only seen it and heard it played online. But I've had my SCT-128 for a few years now, and I love it. I didn't pay their $1200.00 asking price. I bought mine used and wounded (it had been dropped) off Ebay for about a 1/4 of the new price. But it recovered well. I like playing classical with it. Performed with it in public for the first time this last Christmas, at the kids church Christmas play. Got to play lead with an acoustic guitar backup on "What Child Is This." Sound man added a little reverb and chorus, and it almost sounded like I knew what I was doing. It was probably the "safest" crowd I've ever played...a bunch of family members cheering their kids on...in church. If I could change anything on the SCT-128, I would octave tune it. I like that sound over a standard tremolo. I would probably like the Suzuki Baritone better as well octave tuned. But I guess they both have their places. Speaking of octave tremolo chromatics, it's a shame Mr. Brendon Power quit selling his "OctaChrom" Octave Tremolo Chromatic kits. His double comb design allowed you to connect two Hohner Super Chromonica 270's together to make an octave tuned tremolo chromatic. And for much cheaper than the $1200.00 Suzuki wants. I bought one of the "selectable kits", and now wish I'd bought several more. It's one of my favorite chromatics. Youtube video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YklPHYumi0I He still mentions it at his website in the "discontinued section" : https://www.brendan-power.com/harmonicas-twin.php Maybe if enough of us asked him nicely, he'd make some more for the fine members of the greatest chromatic harp website on the planet.