|
Harmonica - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
|
|||
|
Diatonic harmonica - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Diatonic harmonica refers to various kinds of single key harmonica:
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diatonic_harmonica |
|||
|
|||
|
Tremolo harmonica - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
|
|||
|
|||
|
A diatonic harmonica is a harmonica that only has the notes in an ordinary diatonic scale directly available. A variation on the diatonic is the tremolo tuned model, where two reeds that are tuned slightly apart sound at the same time to produce a tremolo effect.
|
|||
|
The Richter harmonica is what most people mean when they use the term "diatonic harmonica". In fact, the term Richter seems to be most commonly used to describe the tuning layout of the typical diatonic harmonica, although strictly speaking it actually describes the way the harmonica is constructed.
|
|||
|
A favorite Hohner diatonic harp (harmonica) for price, quality and ease of use for beginners and pros alike. ... This is a HarmonicaLessons.com favorite Hohner diatonic harp (harmonica) for price, quality and ease of use for beginners and pro players alike, along with the Hohner Crossover harmonica. This model is...
|
|||
|
The standard 10-hole diatonic harmonicas come in all 12 keys of music and allow you to play a complete 7-note scale of the key of the harmonica. Additional notes from outside the scale can be acquired by bending certain draw (inhale) and blow (exhale) notes. ... Most professionals primarily play diatonic harmonica.
|
Copyright © 2009, Dictionary.com, LLC. All rights reserved.