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Nice. I’d never heard of this instrument before. Ingenious!Thanks for showing us. As far as keyed chromatics, they are commonly, C C#, G Ab, D Eb, A Bb, Bb B, etc. probably the easiest way to get a full breakdown would be to open the custom configurator at seydel and choose solo, the. Put a n whatever key you are interested in, it will layout the whole harmonica for you. It’s an addictive toy though. Enjoy
The seven levers raise one pitch at a time up a half step, both lower and upper together. So the first lever raises all the A flats and all the A naturals up a half step. The result is to go from the keys of Eb/E to Bb/B, etc. There is a node point where the lower and upper strings pass by each other, which allows a player to access one or the other without moving very far away from the center of the strings. It's not so much that it allows a player to play chromatically, as it is to select an upper note or more to play chords that do not naturally appear in the diatonic scale. The levers provide a more wholesale transposition into a new key. The right hand plays melodies and chords. The left hand plays the bass strings, tuned to a chromatic scale; flips the levers; and plays or deadens the melody strings. The levers can be along the top, on the far side, or in the back.The bandura is in some ways much more versatile than a standing pedal harp. The seven pedals also change pitch, and have three positions instead of two: sharp, natural, and flat, affecting all of each pitch of a diatonic scale. It may have a similar range, but no chromatic bass notes, and it is not double-strung a half step apart. The bandura has metal strings, the pedal harp nylon.If you want to consider a parallel to harmonicas, it's like stacked tremolos of more than just two tuned a half step apart. Players can hold several at once, in different keys, minor as well as major, to play more complicated music. Sometimes a player will have even more on a table, and set some down to take up others, in the middle of a piece.Tom
I don't think the idea can be transferred to a harmonica.First I though about interchangeable slides that would swap the slide-function on a hole-per-hole basis, but then you would be switching both blow and draw reeds.I think the best idea, is to have a button than you can quickly press while you are playing, as to choose the accidental of the note you are playing at that time. Euh... wait a minute... that's a regular chromatic harmonica. :-)
It arrived today! Sadly, there was no tuning key with it though. Based on what has been discussed in this thread, I'm not it's set up correctly, as it seems to be sharpening G, then D, then A... There's also an added complication of each lever sharpening the vertically lower string (lower half of the instrument) and the semitone lower string, not the semitone higher as I expected. I just bought one heck of a heavy logic puzzle.I'll figure it out... eventually
That's great, Aimless.Shows you're one of the type with musical imperative just built in.I'm certain a lot of us can relate.Very cool, cool instrument there, looks-wise and construction-wise.Looks like something that can maintain your absorption from now on and on,and deliver tangible reward for your time and efforts.Congradge elations.