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@streetlegalI never heard of a Major 7 chromatic, just diatonic. Could you post a link to that chromatic layout?
And as we have covered numerous times here the availability of symmetric pitch layouts is not a major issue. Please stop suggesting that it is, folks.
Yes indeed - a retuner's nightmare.Those who want to go down the augmented path, should go straight to the Seydel configurator. Without going into a lot of detail (there is good information about augmented in previous threads) it needs a little bit of pre-planning as to which scales you want to go where.
Quote from: streetlegal on November 17, 2019, 06:37:35 AMYes indeed - a retuner's nightmare.Those who want to go down the augmented path, should go straight to the Seydel configurator. Without going into a lot of detail (there is good information about augmented in previous threads) it needs a little bit of pre-planning as to which scales you want to go where.... I can't help but wonder why have enharmonics at all. 6 whole tones in an octave would site over three holes, allowing four octaves in a 12-holer (barring the final root note),...
I consider the redundant pitches an unintentional feature, not a drawback.
Quote from: SlimHeilpern on November 17, 2019, 11:03:44 AMI consider the redundant pitches an unintentional feature, not a drawback.I am used to enharmonics, being a guitar player.And I find that my improvisation owes a lot to my string sensibilities.But as to Solo vs bebop--the Bebop tuning changes a redundant C note (blow 4) into a Bb, giving you three enharmonics in a row (there are now 2 Bb notes, 2 B notes and 2 C notes) and the breath pattern is altered so that every blow note is lower that the draw note....
Not too much. I can do most of what I do on a standard chromatic. I know we agree, the bebop tuning is superior.
SaxonyFan wrote:QuoteAnd as we have covered numerous times here the availability of symmetric pitch layouts is not a major issue. Please stop suggesting that it is, folks.It is an issue if you have to do it yourself.
Quote from: Gnarly He Man on November 17, 2019, 03:52:40 AMSaxonyFan wrote:QuoteAnd as we have covered numerous times here the availability of symmetric pitch layouts is not a major issue. Please stop suggesting that it is, folks.It is an issue if you have to do it yourself.I, as with most players, purchase their harps in the tuning they want from the manufacturer.
The bottom line, I believe, is that while solo tuning is far from perfect, it is the standard, and that in of itself can be an important feature, depending on your personal goals and preferences. And to AimlessWanderer's point, if you're not going to be self-taught or if you're going to rely on tablature (as opposed to standard music notation), the best choice is probably to stick with solo tuning.
AimlessWanderHere is what a noob needs to know when choosing a pitch layout:(1) The key of a piece of tonal music does not dictate the pitches you will use. (2) A master improviser uses all 12 pitches of the chromatic scale only slightly favoring chord tones of the underlying chord progression.Give those two simple facts why would anybody choose a pitch layout that somehow favors a particular key? Symmetric pitch layouts are designed around these two facts. Choose your pitch layout based on your 20 year goals (which will change in ways unimagined) not your 2 year goals.
Quote from: SaxonyFan on November 17, 2019, 06:20:33 PMQuote from: Gnarly He Man on November 17, 2019, 03:52:40 AMSaxonyFan wrote:QuoteAnd as we have covered numerous times here the availability of symmetric pitch layouts is not a major issue. Please stop suggesting that it is, folks.It is an issue if you have to do it yourself.I, as with most players, purchase their harps in the tuning they want from the manufacturer.Well, most players use solo tuning, hard to argue with the "most" thing.
Quote from: Gnarly He Man on November 18, 2019, 02:20:02 AMQuote from: SaxonyFan on November 17, 2019, 06:20:33 PMQuote from: Gnarly He Man on November 17, 2019, 03:52:40 AMSaxonyFan wrote:QuoteAnd as we have covered numerous times here the availability of symmetric pitch layouts is not a major issue. Please stop suggesting that it is, folks.It is an issue if you have to do it yourself.I, as with most players, purchase their harps in the tuning they want from the manufacturer.Well, most players use solo tuning, hard to argue with the "most" thing.The discussion is about altered tunings, right?
Quote from: SaxonyFan on November 18, 2019, 08:47:52 AMQuote from: Gnarly He Man on November 18, 2019, 02:20:02 AMQuote from: SaxonyFan on November 17, 2019, 06:20:33 PMQuote from: Gnarly He Man on November 17, 2019, 03:52:40 AMSaxonyFan wrote:QuoteAnd as we have covered numerous times here the availability of symmetric pitch layouts is not a major issue. Please stop suggesting that it is, folks.It is an issue if you have to do it yourself.I, as with most players, purchase their harps in the tuning they want from the manufacturer.Well, most players use solo tuning, hard to argue with the "most" thing.The discussion is about altered tunings, right?Well, in that case, I doubt it. It’s too expensive, and harmonica players are notoriously frugal. But I do a fair amount of retuning for folks—perhaps this is a percentage of the folks you are claiming as being serviced “by the manufacturer “?Suzuki does not offer this service (I offered), nor does Easttop. AFAIK, only Seydel and Hohner do—and Hohner charges an arm and a leg. Offering custom tunings is one of the finer things Seydel does👌!
Any vids out there breaking down Dimi and Augmented tunings?EZ