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Pretty cool, Henry! I like that! Deb
thanks Henry!this is how i've adapted your work for my own purposes. i'm just a beginner, so your posts was very helpful.i would like to hear a opinions about what should be changed/added for a newbie's chromatic handbook.
Learn the addresses of all the notes. They all have names (just like people) They all have addresses. Well except in the case of diatonics where you are using notes that you materialized out of thin air. They don't have real addresses but live in the same building with the notes that do. The only thing is is that THEY live in the stairwell, the elevator shaft, the linen room, laundry room, furnace room, extinguisher locker, trash room, utility lkr, cleaning lkr, etc. But I digress. Learn those addresses. THEN, you can go and 'deliver the mail'. And when learning scales, avoid C (on a c instrument). Waste of time. That will come naturally by osmosis. smo-joe
I had a five year goal to know the harmonica well enough to play most of my flute repertoire. I didn't make itTom
didn't miss by much, jon. My musical background, including flute, probably knocked at least a few years off the process. Not everyone has that advantage. It's made me lazy, though. I could be even better if I played scales and exercises.
(personally) I feel that having another instrument under your belt gives one a HUGE advantage. Especially if they learned to read at that time. And flute is about as good as it gets for learning harmonica. Lots of flute music is a natural for harmonica. AND since you aren't 'pinching' the mouthpiece (as in sax & clar), but holding it loosely in your mouth, the embochure from flute to harmonica is also a natural. Another advantage: since flautists are 'used' to using a lot of air because most gets slip streamed out into space, the wind needed for harmonica is comparitively a non sequeter. smo-joe
Things to think about while learning scales. Get a good tone first, and try to maintain it while playing scales. Like walking and chewing gum, perhaps, but necessary.
C-E-G and C-F-A are chords, not scales.Think glottal stop instead of coughing, as in whispering, "uh-uh." Draw is harder. Without the harmonica, exhale four glottal stops, followed by four inhale glottal stops, slowly. Do it a lot. Add the harmonica. Do it a lot. Cut back to three, then two glottal stops per breath exchange. Do it a lot. Cut back to one per breath exchange. Then work for speed. Five minutes a day may be all you're good for, or all your loved ones can stand to listen to.Tom