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I'm hoping for 10 or more members here. The few the proud... I'll accept any symmetrical tuning system without redundant notes.I'm in.
Okay this is a total newbie question, but does diminished tuning count? I recently purchased a solo tuned chrom and a diminished tuned and I like the diminished tuned much better. It just makes more sense to me.
Yes. I wasn't familiar with diminished tuning but it seems to be in the same ballpark. Where did you purchase it, if you don't mind my asking?
I feel that circular doesn't qualify, as there are enharmonics and it is somewhat key specific.Gary
already purchased a solo tuned Hohner 280 the week before.
Count me in. I have been playing diminished tuning for some years now (6ish, I think), and I still love it. It's not the perfect tuning (there isn't one), but it's very versatile and certainly suits music that changes key a lot (jazz, for example). And like augmented tunings, it's symmetrical, which helps transposing or even shifting into a new key. You can voice some chords as mentioned above, including using tongue blocking to play tritones and major 6ths etc. And you can get dual-reed bending on 2/3 of the notes = 8 out of 12 notes of the chromatic scale if you're into those sort of shenanigans (I am).Quotealready purchased a solo tuned Hohner 280 the week before. At some point, you might consider retuning the 280 to Bb diminished, which will give you the same patterns as the G diminished. It's a big retune, and having everything displaced by one hole will take a bit of getting used to, but it's a great horn!Eugene
Is retuning hard?
QuoteIs retuning hard?Not hard, per se, think more... tedious I'm kind of kidding, but it is time consuming and can be frustrating getting everything right. Then again, you might love it the satisfaction of getting the harp exactly the way you want it. You would have to do the tuning in several passes. Tuning down a 280 to Bb diminished involves retuning 64 reeds, as opposed to retuning way fewer reeds for a diminished tuning based on a regular 48 reed 12 hole chrom. I have to tune up every stock chrom I get, possibly one of the disadvantages of playing a non-standard tuning Building up the right set of tools is also important. People who are tuning a lot usually have tools to speed up the process - for example, a rotary tool, although it's not necessary to get simple retuning done - sanding wands or a file would do.Like the old joke "how do I get to X", "well, I wouldn't start from here if I was you" - I wouldn't start on the 280. IMHO you would be better experimenting on a blues harp, maybe tuning up to country tuning or Paddy Richter. Or maybe wait until your chromatic goes out of tune and then you'll have to retune anyway. I hope that helps. Give me a shout if you need more information on any of the above at some stage.Eugene
I am working on a 270 for Grant, and have just finished the rough tuning--it should be done sometime next week.Pat wrote me once that you need to let tunings settle, and this harp has some massive retunes--I keep thinking of Roady's 16 hole instruments. Hey Roady, how far did you have to retune? Any stories/comments to share?Gary
... -I keep thinking of Roady's 16 hole instruments. Hey Roady, how far did you have to retune? Any stories/comments to share?Gary
Yep - here's the quote from roady:So for example my Meisterklasse "has to" start at B2, so I get G3 in hole 3 (the tricky thing was to find fitting reeds for hole 14, highest note F#7!)Also I believe he replaces a lot of reeds rather than retuning large intervals.